PIGEON FORGE TN

My Ashes

The Pigeon River that flows through is SO POLLUTED WITH ECOLI that you can't fish/swim/wade or stick your toe in it.....So much for progress in a tourist trap.

I've told my wife and kids that's where I want my ashes, because of my Cherokee Heritage, so add me to the list of pollutants!!!
 
Pigeon Forge is the biggest tourist trap I have ever seen . It's great if you have children but for a couple of adults the experience was maddening . Traffic , cheesey t-shirt shops and fast food joints , etc.

Make the short drive to SMKW to salvage the day .



Bet ya haven't seen Myrtle Beach!
 
Cades Cove is a nice break from town but traffic is bumper to bumper on weekends. And if smoeone spots a bear, all bets are off expect to sit there while the idiots try to get closer for pictures. You might just get to see a bear chase them back to the car. Lol. On the way out, at The Wye, turn left and go into Townsend, its much quieter than Pigeon Forge and Gatlinburg. Easy return to Pigeon Forge via Wears Valley Road.
I've been local for 50+ years so feel free to pm any questions. I wish you luck and patience on your visit.
Last time we were there, a bear about 150 yards away took an interest in my adult daughter. It made and kept eye contact with her while steadily coming toward her. A park ranger was there and he told my daughter to get in her call now. He said when a bear takes that much interest in a human, it's time to make a quick exit.
 
I can't remember how far from Pigeon Forge it is, but the American Museum of Science and Energy in Oak Ridge is worth the short drive. They built a whole town to develop the atomic bomb. People living and working there had no idea. They show the whole process and even have an actual house that workers lived in. Check out the museum link at bottom of post. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HQ37UWiALi8

American Museum of Science & Energy
This place is worth going to Tennessee for all by itself. It was really interesting how everyone in the town knew their part of the job being done, but no one knew what was being researched and made. The flap top houses were pretty interesting too.
 
Many many years ago......

If you like the great outdoors, do the drive to Clingman's dome. I think the elevation is around 6600 feet above the sea. Take a jacket. Different part of the world for anything east of the big muddy. Cades cove is nice, but expect traffic.

The Clingman's Dome area was covered with all kinds of spruce trees. Then in the 60's the pine borers took over and devastated the area. The last time I was there it was awful, but that was a really long time ago. How is it looking nowadays. The borer was one of those National Park Dilemmas where they couldn't treat for the borer without breaking the sanctuary laws. Just like the boars that eat up huge areas. My philosophy, if an 'exotic' to the park is that destructive, get rid of it.

PS: The golf place with the big red octopus coming out of the water always tickles me. :)
 
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They say paved trails...

Yeah and you'll find out if your a real man if you climb to the top of it.

Especially if you're a flatlander like me, whew!!! :rolleyes:

You can see something like 5 states from it's summit, beautiful part of the world.


They say that paved trails are harder than natural ones, and I think I agree. That is a long, steep, paved one.
 
The Clingman's Dome area was covered with all kinds of spruce trees. Then in the 60's the pine borers took over and devastated the area. The last time I was there it was awful, but that was a really long time ago. How is it looking nowadays. The borer was one of those National Park Dilemmas where they couldn't treat for the borer without breaking the sanctuary laws. Just like the boars that eat up huge areas. My philosophy, if an 'exotic' to the park is that destructive, get rid of it.

Seems I've been on Clingman's Dome at least once a decade since the 60's, just often enough so the ongoing devastation of not only the spruce but the Fraser firs and hemlock, some maybe 500 years old is very evident. Also depressing is much of the Smoky Mtn. "smoke" visible from the peaks is air pollution.
 
They say that paved trails are harder than natural ones, and I think I agree. That is a long, steep, paved one.
You can take the really long paved trail that starts in the park, The Blue Ridge Parkway, and have some beautiful views. This is where we turn around when my husband and I ride up there on his motorcycle.

 
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