Wednesday, November 25, 2015

Guided Hikes Friday in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park.

This Friday, November 27th the Great Smoky Mountains National Park (#GSMNP) is offering park visitors to chance join 3 different ranger led hikes, 2 of which are in Tennessee, Elkmont and Cades Cove and the third in Little Cataloochee North Carolina.

The guided hikes with Rangers, park volunteers, and Friends of the Smokies staff are all free and allow visitors to learn discover and learn about special cultural and natural resources along the hikes.

Beside the guided hikes offered, there are more than 800 miles of other hiking trails in the GSMNP as well as short nature walks that most everyone can take advance of. There are only 2 trails in the park where dogs are allowed, the Gatlinburg Hiking Trail and the Oconaluftee River Hiking Trail. Plan to hike elsewhere? Please leave the dog at home while you are hiking.

If you plan on hiking on any of the guided hikes be sure to wear comfortable but sturdy shoes, dress in layers and bring along enough food and water for everyone in your group.

All of the guided hikes are subject to cancellation in bad weather.

Hike #1: Hike to Abrams Falls in Cades Cove Tennessee

Take a 5-mile 4 hour moderate hike with several steep, rocky sections to one of the largest waterfalls in the Great Smoky Mountains national park in the back end of Cades Cove.

Meet at the Abrams Falls trailhead, halfway around the Cades Cove Loop Road at 10:00 am. Expect to enter the Cades Cove area by 9:00am to be there on time. For more information, call Cades Cove at (865)448-4104.

Hike #2: Hike to Cucumber Gap Trail in Elkmont Tennessee

Enjoy an easy 4.8-mile, 4 mile round-trip hike along the Little River and a beautiful, cove hardwood forest. A small creek crossing may be required (a hiking pole will help).

Meet at the Little River trailhead at 9:00 am which is the back of Elkmont 7 miles west of Sugarlands Visitor Center. For more information, call Sugarlands Visitor Center at (865)436-1291.

Hike #3: Hike Little Cataloochee near Cataloochee North Carolina

Learn about history and nature on a moderate 5-mile, round-trip hike on the Little Cataloochee Trail and see the Hannah cabin, the Little Cataloochee Church and cemetery, and the Cook cabin as well several former homesites along the way.

Meet with the ranger first by 10:00 am in the information parking area on the left just after entering Cataloochee Valley where the road becomes level. If you go past the Campgrounds you went a little too far. From this location you will follow the ranger to the trailhead.

The best route into Cataloochee is Cove Creek Road which is accessible from Hwy. 276 near its intersection with Interstate 40. Participants driving to the area on I-40 should use Exit 20 (Hwy. 276 exit) and immediately turn right on to Cove Creek Road. The drive from Hwy. 276 into Cataloochee is 10 miles. Cove Creek Road is a winding, two-lane road and includes a four-mile section that is unpaved. For more information, call the Oconaluftee Visitor Center at (828)497-1904.

"I hope you have the chance to Find Your Park over the Thanksgiving holiday," said Superintendent Cassius Cash. "The park offers the perfect place to take a stroll with your family or find a quiet place for reflection. I encourage you to spend some time in your park and am thankful for our dedicated staff, volunteers, and partners for making these special hiking opportunities available."

Wednesday, September 16, 2015

GSMNP Celebrates Fall Harvest with Annual Mountain Life Festival in the Smokies

Every year at mid September the Great Smoky Mountains National Park (GSMNP) hosts the annual Mountain Life Festival at the Mountain Farm Museum adjacent to the Oconaluftee Visitor Center near Cherokee North Carolina This year this popular program will be taking place on Saturday, September 19th, from 10:00 am to 4:00 pm.

This Mountain Life Festival helps preserve the legacy of Appalachian folkways and is meant to be a tribute to the people of European heritage who moved after their land was purchased in order to create the Great Smoky Mountains national park. The event is suitable for all ages and the activities are free.

Besides there being artifacts and historic photographs from the national park’s collection on display, this living history event will include demonstrations on old fashioned life skills such as blacksmithing, lye soap making, food preservation, hearth cooking, apple butter making, and chair bottoming. There will be a music jam session too from 1:00 to 3:00 pm.

One of the highlights of the Mountain Life Festival has been taking place for more than 30 years. The sorghum syrup demonstration, shows how with the use of a horse powered cane mill and a wood-fired cooker syrup is made much the same way it was produced a hundred or more years ago.

For the first time ever the Great Smoky Mountains Association (GSMA) which helps support the park is launching the new Mountain Farm Museum audio tour with free handsets available to visitors and members. There audio tour devices will be distributed for use on a first come first serve basis.

The location where the event take place right of Newfound Gap Road US411 has pretty vistas, a small working farm area with numerous historical structures and a hiking trail along the river which si one of the few places in the GSMNP where you can hike with your dog.

The farm area also contains one of the satellite herds of North American Elk in the Smokies introduced into the area in 2001. Since this is Rut season, male elk are especially active and aggressive so you must keep your distance from them for their safety as well as your own.

Enjoy a Star Gazing Event Saturday Night in Cades Cove GSMNP

You know fall is just around the corner when it is time for the annual Great Smoky Mountains national park (GSMNP) star gazing event in Cades Cove.

One of the great things about our beloved national park besides the beautiful scenery, numerous cultural resources and peace and quiet is the fact that there are spots in the park with virtually no light pollution so you can see fainter celestial objects possible better than you have ever seen them before.

Because of their bowl like geography which blocks out light pollution from nearby towns and roads, 2 areas of the Great Smoky Mountains national park, Cades Cove in Tennessee and the Cataloochee Valley in North Carolina give stargazers to chance to see faint objects like the Milky Way very clearly on a clear night.

This Saturday, September 19th 2015 beginning at 7:30 pm there will be a 2-1/2 hour stargazing event taking place in Cades Cove presented by the Great Smoky Mountains National Park with help from the Smoky Mountains Astronomical Society.

As long as the weather is good for viewing, this program will take place on the first field on the right hand side as you enter the Cades Cove Loop. You will park your car near the orientation shelter at the start of the loop, or in the overflow parking area by the Cades Cove Riding stables.

You should come to the star gazing event in Cades Cove with warm clothes, a flashlight, a blanket or lawn chair along with any drinks or snacks you may want. Whatever you bring you will need to be able to carry it at least 1/3rd of a mile. Since parking is limited, carpooling is strongly advised.

When you arrive in the field, there will be numerous telescopes set up which you are allowed to use after a demonstration and lecture that is fun for all ages about the night sky. According to GSMNP Park Ranger Mike Maslona "People will be amazed at the vast depths of this planetary world and all that they can see in the complete darkness. This program mixes astronomy, legends, and the beauty of the stars to create a worthwhile exploration into the wonders of the heavens."

If the weather is such that there is a heavy cloud cover or possible rain the star gazing event is subject to postponement. To confirm that the program will take place, call (865)448-4104 on Saturday.

Tuesday, June 23, 2015

Tragic Story of a 16 Year Old Camper, 2 Bear and the Great Smoky Mountains National Park Continues.

In a very sad turn of events, DNA evidence has confirmed that the bear that was trapped and destroyed by Great Smoky Mountains National Park (GSMNP) rangers was in fact not the black bear that attacked and mauled a 16 year old camper.

This does not mean that the rangers in the field did anything wrong by destroying the bear that was not responsible for the attack. They made the best decision possible based upon the facts at hand at that minute and as you will see later, had no other choice.

This tragic story started at around 10:30 on the night of June 6th 2015 when 16 year old Gabriel Alexander from Ohio was attacked by a black bear while he was sleeping near his father Greg Alexander in backcountry campsite 84 in the Hazel Creek North Carolina area of the Great Smoky Mountains national park.

