We will be doing an extended tour for the next few weeks of back country areas as well as some of the most popular attractions.
Keep your eyes open for the Your Smokies and say hi when you see us!
We are the official news source of Your Smokies in the Great Smoky Mountains of North Carolina and Tennessee. In the Smokies you can find peace and solitude in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park or excitement in Pigeon Forge and Asheville. Your Smokies has the best Smokies News and Information.
We will be doing an extended tour for the next few weeks of back country areas as well as some of the most popular attractions.
Keep your eyes open for the Your Smokies and say hi when you see us!
The Great Smoky Mountains National Park is under attack from aliens! These tiny unwanted aliens can cause major devastation to not only the plant life in the Smokies National Park but can destroy animals and fish as well.
About 15 years after Orson Welles famous radio broadcast in 1938 where Martians were taking over earth in a War of the Worlds, a real invasion of an alien creature from Asia was found in the South Eastern United States near Richmond Virginia.
Just as deadly as the fictitious Martians were to man, the woolly adelgid insect is to hemlocks. This unwelcome guest feeds variously on the base of hemlock needles which cases a prolonged starvation to the tree which will ultimately die in as long as 10 years from the initial infestation to a short as 3 years.
Since the Hemlock is such a key component in the natural balance of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park and the hemlock trees that reside in the national park have no resistance to the woolly adelgid, what the hemlocks need right now is a super hero to save the day.
Who is that super hero? What can you do to help? Learn about the Hemlock woolly adelgid infestation and what is being done.
The Hemlock woolly adelgid infestation of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park is no laughing matter and we desperately need your help.
Less than a month is left for the public to comment on the Great Smoky Mountain National Park Environmental Assessment of the proposed Roaring Fork Road Project. If green lighted the project would begin sometime between 2009 - 2010 and may cause some closures of this popular motor trail in the national Park.
The Roaring Fork area of the Smoky Mountain National Park borders Gatlinburg Tennessee and is not accessible with any other roads from within the national park but contains key trailheads including one of the better trails going to the peak of Mt Le Conte. There are also trailhead to 2 popular wonderful waterfalls - rainbow falls and Grotto falls and a collection of beautiful historic buildings.
The Roaring Fork Section of the park has a beautiful 9 mile one way drive that is far less traveled that the Cades Cove Loop trail, but goes through a much denser wooded section that Cades Cove which includes some old growth forest, has a spectacular mountain vista view from one of the pull offs, and a fantastic collection of historic cabins and small buildings.
The winding barrow road crosses some small bridges and towards the end of the trail some steep drop offs to the right with a river running alongside the road. In bad weather this road can be quiet hazardous if one is not driving with extreme caution and thus the National Park Service is looking to repair and expand the existing road.
The agenda of the Roaring Fork Road Project is:
This project has been estimated at $9.8 million and is fortunately a joint effort between both the National Park Service as well as the Federal Highway Administration. Both organizations are also responsible for the Environmental Assessment.
While the Park service is hoping to facilitate as much of the road improvements to the Motor trail during off-peak months that is possible it is expected that this popular motor trail and some of the adjuring areas in this section of the park may be closed during busier months that would normally receive a high volume of visitors.
According to Park Superintendent Dale Ditmanson he commented "The basic character of the road will not be changed. It will remain a narrow, low-speed byway which provides visitors with an intimate forest experience as close to a hike as you can have in your vehicle. Vehicles larger than passenger vans and those pulling trailers will continue to be barred from the Roaring Fork Motor Nature Trail."
You can obtain printed copies of the Roaring Fork Road Project Environmental Assessment at the Great Smoky Mountains National Park Sugarlands Visitors Center or in Gatlinburg TN at the Anna Porter Public Library and clicking here for more information in a PDF version.
The Environmental Assessment outlines the work, the proposed mitigation measures that the Park Service would have to take in order to minimize the impact on the Smoky Mountains Park's natural and cultural resources and you - it visitors.
The EA describes how the various alternative actions including the Smoky Mountains Park's preferred alternative and what each of their potential environmental impacts might be which is in accordance with requirements of the National Environmental Policy.
Any comment you wish to make to the National Park Service in regard to the Roaring Fork Road Project Environmental Assessment must be done so the NPS receives it at or before February 5, 2007. Comments can be made via email or regular mail to:
Superintendent
Great Smoky Mountains National Park,
107 Park Headquarters Road.
Gatlinburg, TN 37738
Email:grsmcomments@nps.gov
Hikers and outdoor enthusiasts very often have libraries filled with books and maps of areas that they are looking to explore on their upcoming excursions. Here is an opportunity to get one definitive book on all of the trails of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park.
The Day hikers guide to all the trails in the Smoky Mountains by Elizabeth L Etnier shows you in great detail the most efficient way to explore all 800 miles of hiking trails in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park.
Chock full of accurate trail descriptions, charts, tables, color photographs, detailed maps, a hiking trail index, checklist of trails in the Great Smoky Mountain National park you hiked with mileage and more in a handy sized wire bound book - this guide has it all.
You will even finds descriptions of wildlife and wildflowers in this hiking guide for the national park.
You can find out more about The Day hikers guide to all the trails in the Smoky Mountains by Elizabeth L Etnier here.