Showing posts with label Elkmont. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Elkmont. Show all posts

Saturday, March 11, 2017

Little River Trail - Great Smoky Mountains National Park


We hiked the Little River Trail from Elkmont to the Cucumber Gap Trail junction again in October 2016. I've written about two previous hikes on this trail. The first was in March 2014 and can be found here. The second was a couple of years later in March 2016 where we continued on up the Little River Trail to the Goshen Prong Trail junction. A blog post of the second hike, including a topographic map and elevation profile, can be found here.

Little River near Millionaire's Row

More of the Little River above Millionaire's Row

Whitewater and deep pools

A small cascade on the river

The end of the old gravel road is marked with a turnaround and a boulder blocking most vehicles

A jumble of rocks forces the river toward the near bank

Boulders in the river

The trail takes a shortcut and moves away from the river for a short distance

Back beside the river

Huskey Branch Falls

Little River at Huskey Branch


Looking upriver at the autumn foliage

Trail junction and our turnaround point

Entry to Great Smoky Mountains National Park is free.

The park website is https://www.nps.gov/grsm.

Monday, May 16, 2016

Abandoned Buildings of the Elkmont Historic District - Great Smoky Mountains National Park


Elkmont is located in the Little River and Jakes Creek valleys on the Tennessee side of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. A pioneer community in the 1840s, it became a logging town in the early 1900s, and a resort community for the affluent in the 1910s. When the National Park was established in 1934, many of the resort cottage owners were given lifetime leases. The leases were converted to 20 year leases in 1952 and renewed in 1972. In 1992, most of the leases expired and the park announced plans to remove the Wonderland Hotel and all the cottages. Before the park service could act, the hotel and many of the cottages were listed on the National Register of Historic Places as the Elkmont Historic District, Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Over the next 15 years, various stakeholders vigorously debated the future of the historic structures. During that time, the Wonderland Hotel collapsed due to structural failure likely due to rainwater leaking into the building. The park service has restored the Appalachian Clubhouse and has plans to restore over a dozen of the most significant structures as funding allows. In the interim, the lack of maintenance is obvious and signs have been posted warning visitors not to enter the buildings. Below are pictures from late April 2016 of some of the structures built along Jakes Creek.





















Entry to Great Smoky Mountains National Park is free.

The park website is http://www.nps.gov/grsm/index.htm.

Saturday, May 14, 2016

Cucumber Gap Loop - Great Smoky Mountains National Park


Although we had planned to hike the Cucumber Gap loop in mid-March 2016, when we got to the Cucumber Gap Trail junction, we changed our plans and followed the Little River Trail upstream to the Goshen Prong Trail. I described that hike here. We finally hiked the loop in late April 2016. We parked at the upper paved hiker parking area near the Jakes Creek Trail trailhead. We walked down the road to the lower parking area and the Little River Trail trailhead and hiked upstream to the Cucumber Gap Trail junction. While most of the Little River Trail is a single lane gravel road up to the Goshen Prong Trail, the Cucumber Gap Trail is a wide dirt path with protruding roots and rocks. Most places are wide enough to meet another hiker without having to step off the trail. At the west end of the Cucumber Gap trail we headed north on the gravel road that is the Jakes Creek Trail. Note that this trail is also used by equestrians. We were a bit late for the spring ephemeral wild flowers, but still saw enough to make the hike up to the gap and down again enjoyable. Several of the abandoned buildings of the Elkmont resort community are still located along the lower end of the Jakes Creek Trail. The loop climbs and falls 750 feet with the highest elevation at Cucumber Gap and the lowest elevation between the two hiker parking areas in Elkmont. The route along Jakes Creek is much steeper than the Little River Trail.

Unless the wildflowers are blooming along the Cucumber Gap Trail or you want a bit of solitude, I'd suggest hiking further up the Little River Trail and retracing your steps for a more enjoyable and scenic hike.

Topographic map with GPS route

Elevation profile

Little River

Island with a carpet of green moss and grass

Cascade on Little River

Yellow Trillium (Trillium luteum)

Another cascade

Dogwood above the Little River

Canadian Violet (Viola canadensis)

Turnaround at the end of the old road about one mile up the trail

Another noisy cascade on the river

Little River flows over a series of boulders

View from the log bench

Husky Branch Falls

Husky Branch flows into Little River

Cucumber Gap Trail trailhead to right

The smooth trail surface provided a false hope...

...as we found plenty of roots and mud along the trail

The trail looks like a sunken road

Root-bound trail

The Cucumber Gap Trail crosses Husky Branch without the benefit of a bridge

Another sunken section of the trail

Fungi face

More roots and rocks as the trail weaves among the hardwoods

The trail follows a small stream for a short distance

Root stairs

This rock is the only "bench" on the Cucumber Gap Trail

Sweet White Trillium (Trillium simile)

Foamflower (Tiarella cordifolia)

Blown down trees have been cleared from the trail

Yellow Trillium (Trillium luteum)

More Sweet White Trillium

Approaching the high point on the trail

Beginning the descent toward the Jakes Creek Trail

Burnt Mountain (3373')

The trail crosses a very shallow Tulip Branch

A small stream flows into Tulip Branch

A hillside covered in trillium and foamflower

A small stream flows through a culvert covered by rocks

More roots

Cucumber Gap Trail ends at intersection with Jakes Creek Trail

Typical view from and surface of Jakes Creek Trail

A wooden drain allows runoff to flow into Tulip Branch

Tulip Branch

A modern gate across a side road seems out of place

Jakes Creek from the cemetery road bridge

Entry to Great Smoky Mountains National Park is free.

The park website is http://www.nps.gov/grsm/index.htm.