Gabriel suffered significant injuries from the attack and spent 5 days in Mission Hospital in Asheville NC. The amazing story including the heroic struggle he and his father had after the attack can be read about here.

At daybreak on June 7th 2015 National Park Rangers entered the Hazel Creek area by boat and started closing campsite 84 as well as all of the surrounding campsites and hiking trails since a dangerous bear was in the area.

Rangers and wildlife officers worked on gathering as much forensic evidence as possible while they were retrieving personal belongings left at the site.

While doing so they found drag marks made by the bear as it dragged Gabriel as well as blood, saliva and hair from the bear and blood and hair from the victim.

Rangers from the GSMNP set up a culvert trap (similar to the photograph below) which is a metal tube with a sliding door in order to trap the offending bear if it came back.

On June 8th just before sunset park wildlife biologists encountered a bear that was suspected in the attack near campsite 84 and shot at it a number of times.

The bear ran off after being shot at and the wildlife rangers were unable to successfully track the potentially wounded bear. The problems they encountered when attempting to track the bear included that fact it was getting dark and that a severe thunderstorm with heavy rainfall was taking place.

Upon returning to campsite 84 on the morning of June 9th, 2015, rangers found a bear caught in the trap they set on June 7th. The trapped bear was tranquilized and following that euthanized with an injection of Potassium Chloride.

The captured male bear was examined and did not show any signs of a recent bullet wound. After DNA samples were taken from the dead bear it was ”recycled” into the forest, the same way most other wildlife carcasses are in the GSMNP.

Since so much was at stake and there was no way to know if they destroyed the right bear until DNA the evidence comes back from the lab proving it, wildlife rangers had to continue searching the area for any other aggressive bear as well as looking for any bear that they may have shot.

During the 9th while searching the area, a spent bullet from a rifle with bear hair still on it was found. It was collected and sent to the same lab as the other DNA samples.

How a bullet was found without specifically looking with a metal detector, especially after there was a "severe thunderstorm with heavy rainfall" which should have washed away most any blood trail is beyond me.

On June 9th the Great Smoky Mountains national park spokesperson released an official statement saying that rangers have trapped and then euthanized a bear that morning and that DNA samples were sent to the lab to determine if it was the correct bear. No mention was ever made of another bear being shot at or a bullet with bear hair on it was found.

The DNA samples sent out were analyzed by the Northeast Wildlife DNA Laboratory which is part of the East Stroudsburg University in Pennsylvania which uses genotyping equipment that is maintained in a controlled and secure environment.

This lab provides services for both forensics and research of wildlife populations. The lab is able to determine accurately and in a very timely manner among other things such as species and sex variations between DNA samples or lack of variations proving that 2 or more DNA samples are from the same animal or not.

Based upon DNA samples collected from the scene of the attack, the euthanized bear and the bullet which struck and injured a bear, the following has been determined.

  1. The bear responsible for the attack was a male.
  2. The bear trapped and euthanized (male) is not the bear responsible for the attack.
  3. The bear rangers shot that got away (male) may be responsible for the attack.

According to the Northeast Wildlife DNA Laboratory, there was an insufficient sample size of bear DNA from the bullet to make an exact determination if it was in fact it was DNA from the bear that attacked the camper. They did give an estimation that the bear that was shot is a 65% match to the attacking bear.

Officially ”While it is likely that the bear shot was the same involved in the attack, it cannot be confirmed without a better DNA sample”. Considering bear populations in the Hazel Creek area would not have as diverse a genetic makeup as humans that would populate an area of that size, a 65% determination as to a ”match” for a bear is not as positive as it sounds as if it was a human.

Wildlife biologists for the GSMNP are taking the stance that they believe that the bear that they shot is likely dead. They believe this as there has been no additional bear activity at campsite 84 since June 8 despite ”extensive search efforts”.

Bear in mind that the park service does not use tracking or cadaver dogs when it comes to wildlife issues or wildlife management such as hunting for invasive species. Scientists with specially trained dogs are no longer granted permits to search for panther in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park which was allowed for years.

Also bear in mind that the normal home range for a male black bear is from 8 to 60 square miles, some range as many as 100 square miles. Obviously a single campsite in the forest is a minuscule part of the the normal range of a black bear and a being shot at and injured could force a bear to move elsewhere possibly outside its normal territorial range.

Temporary closures still remain in effect for backcountry sites in the area as well as all the surrounding hiking trails. Great Smoky Mountains national park wildlife officers are still searching and investigating and Park Managers will assess later this week whether it would be "reasonably safe" to end the closures.

The GSMNP announced the DNA results on June 23rd and stated the ability of using DNA was ”the first time in the history of managing bear populations in the park where wildlife biologists have had access to a lab willing and capable of processing DNA samples in a timely enough manner to be of use in a bear attack case”. This is a huge leap forward in public safety.

”Due to the extreme seriousness of the bear attack and threat to human safety, we responded swiftly to secure the safety of hikers in the backcountry,” said Great Smoky Mountains National Park Superintendent Cassius Cash. ”Though extremely rare and regrettable, we recognize that an uninvolved bear was euthanized through this process and we will be examining new procedures that may allow us to quickly use DNA analysis to correctly identify bears responsible for predatory attacks in the future.”

What does it all mean?

1) Not even the bear attack victim wanted to have any bear destroyed. He acknowledged it had to be done to the offending bear in order to protect other humans. The fact that the wrong bear was put down is sad, but mistakes are made and we should be glad to know with certainty when either the right or the wrong animals is destroyed.

With circumstantial evidence, if we can draw fast conclusions without cold hard indisputable facts, we are going to make mistakes. This time it was a bears life. It could have been a humans if we got the wrong bear and thought the area was safe.

2) Even skilled marksman that shoots at wildlife for a living can miss putting down a large target with a rifle - with more than one shot. Remember this when someone wants to ”protect you from wildlife” with a small caliber handgun rather than a can of bear spray.

3) You can do everything right as these campers did in the backcountry and yet something can go horribly wrong. If both campers had bear spray, the injuries may have been lessened. If the campers used a portable electric fence designed for camping, the bear would have never made contact with either camper.

4) Dogs need to be used more often in situations such as this. If the bear that was shot was in fact killed or wounded, a trained dog would have found it. I have some doubts as to if the bear is dead for sure unless there are more facts that were not released.

5) Numerous suggestions have been made that the trapped bear and future suspected offenders should have been held in some form of captivity until it was proven whether it was the bear that attacked someone or not. While good intentioned this is not something that will work for a few reasons:

  • Not all offending animals will end up being captured live.
  • There are no facilities in the park to hold wildlife for days or even weeks.
  • Even if such a faculty is made, how do you release an animal held and fed by humans back into the world without them acclimated to humans?
    Presently captured problem bears are purposely harassed humanly for up to hours (not physically) so that when they are released they avoid humans.

6) In 2013 hunters in North Carolina killed 2,991 black bear. So far for 2015 the Great Smoky Mountains national park can confirm 2 bear were killed by the park and they believe another was killed as well. I think these numbers speak for themselves.

7) A bear was shot at and hit was left out of previous reports and conversations prior to the release of the DNA results. Press releases are exempt from guidelines for quality and accuracy required for organizational, natural, cultural resource and budget information as laid out in DIRECTOR’S ORDER #11B: Information Quality – Ensuring Objectivity, Utility, and Integrity of Information Used and Disseminated by the National Park Service. If you think this is wrong, you are not alone.

This story will be continue to be updated.
Last updated on 6/24/2105 11:42am with a new timeline

Black Bear information for the Great Smoky Mountains National Park

Camping Conditions, Bear Warnings and Bear Closures in the GSMNP

Hiking Conditions, Bear Warnings and Bear Closures on GSMNP Trails

Great Smoky Mountains National Park Official Statements

Recent Bear attacks in Great Smoky Mountains National Park

Monday, June 08, 2015

Body of Missing Off Trail Hiker Found in Greenbrier area of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park

Search teams found a body in the Great Smoky Mountains national park this morning at around 9:30am matching the description and believed to be that of avid 62 year old hiker Jenny Bennett who lived in Sylva North Carolina and according to her family has been missing since at least June 1st 2015.

Numerous people noticed her car sitting alone at the Porters Creek Trailhead parking area which was confirmed by rangers last night at around 7:53pm. Being too late to start a search, an area wide search went underway first thing this morning involving trained man trackers from the national park and other agencies with the aid of dogs.

The search ended when they found what ranger believe to be hiker Jenny Bennett’s body in an off trail area of Lester Prong in Greenbrier about a mile south and above backcountry campsite 31 at the end of the Porters Creek. Foul play is not suspected at this time.

Many other hikers have been lost or stranded in the same general area in the past, most notably GSMNP Backcountry Park Volunteer 70 year old hiker Albert Morgan Briggs who spent almost a week stranded atop Porters Mountain.

Exact details are still sketchy as to when she started her ill fated hike, but what is known is that her car was parked at the Porters Creek Parking area since at least the night before last. When Jenny Bennett decided to get in one more solo off trail hike in the Great Smoky Mountains national park before moving to Vermont is anyone’s guess at this point.

What is known is she was supposed to move to Vermont on June 1st and when movers arrived at her residence in Sylva, she was nowhere to be found.

Jenny Bennett’s brother Peter Bennett had no idea that she was missing until Saturday June 6 when he received a call from her landlord in Sylva who told him that her belongings were still in the house in Sylva, some of which were never packed.

He then reported her absence as well as the fact Jenny was an avid hiker and a member of the Smoky Mountain Hiking Club to a Jackson County Sheriff deputy who told him that they were going to treat this as a missing person case and start searching for her car.

Peter Bennett went on to tell the deputy that she was probably up one of the trails in the area. The Sheriff's department told him they were going to follow up and search the trail heads for her car.

Her brother Peter expecting the best assumed he would hear back from the Sheriff’s department with a few hours, but by the end of the day he had not heard back and became more concerned prompting him to email the Smoky Mountain Hiking Club.

The next day on June 7th at 10:36am Peter Bennett posted a missing persons report on the Go Smokies blog which eventually made its way around Facebook as well. National Park Officials we also notified the on June 7th that Bennett was missing as far back as Saturday May 30 and possibly in the park.

The park service had no recent backcountry permits on file for Jenny Bennett, nor was her parked cars license plate run the system to see if she had an active backcountry permit while it sat in the parking area for at least 1 day prior to it being reported missing.

Not only was Jenny Bennett an avid off trail hiker in the Smokies, she was a writer as well. She produced 2 books Murder at the Jumpoff and the latest being The Twelve Streams of LeConte as well as a blogger writing on treamsandforests.wordpress.com

   

More information to follow...

Sunday, June 07, 2015

Black Bear Attacks Camper in Great Smoky Mountains National Park

Unprovoked black bear attacks in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park (GSMNP) are very rare, especially when the person who was attacked was so even though they were following all the recommended black bear safety rules.

Unfortunately for a 16 year old boy Gabriel Alexander from Ohio camping with his father Greg Alexander in a primitive backcountry campsite in the Hazel Creek area of the Great Smoky Mountains national park, rare doesn’t mean never.

The site where the ”bear incident” occurred is backcountry campsite 84 also known as Sugar Fork which has a capacity of 6 campers and is located 4.5 miles North from the shoreline of Fontana Lake near Hazel Creek in North Carolina.

At around 10:30 last night the black bear attack in the GSMNP occurred as the son Gabriel Alexander was sleeping in his hammock and his father Greg, the only other camper in the campsite, was sleeping in his own hammock about 10 feet away.

Awakened from a deep sleep by intense pain in his scalp, the bear attack victim never knew what was attacking him and thought perhaps it was a dog. He received multiple serious injuries including severe lacerations to his head as the bear violently pulled him from his hammock and dragged him screaming in the campsite toward the bushes.

While Gabriel Alexander was being attacked by the bear, his father woke up when he heard his son screaming for help. There was just enough moonlight so he could see the bear was dragging his son across the ground by his head.

Barefoot, Gregg tried kicking the bear which had no effect on him. He then jumped on the bears back and started punching the bear in the face at which point the bear finally let go of Gabriel. The bear then backed off a few paces and then moved again towards father and son. Being hit hard at least once with a rock thrown by the father the bear finally moved further away but could be heard circling the two in the brush.

After being attacked and injured by the black bear, the victim and his father quickly packed a few things and bravely hiked the approximately 3-1/2 miles in the dark down the Hazel Creek Hiking Trail to the next backcountry campsite number 86 where they were lucky enough to find campers that had a boat at shore of the lake close by.

After the Father Greg, son Gabriel and other campers made it down to shore, they took a boat ride in the dark across Fontana Lake to the Cable Cove boat dock where Graham County Rescue EMS transported them at about 3:00 am to a landing zone where they were then flown by Mountain Area Medical Airlift to Mission Hospital in Asheville NC.

The 16 year old victim remained conscious throughout the entire bear attack and remains in the ICU at Mission Hospital where he is in stable condition at this time and was able to get up and walk around Monday afternoon.

The father and his son were hiking and camping for days and had already completed 40 miles into what was going to be a 50-mile backpacking trip. All of their food, equipment and packs were correctly stored by being hung up on bear safe aerial food storage cables so as not to attract wildlife to an easy meal.

Proper storage of food, trash and camping items great reduces the number and severity bear encounters if bear cannot receive any rewards of human food. While you may do everything correctly during your stay in a campsite, bear or other wildlife may be habituated by other less careful campers before your arrival.

Though there were other issues in the past year in that area, there were no prior black bear problems reported in the past few days at that backcountry site or at ones close by promoting any sort of warning. There have been black bear issues above that campsite at the Derrick Knob Shelter on the Appalachian Trail which may be related to the same bear.

There are reports that in the same campsite last fall, a black bear grabbed a chunk of an air mattress from underneath a camper. Other campers have claimed at around the same time they had water bottles clawed at in Bone Valley, and a bottle of liquid soap with a strong scent was bitten into at Hazel Creek.

Park rangers and wildlife biologists used boats and then have hiked into the campsite where the bear attack occurred as well as surrounding campsites to investigate the attack and clear the area of other campers and hikers until it is safe again for public use.

If they can determine which of the parks many black bears initiated the attack, the animal will be destroyed. Due to extensive forensic evidence collected, if the bear is found in short period of time, national park officials can be sure they did in fact get the right animal or not after the bears necropsy.

Even though Gabriel, a straight-A student, track athlete and member of the marching band at his high school went through a terrible ordeal due to the aggression of this a predatory bear, he expressed mixed feelings about the national parks protocol to put down such an animal. While he did not want the bear to have to be euthanized, he also did not want anyone else to go through what he has.

For now the following backcountry campsites are closed: 82, 83, 84, 85, 86, and 88 and the following hiking trails are closed to all use until further notice: Bone Valley Trail, Cold Spring Gap Trail, Hazel Creek Trail and Jenkins Ridge Trail. As a precaution Derrick Knob shelter along the Appalachian Trail has also been closed to camping and there is a park representative there right now.

Our new park superintendent Cassius Cash stated ”While incidents with bears are rare, we ask park visitors to take necessary precautions while hiking in bear country and comply with all backcountry closures,” and went on to say ”The safety of our visitors is our number one priority.”

Other recent bear attacks that occurred around the United States this month were a 55 year old hunter in New Mexico who suffered deep flesh wounds from scratches on his chest and a bite to his leg by a black bear who was startled by him, and 2 people camping in Colorado who were bitten by a bear one of which was first tackled by a bear which then started biting a him in the back of the neck and head.

Black Bear information for the Great Smoky Mountains National Park

Camping Conditions, Bear Warnings and Bear Closures in the GSMNP

Hiking Conditions, Bear Warnings and Bear Closures on GSMNP Trails

Great Smoky Mountains National Park Official Statements

Recent Bear attacks in Great Smoky Mountains National Park

Update 6/7/2015 7:43 pm
At 7:32 this evening there was a report made of numerous people being chased by an aggressive black bear, one of which was a women claiming she was chased for a mile on the popular Laurel Falls Hiking Trail between the Sugarlands and Elkmont.

This hiking trail is already under an aggressive Bear Warning as well as Mount LeConte.

Update 6/9/2015 1:43 pm
It is believed that the bear that attacked Gabriel Alexander has been captured by park service personnel. We are awaiting positive identification at this time.

Update 6/9/2015 5:38 pm
Official park statement in regard to the bear captured this morning:

This morning, we captured, tranquilized, and humanely euthanized a male bear with potassium chloride at Campsite 84. Based on our experience and training, the bear exhibited the behavior pattern we expected. It returned directly to the site, within feet of where Alexander's hammock was strung. Due to the seriousness of the attack, our staff acted swiftly and did not take any chances.

We have collected bear hair and blood samples from the night of the attack and also this bear. Samples have been sent to the lab for DNA analysis and we expect that report to come back within a couple of weeks.

The trails and campsites will remain closed. There is always a chance that we did not get the right bear and human safety is our number one concern. Our staff remains on scene to continuing monitoring the site for bear activity.

Dana Soehn
Great Smoky Mountains National Park
Management Assistant/Public Affairs

Update 6/9/2015 8:12 pm
Hopes are that Gabriel can leave the hospital and head back home to Ohio on Wednesday where after some plastic surgery he is expected to make a full recovery. The bear attack left him with deep gashes on his scalp and face and a wound near his mouth.

Update 6/23/2105 9:04 pm
DNA proves bear euthanized was innocent and another bear was shot.

Friday, May 29, 2015

Great Smoky Mountains Firefly Show Already in Full Swing in the National Park.

Who doesn’t love fireflies? Young and old alike love to see them flash in the night and the best place in the United States to see fireflies is in the Great Smoky Mountains. Even though the official synchronous firefly event in the Great Smoky Mountains national park does not take place unit next week, the lightning bugs are already putting on an exceptional show already that you won’t want to miss!

Just a few minutes before dusk you will start to see some of the synchronous fireflies start to flash. As it gets even darker the number of fireflies increase at which point they appear to synchronize as well.

Best synchronous firefly shows seem to be on an evening after a light rain in the afternoon and when it is not raining right before or at dusk.

The firefly show will be in places tonight such as in Elkmont, Tremont, Metcalf Bottoms and the Cherokee Orchard / Roaring Fork outside of Gatlinburg Tennessee. There are slightly less active fireflies in Cades Cove right now but that should pick up throughout the week.

Before you get any ideas, both the Elkmont and the Cades Cove campgrounds are booked solid.

Wherever you go to enjoy the fireflies in the Smokies, think safety first. Keep out of roadways, beware of areas with step drop offs, and keep kids under control at all times.

Since turning on any light source such as flashlights, or using a cell phone creates enough light to stop the light show and reduce your night vision be extra careful not to trip over roots and rocks that may be hard to see in the dark. Lights also annoy the heck out of others as well.

This is a fairly buggy year and since you will be fairly close to water where there are always more insects, bring along some bug spray.

The safest way to see the fireflies is during the official GSMNP firefly program, but with such a limited number of tickets, many won’t have the opportunity to enjoy it this way and in order to see our special Smokies firefly, may need to be more adventurous.

Synchronized Fireflies in the Great Smoky Mountains

Monday, May 04, 2015

Perfect Location to See the Special Smokies Fireflies and Help a Great Cause at the Same Time!

Every spring the hottest ticket in the Great Smoky Mountains is to get the trolley passes to see the synchronous firefly event in the Elkmont area of the National Park. This tickets area hard to come by since they are limited and sellout quickly.

If you do take the trolley to the event, you get to wait on lines before you go, deal with about 1,000 people a night milling around on the Little River Hiking Trail, and then wait even longer on line to take the shuttle bus back to the Sugarlands Parking are where you left your car.

How would you like to enjoy this amazing natural display of synchronized bioluminescence in a place with ample parking, no crowds, and access to a true firefly expert after enjoying some heavy hors d'oeuvres and drinks in the exclusive Norton Creek Sanctuary which borders the Great Smoky Mountains National Park (GSMNP)?

What we feel is the most important nonprofit doing research in our national park and beyond: Discover Life in America will be hosting this fundraising event and there are a few spots left for the nights of June 5th or 7th!

Your purchase of tickets being sold to the Discover Life in America Synchronous Firefly fundraising event at $100 each help support groundbreaking discoveries made in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park where this organization help find 8,095 new species that reside in the GSMNP and 951 new species to science!

You are not helping what we feel is the most important biological study to take place in the national park, you are sure to have the best Smoky Mountains synchronized firefly experience possible!

For reservations or more information, e-mail Todd Witcher at todd@dlia.org or call (865)430-4757.

Synchronized Fireflies in the Great Smoky Mountains

31st Annual Tourism Week Event takes place today in the GSMNP

A "tourist family of the day" will be picked out this morning at the Sugarlands visitor center to help kick off Annual Tourism Week sponsored by the Smoky Mountain Tourism and Development Council. This family will be part of the celebration taking place at 11:30am on the front lawn of the Great Smoky Mountains national park (GSMNP) headquarters in Sugarlands Tennessee.

Jimbo Whaley, a singer and songwriter who traces his family roots to land which is now part of the Great Smoky Mountains national park and will be the emcee of the GSMNP event honoring Dana Soehn as the Park's 2014 "Employee of the Year".

The co-hosts of this event include: Smoky Mountains Tourism Development Council, Gatlinburg Department of Tourism, Pigeon Forge Department of Tourism, Sevierville Chamber of Commerce, Blount County Partnership, and the Cocke County Partnership.

Friday, April 24, 2015

Synchronous Fireflies in the Great Smoky Mountains in June 2015

One of the most anticipated events that takes place in the Great Smoky Mountains national park is when the Synchronous Fireflies also known as lightning bugs, emerge from underground and converge in huge numbers appearing to synchronize their flashes with one another for mating purposes.

This event has become so popular that the National park service had to arrange to have shuttle buses (actually trolleys) for parking and safety reasons bring visitors to where they can be seen best and crowds would be the safest - Elkmont Tennessee.

This year the 2015 firefly event will take place from June 2nd 2015 to June 9th and the firefly event tickets will start going on sale April 30th 2015 for $1 per person and parking passes will be $1.50 per vehicle.

For more information about the fireflies in the Smokies, reservations and how to obtain a permit in order to film the firefly event, visit this Fireflies in the Smokies page.

Synchronized Fireflies in the Great Smoky Mountains

Saturday, January 31, 2015

Schedule for Day 8 of Wilderness Wildlife Week 2015 in Pigeon Forge Tennessee Smokies

Hard to believe that the last day of the Pigeon Forge Wilderness Wildlife Week in the Winter is already here under yet another day of snow capped peaks and road closures in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park.

The good news is that the few road closures that are still active this morning as well as the weather in the Smokies will not impact any more of the guided hikes and tours and are more of an inconvenience to anyone want to go over the mountain via Newfound Gap Road US441.

Due to 2 small snow storms that rushed through the area, there is still about 5 inches of snow at Newfound Gap and sunrise happening right now over LeConte is a stunning sight. Cades Cove even tomorrow will be post card perfect looking up at Gregory Bald.

There have been hundreds of programs that have already taken place this year at Wilderness Wildlife Week and some programs with local wildlife and nature experts such as Kim Delozier and Warren Bielenberg and performers such as Boogertown Gap have again become attendees favorites.

Even though some other hikes were canceled due to conditions, Warren Bielenberg led three morning bird walks along the Little Pigeon River near the Leconte Center in which he and attendees observed more than 25 bird species each morning and had a cumulative number of 33 species!

Some of the best programs to attend today are the early morning Photography Workshop, A Year in the Life of a Bear by David Whitehead and Southern Fly Fishing by Jon Hopper.

Sat, January 31th 2015 Wilderness Wildlife Week Schedule

  • 9 to 9:45am: SOUTHERN TROUT FLY FISHING FAIR! NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Fly Fishing 101. Presented by Dave Carson. Taking place in the South Multi-Purpose Room 2.
     
  • 9 to 10am: Discovering the Cumberlands Video Presentation. Presented by Stuart Carroll. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 2.
     
  • 9 to 1pm: Photography Workshop. Presented by Warren Bedell, Kendall Chiles and Don McGowan. A YourSmokies favorite! Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall B.
     
  • 9 to 1pm: Special Hours for Photo Contest in Taking place in the LeConte Hall North.
     
  • 9:30 to 10:30am: Digital Printing Made Easy. Presented by Douglas Hubbard. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 1.
     
  • 9:30 to 10:30am: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Yellowstone in Winter: A Photo Tour of Our First National Park Video Presentation. Presented by Jerry Whaley. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall C.
     
  • 9:30 to 11:30am: LIMITED SPACE! Design Your Own Wilderness Wildlife Week Bandana. Presented by Louise Bales. Limit to 20 people ages 12+ who will join Louise as she teaches them how to design their own Wilderness Wildlife Week 25th Anniversary commemorative bandana. Taking place in the Bob Kolb Memorial Room.
     
  • 10 to 11am: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Eat or Be Eaten: How Animals Protect Themselves. Presented by Kris Light. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall A.
     
  • 10 to 11am: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! LIMITED SPACE! Make a Grapevine Dreamcatcher. Presented by Sue Todd. Limited to 10 people ages 15+. Taking place in the Bob Hatcher Memorial Room.
     
  • 10 to 10:45am: SOUTHERN TROUT FLY FISHING FAIR! NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! South Holston River Trout. Presented by Jon Hopper. Taking place in the South Multi-Purpose Room 2.
     
  • 10:30 to 12:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! LIMITED SPACE! Learn How to Scan and Digitalize Old Photographs or Negatives/Slides. Presented by Bob Keim. Limit 8, bring some pictures/slides. Should have computer knowledge. Taking place in the South Multi-Purpose Room 1.
     
  • 10:15 to 10:45am: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Waterfalls of Tennessee’s Highland Rim and Cumberland Plateau Regions. Presented by Keith Garnes. Join Keith as he shares an overview of Tennessee’s waterfalls west of GSMNP including Fall Creek Falls, Burgess Falls and numerous others. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 3.
     
  • 11 to 11:30am: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Waterfalls of Tennessee’s Appalachian Corridor. Presented by Keith Garnes. Join Keith as he shares waterfalls from Polk to Johnson Counties, as well as the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 3.
     
  • 11 – Noon: Better Wildflower Pictures. Presented by Bob Stephenson. Join Bob as he provides knowledge on basic camera operation, optics and composition to take excellent flower photos. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 1.
     
  • 11 – Noon: Capturing Wildlife with a Remote Camera. Presented by Joel Zachry. Join Joel as he shares entertaining stories of capturing wildlife on camera. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall C.
     
  • 11 to 11:45am: SOUTHERN TROUT FLY FISHING FAIR! NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Traditional Flies of the Smokies. Presented by Don Kirk. Taking place in the South Multi-Purpose Room 2.
     
  • 11:30 to 1pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! KIDS’ TRACK! LIMITED SPACE! The Red Headed Boogertown Bunch. Presented by Mary Phillips. Limit 30, ages 5-10. Participants join Mary as she continues the Tall Tales of a firefly, a boy named Booger and his faithful cat, Stinker. "Who is your granddaddies uncle’s sister? Where did your red hair come from?" Spin a tall tale and color something totally bewildering. Recognize four new native plants. Curriculum standards apply for science, art and literature. Taking place in the Bob Hatcher Memorial Room.
     
  • Noon to 1pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Acoustics II: Sound and Birds. Presented by Ethan Duke. Join Ethan as he introduces attendees to techniques for recording and methods of using sounds to monitor the natural world. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall A.
     
  • Noon to 1pm: KIDS’ TRACK! LIMITED SPACE! Pioneer and Historical Toys. Presented by Roy Henson. Limited to 20 people ages 10+ who will join Roy as he instructs them on how to make historical style toys pioneers would have had in days gone by. Taking place in the Bob Kolb Memorial Room.
     
  • Noon to 12:45pm: SOUTHERN TROUT FLY FISHING FAIR! NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Cataloochee: The Far East of GSMNP. Presented by Ron Gaddy. Taking place in the South Multi-Purpose Room 2.
     
  • 12:30 to 1:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Wildlife on White: Meet Your Neighbors. Presented by Todd Amacher and Paul Hassell. Join wildlife photographers and MYN contributors Paul and Todd as they come to inspire you with the story of a worldwide photography movement across the globe that connects people with wildlife in their own backyard. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 1.
     
  • 12:30 to 1:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Adventures West. Presented by Pat and Wendell Gordy. Join Pat and Wendell as they share photos and stories from their western U.S. adventure visiting national parks and working and volunteering for the National Elk Refuge and the Greater Yellowstone and Jackson Hole Visitor Center. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 3.
     
  • 12:30 to 1:30pm: Wild Ones Among Us. Presented by Lynne McCoy. Join Lynne as she shares the story of wildlife rehabilitation with live animals as ambassadors, including non-releasable animals and their stories and natural history. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall C.
     
  • 1 to 2pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! HERITAGE! Cades Cove War Veterans. Presented by Dorothy Gregory Sutton. Join Dorothy as she discusses Cades Cove veterans and how war affected Cades Cove and surrounding communities. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 2.
     
  • 1 to 1:45pm: SOUTHERN TROUT FLY FISHING FAIR! NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Fontana Backcountry Trout. Presented by Steve Claxton. Taking place in the South Multi-Purpose Room 2.
     
  • 1:30 to 2:30pm: Range of Light: Capturing the Mood of the Smokies. Presented by Jerry Whaley. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall B.
     
  • 1:30 to 2:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! LIMITED SPACE! Whittle a Mountain Flower. Presented by Jacki Proffitt. Limit to 10 people ages 16+. Participants must bring own sharpened pocket knife. Taking place in the Bob Kolb Memorial Room.
     
  • 1:30 to 2:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! LIMITED SPACE! Carve a Wildlife Stamp. Presented by Pat Thomas. Limit to 12 people ages 12+. Taking place in the Bob Hatcher Memorial Room.
     
  • 1:30 to 2:30pm: Wild Hog Management: Are We Too Late? Presented by David Whitehead. Join David as he discusses the history of the European wild hogs of Tennessee and the Smokies. Questions to be answered include when did they arrive, how did they spread, problems they cause and behaviors. Taking place in the South Multi-Purpose Room 1.
     
  • 2 to 3pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! HERITAGE! The Elkmont Community. Presented by Missy Tipton Green and Paulette Ledbetter. Join Missy and Paulette as they discuss Great Smoky Mountains National Park’s historic Elkmont community along with a special photo presentation. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall A.
     
  • 2 to 3pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Attracting and Protecting Bluebirds. Presented by Steve Garr. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall C.
     
  • 2 to 2:45pm: SOUTHERN TROUT FLY FISHING FAIR! NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Bamboo Rods. Presented by John Hollifield. Taking place in the South Multi-Purpose Room 2.
     
  • 2 to 3:30pm: Advanced SLR Flower Photography. Presented by Robert Hutson. Join Robert as he provides insight to photographers of all skills on tips and techniques used to capture flower pictures with a single lens reflex camera. No camera required. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 1.
     
  • 2:30 to 3:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! True Bear Tales. Presented by Janet Dalton. Join Janet as she relates funny and engaging true stories about the black bear cubs rehabilitated by Appalachian Bear Rescue. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 2.
     
  • 3 to 4pm: Where and When to Photograph in the Smokies: Fall and Winter. Presented by Roger Trentham. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall B.
     
  • 3 to 3:45pm: SOUTHERN TROUT FLY FISHING FAIR! NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Southern Appalachian Fly Fishing Museum. Presented by Alen Baker. Taking place in the South Multi-Purpose Room 2.
     
  • 3:15 to 6pm: Photography Contest Pickup: Sherry Lutes and Event Volunteers at the Taking place in the LeConte Hall North Concourse.
     
  • 3:30 to 4:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! The 2014 SCIPE Digital Contest Showcase. Presented by Pat Gordy. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 3.
     
  • 3:30 to 4:30pm: HERITAGE! Tom Davis, Lizzie Crozier French and the Mystery of the White Caps Book. Presented by Don Williams. Critics say E.W. Crozier could not have written "The White Caps: A History of the Organization in Sevier County" (1899) about a vigilante order that numbered in the hundreds and spread fear, brutality and murder across the Smoky Mountain foothills. New research suggests not only did Crozier write the book, but that it bears the stamp of his famous suffragette sister, Lizzie, along with the heroic sheriff, Tom Davis. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall A.
     
  • 3:30 to 4:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! HERITAGE! While the Men Were Away: Stories of Brave Cocke County, Tennessee Women and Children. Presented by J. Duay O’Neil. Join Duay as he tells stories of the bravery of Cocke County, Tennessee’s women and children as their husbands and fathers were away during various times of war. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall C.
     
  • 3:45 to 4:45pm: A Year in the Life of a Bear: The Life History of Black Bears in Tennessee. Presented by David Whitehead. Join David as he discusses the food habits, life cycle and behavior of black bears in Tennessee. Taking place in the South Multi-Purpose Room 1.
     
  • 4 to 5:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Taking Better Photos Using Your Camera, Cell Phone and Tablet. Presented by Jim Eastin. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 1.
     
  • 4 to 4:45pm: SOUTHERN TROUT FLY FISHING FAIR! NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Blue Lining Off the Wireless Grid. Presented by Fred Turner. Taking place in the South Multi-Purpose Room 2.
     
  • 4 to 5:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! HERITAGE! Shaconage: Land of the Blue Sky. Presented by Harry Dunn. Join Harry as he reviews the history of the Great Smoky Mountains and the heritage of its inhabitants in this special video presentation. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 2.
     
  • 4:30 to 5:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! How Are Photographs Judged and How to Select Images for Contest Entry. Presented by Douglas Hubbard. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall B.
     
  • 5 to 5:45pm: SOUTHERN TROUT FLY FISHING FAIR! Backcountry Cooking. Presented by Craig Haney. Taking place in the South Multi-Purpose Room 2.
     
  • 5:40pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Seeing God in Nature: The Joys of Seeing the Creator in His Creation. Presented by Ken Jenkins. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall C.
     
  • 6:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! TICKETED FUNDRAISER EVENT! Appalachian Bear Rescue Fundraiser. Presented by Sam Venable, Ken Jenkins and Friends. Taking place in the LeConte Hall South.
     

Friday, January 30, 2015

Schedule for Day 7 of Wilderness Wildlife Week 2015 in Pigeon Forge Tennessee Smokies

While Wilderness Wildlife Week in Pigeon Forge rolls into day 7 at the LeConte Center, a mild winter storm is still creating issues in the Great Smoky Mountains, especially in the higher elevations where as much as 3 inches my fall by this afternoon. With some roads still closed and driving conditions less than optimal in some places, again some guided hikes were canceled earlier today.

Starting next year, Wilderness Wildlife Week will no longer take place in the Winter but in mid-May so that participants won’t have weather related issues getting in and out as well as around the Smokies. I can not remember a time in the past 7 years where at least some Wilderness Wildlife Week guided hikes were not cancelled for at least a day due to extreme cold or closed roads due to snow and ice.

You can take comfort that there will another great full day of programs taking place indoors at the LeConte Center on Teaster Lane in Pigeon Forge today and as always the price is right - FREE!

Fri, January 30th 2015 Wilderness Wildlife Week Schedule

  • 8 – Noon: LIMITED SPACE! Learning to Use Map and Compass. Presented by Terry and LaValla Edgington. Limit 30 people and includes bus trip to Patriot Park for field practice. Taking place in the South Multi-Purpose Room 1.
     
  • 9 to 10am: Fall Creek Falls and the Mid Cumberland Recreation Area Video Presentation. Presented by Stuart Carroll. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 2.
     
  • 9 to 10:30am: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Living with a Pack of Wolves: The Bays Mountain Park Puppy Pack. Presented by Rhonda Goins. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall B.
     
  • 9:30 to 10am: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! The Seven Principles of the Leave No Trace Practice. Presented by Terri Butler. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall A.
     
  • 9:30 to 10:30am: LIMITED SPACE! Wire Wrapping a River Rock Pendant. Presented by LaDonna Twyman. Limit to 12 people ages 18+ who will join LaDonna as she instructs them on how to make a local river rock pendent to take home with them using a local river rock and twist wire. Taking place in the Bob Hatcher Memorial Room.
     
  • 9:30 to 11am: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! LIMITED SPACE! Potholder Loom Weaving. Presented by Sherry Mummert. Limited to 10 participants ages 10+ who can will join Sherry as she teaches them by using cotton loopers, a square potholder will be woven on a small loom. Taking place in the Bob Kolb Memorial Room.
     
  • 10 to 11am: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Water, Fish and People: How Are We All Getting Along? Presented by Matt Kulp. Join Matt as he discusses water quality and fish community issues related to the Great Smoky Mmountains National Park and surrounding waters. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 1.
     
  • 10 to 11am: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Butterflies: Flying Flowers in the Garden. Presented by Kris Light. Join Kris as she covers butterflies, their life cycles and the plants that can be used in gardens to attract them. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 3.
     
  • 10 to 11am: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! HERITAGE! Songs of Cades Cove. Presented by Madalyn Carpenter. Taking place in the LeConte Hall South.
     
  • 10:30 to 11:30am: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Discovering TWRA’s Wildlife Management Areas as Wildlife Observation Areas in East Tennessee. Presented by Chris Ogle. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 2.
     
  • 10:30 to 11:30am: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Eat Taters and Wear No Clothes. Presented by Kathy Gwinn. Join Kathy as she recalls the spirit and spunk of the original "Tweetsie," the little train with a big heart and its impact on the Doe River Gorge and Roan Mountain area. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall C.
     
  • 10:30 – Noon: Bird Songs of the Smokies. Presented by Mark Dunaway. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall A.
     
  • 11 – Noon: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Let’s Talk About the Cherokee: Arlene Eagle. Join Arlene as she discusses the development of clothing and the use of beading and various styles in Cherokee culture. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall B.
     
  • 11 – Noon: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! LIMITED SPACE! Paint Your Own Watercolor Notecards. Presented by Melanie Fetterolf. Limited to 15 people ages 12+. Bob Hatcher Memorial Room
  • 11:30 to 12:30pm: Point and Shoot Flower Photography. Presented by Robert Hutson. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 1.
     
  • 11:30 to 12:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Acoustics I: Sound and Birds. Presented by Ethan Duke. Join Ethan as he introduces attendees to vocal communication and using sound to study and enjoy birds. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 3.
     
  • 11:30 to 12:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! LIMITED SPACE! Painting Violets on Sweatshirts or T-Shirts. Presented by Lois Armstrong. Limited to 10 pople who must bring own white t-shirt or sweatshirt. Taking place in the Bob Kolb Memorial Room.
     
  • 11:30 to 12:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! HERITAGE! Mountain Music from Today’s Generation. Presented by Madalyn Carpenter and Friends. Taking place in the LeConte Hall South.
     
  • Noon to 1pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Herbs, Hives and Hens. Presented by W.C. and Glenna Julian, Donna Stinett and Mike Clark. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 2.
     
  • 12:30 to 1:30pm: HERITAGE! Moonshine in Tennessee. Presented by Tony Thomas. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall B.
     
  • 1 to 2pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Insects: Friends or Foes? Presented by Kris Light. Join Kris as she covers the good, bad, beautiful and ugly of the six-legged critters living around us. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 3.
     
  • 1 to 2pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! HERITAGE! Kermit and Lois Shuler Caughron: The Last Cades Cove Residents. Presented by Ruth Caughron Davis. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall A.
     
  • 1 to 2pm: KIDS’ TRACK! LIMITED SPACE! Pioneer and Historical Toys. Presented by Roy Henson. Limited to 20 participants ages 10+ who will join Roy as he instructs them on how to make historical style toys pioneers would have had in days gone by. Taking place in the Bob Kolb Memorial Room.
     
  • 1 to 2pm: KIDS’ TRACK! LIMITED SPACE! Whoo Did That?: Fascinating Owls. Presented by Lynne McCoy. Limited to 20 people. Taking place in the Bob Hatcher Memorial Room.
     
  • 1 to 2pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! HERITAGE! Cades Cove and Smoky Mountain Songs. Presented by Earl Layhue. Taking place in the LeConte Hall South.
     
  • 1 to 2:30pm: Where and When to Photograph in the Smokies: Spring and Summer. Presented by Roger Trentham. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 1.
     
  • 1 to 4pm: Famous Searches and Rescues in the Smokies. Presented by Joe Kelley, Joey Holt, Dwight McCarter and Judy Wasak. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall C.
     
  • 1:30 to 2:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! The Pocket Wilderness Areas of Tennessee Video Presentation. Presented by Stuart Carroll. Join Stuart as he covers the pocket wilderness areas, such as a Laurel-Snow where you will find some of the most beautiful trails in Tennessee. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 2.
     
  • 1:30 to 2:30pm: Creating and Telling Family Stories. Presented by Jim Eastin. Taking place in the South Multi-Purpose Room 1.
     
  • 2:30 to 3:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Birds of Prey Program and Live Bird Show. Presented by American Eagle Foundation. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall A.
     
  • 2:30 to 3:30pm: LIMITED SPACE! Quill Pens and Inks. Presented by Pat Thomas. Limit 12 people ages 12+ who must bring own sharp x-acto blade. Taking place in the Bob Kolb Memorial Room.
     
  • 2:30 to 3:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! KIDS’ TRACK! LIMITED SPACE! Come Bear With Us! Presented by Kathy Sherrard and ABR’s K-8 Education Team. Limited to 20 kids ages 5 to 12. A YourSmokies favorite! Taking place in the Bob Hatcher Memorial Room.
     
  • 2:30 to 3:30pm: Of Ginseng, Golden Apples and the Rainbow Fish: Ancient Tales and a Modern Mythic Adventure. Presented by Doug Elliott. Taking place in the LeConte Hall South.
     
  • 3 to 4pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! The Dos, Don’ts and How’s of Photographing Birds. Presented by Clay Thurston. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 1.
     
  • 3 to 4pm: Photo Journeys in the Eastern United States. Presented by Kendall Chiles. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 2.
     
  • 3 to 4pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Critter-Named Creeks, Prongs and Forks of the Smokies. Presented by Fred Turner. Join Fred as he details locations of, as well as trivia about, some of the more than 100 streams in the Smokies with wildlife as their namesakes. Taking place in the South Multi-Purpose Room 1.
     
  • 3:30 to 4:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! HERITAGE! The Making of Moonshine. Presented by Old Forge Distillery. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall B.
     
  • 3:45 to 4:45pm: Storytelling: Growing Up in Appalachia. Presented by Tony Thomas. Taking place in the LeConte Hall South.
     
  • 4 to 5pm: Wildflowers in Tennessee Video Presentation. Presented by Jack Carman. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 3.
     
  • 4 to 5:30pm: Walking in the Beauty of the Natural World Video Presentation. Presented by Don McGowan. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 2.
     
  • 4 to 5:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! LIMITED SPACE! Recycle Scraps Into Rag Rugs and Trivets. Presented by Maria Holloway. Limit to 15 people ages 15+. Taking place in the Bob Kolb Memorial Room.
     
  • 4:15 to 5:15pm: The Circle of Life: The Bear Facts Video Presentation. Presented by Mike Meldrum. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall A.
     
  • 4:30 to 5:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Alive Photo: 25+ Pros on Why They Are Outdoor Photographers. Presented by Paul Hassell. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 1.
     
  • 4:30 to 5:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! HERITAGE! Elkmont: Pioneers, Lumberjacks, Summer People and Fireflies. Presented by Carroll McMahan. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall C.
     
  • 4:30 to 6pm: An Experience Thru-Hiking the John Muir Trail Video Presentation. Presented by Bert Kunze. Taking place in the South Multi-Purpose Room 1.
     
  • 5:30 to 7pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Backpacking the Hawaii Volcanoes National Park: A Photographic Journey Video Presentation. Presented by Mark Evans. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 3.
     
  • 5:45 to 6:45pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! HERITAGE! The History of Bush Brothers and Company: 106 Years and Counting Video Presentation. Presented by Max Fultz. Join Max as he presents the century-old history of an iconic family business. You will learn about Bush Brothers and Company’s 106-year-old canning history and how Bush became the Number One name in beans. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall A.
     
  • 6 to 7pm: Birding 101: How to Identify Birds. Presented by Dr. Fred Alsop III. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 2.
     
  • 6 to 7pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Reading Between the Lines: Writing Hiking Guides for National Parks. Presented by Charles Maynard. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall C.
     
  • 6 to 7pm: Groundhogology: Of Whistlepigs and World Politics. Presented by Doug Elliott. Taking place in the LeConte Hall South.
     
  • 7:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Talk is Cheap. Presented by Bill Landry, Sam Venable, Jim Claborn and Elizabeth Rose. Taking place in the LeConte Hall South.
     

Thursday, January 29, 2015

Schedule for Day 6 of Wilderness Wildlife Week 2015 in Pigeon Forge Tennessee Smokies

This morning played host to one of the most beautiful sunrises you can imagine illuminating the snow caped peaks of Mount LeConte and the entire range of the Great Smoky Mountains. What better way to start day 6 of the Wilderness Wildlife Week event in Pigeon Forge Tennessee?

Rough winter weather has however put a damper on some of the Wilderness Wildlife Week guided hikes aspects due to snow and ice on the roads and trails. Newfound Gap Road US441 and even Cherokee Orchard Road are still closed to snow and ice and hopes are that better weather will allow the rest of the hikes to take place.

You will be warm and toasty inside the LeConte Center where a host of great indoor programs will take place today for Wilderness Wildlife Week including Wildflowers of the Southern Highlands, How to Make Maple Syrup, and Introduction to Tracking People Outdoors.

Thur, January 29th 2015 Wilderness Wildlife Week Schedule

  • 9 to 10am: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! How to Conduct a Survivor Competition. Presented by Mark Kilgore and taking place in the Greenbrier Hall B.
     
  • 9 – Noon: LIMITED SPACE! Painting a Smoky Mountain Waterfall. Presented by Dick Ensing. Limited to 16 people ages 18+. Taking place in the Bob Hatcher Memorial Room.
     
  • 9:30 to 10:30am: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Stayin’ Alive: Preparing Healthy Home Cooked Meals. Presented by Susan Bicksler. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 1.
     
  • 9:30 to 10:30am: Woodpeckers: Nature’s Home Builders. Presented by Regina Garr. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall C.
     
  • 9:30 to 12:30: LIMITED SPACE! Basket Making. Presented by Theresa Tyler. Limited to 8 participants will learn from Theresa the Appalachian art of basket making. Taking place in the Bob Kolb Memorial Room.
     
  • 10 to 11am: HERITAGE! People Who Shaped Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Part 1. Presented by Bill Deitzer. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall A.
     
  • 10 to 11:30am: The Wolves of Bays Mountain. Presented by Rick and Rhonda Goins. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 2.
     
  • 10:30 to 11:30am: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Omnivore’s Dilemma Revisited: How Your Food Choices Affect Our Planet. Presented by Dana Ripper. Join Dana as she discusses our modern food system, its detrimental effects on the environment and how consumers can have a major impact on the situation. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall B.
     
  • 10:30 – Noon: Do It Yourself: Building a Backyard Bird Habitat. Presented by Mark Dunaway. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 3.
     
  • 11 – Noon: Wildflowers of the Southern Highlands. Presented by Garr Jack Carman. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 1.
     
  • 11 – Noon: Tennessee State Parks of Mideast Tennessee and the Cumberland Plateau. Presented by Robin Peeler Wooten. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall C.
     
  • 11:30 to 12:30pm: Update on the Smokies’ All Taxa Biodiversity Inventory: 16 Years and Counting! Presented by Todd Witcher. A YourSmokies favorite! Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall A.
     
  • Noon to 1pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Look and Touch Wildlife Program. Presented by Chris Ogle. Join Chris as he introduces them to preserved wildlife specimens and some live reptiles. Main focus of this session is on non-game wildlife including small mammals, reptiles and amphibians. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall B.
     
  • 12:30 to 1:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Reelfoot Lake: Celebrating 200 Years. Presented by David Haggard. Join David as he shares the history and beauty of Reelfoot Lake – Tennessee’s earthquake lake. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 1.
     
  • 12:30 to 1:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Fabulous Finches and Pretty Pinesiskins: Learn All About Goldfinches, Purplefinches, Housefinches and Pinesiskins and How to Attract Them. Presented by Steve Garr. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall C.
     
  • 12:30 to 1:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! LIMITED SPACE! Painting Magnolias on Sweatshirts or T-Shirts. Presented by Lois Armstrong Limited to 10 people, must bring own white t-shirt or sweatshirt. Taking place in the Bob Hatcher Memorial Room.
     
  • 12:30 to 1:30pm: HERITAGE! Ballads and Ballad Singers of the Smoky Mountains. Presented by Boogertown Gap. Taking place in the LeConte Hall South.
     
  • 1 to 2pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! LIMITED SPACE! Introduction to Needlepoint. Presented by Mary Warner. Limited to 15 people ages 12+. Taking place in the Bob Kolb Memorial Room.
     
  • 1 to 2:15pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! LIMITED SPACE! Helping a Native Landscape Grow. Presented by Dr. Leo and Linda Lubke, W.C. and Glenna Julian, Lois Worthington, Donna Little and Roger Simpson. Limited to 30 people. Taking place in the South Multi-Purpose Room 1.
     
  • 1 to 4pm: Introduction to Tracking People Outdoors. Presented by Joe Kelley, Joey Holt and Dwight McCarter. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall A.
     
  • 1:30 to 2:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Gardening: Good for Your Mind, Body and So Much More! Presented by Dr. Sue Hamilton. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 2.
     
  • 1:30 to 2:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! HERITAGE! Remembrance: Backcountry Cemeteries in Great Smoky Mountains National Park: Renee Michot and Jim Rigsby. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 3.
     
  • 1:30 to 2:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Buried Alive: A Little Girl’s Narrow Escape and an Herb Doctor’s Cure. Presented by Cherel Henderson. The body was laid out, the casket being built, when someone noticed movement under the coverlet. Cora Ogle escaped being buried alive, only to face life as a cripple. Join Cherel as she tells the amazing story of a little girl’s will and an herb doctor’s most unusual cure. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall B.
     
  • 2 to 3pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Wildfire! Preventing Home Ignitions. Presented by Leon Konz. Learn what homeowners and even whole communities can do to make themselves safer from wildfires. Fire prevention, landscaping, building materials, housekeeping and community design will be discussed. These are all elements of the Tennessee Division of Forestry’s programs. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 1.
     
  • 2 to 3pm: Ghost Birds: Jim Tanner and the Ivory-Billed Woodpecker. Presented by Stephen Lyn Bales. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall C.
     
  • 2 to 3pm: KIDS’ TRACK! LIMITED SPACE! Get Growing: Keep Sevier Beautiful. Limited to 25 participants ages 8+ who will make a vase using a plastic two liter bottle, which they will decorate and will be provided with seeds to start a flower. Taking place in the Bob Hatcher Memorial Room.
     
  • 2 to 3pm: HERITAGE! Old Time Hymns. Presented by Don Huskey, Marcia Huskey Nelson, Roger Helton and Andy Stinnett. Listen to cherished melodies that carried from the open windows of little mountain churches of the past. Taking place in the LeConte Hall South.
     
  • 2:30 to 3:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! LIMITED SPACE! Make a Grapevine Dreamcatcher. Presented by Sue Todd and Limit 10 people ages 15+. Taking place in the Bob Kolb Memorial Room.
     
  • 3 to 4pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Understanding Bears: The Habits and Characteristics of North American Bears. Presented by Joel Zachry. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 2.
     
  • 3 to 4pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Discovering Tennessee’s Wildlife Diversity. Presented by Chris Ogle. Join Chris as he discusses several of Tennessee’s little known and, strange and amazing creatures with an emphasis on salamanders, frogs, snakes and bats. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall B.
     
  • 3 to 4pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! LIMITED SPACE! How to Make Maple Syrup. Presented by John Curtis. Limited to 40 people. Taking place in the South Multi-Purpose Room 1.
     
  • 3:30 to 4:30pm: HERITAGE! The Founding of a National Park: The Establishment of Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Presented by Tom Harrington. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 1.
     
  • 3:30 to 4:30pm: Forest Insects and Disease in Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Presented by Jesse Webster. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 3.
     
  • 3:30 to 4:30pm: Bird’s the Word: Celebrating the World of Birds With Bird Stories, Lore, Songs and Natural History. Presented by Doug Elliott. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall C.
     
  • 3:30 to 4:30pm: KIDS’ TRACK! LIMITED SPACE! Pioneer and Historical Toys. Presented by Roy Henson. Limited to 20 people ages 10+ who will join Roy as he instructs them on how to make historical style toys pioneers would have had in days gone by. Taking place in the Bob Hatcher Memorial Room.
     
  • 3:30 to 5:30pm: HERITAGE! Old Harp Singing School. Presented by David Sarten, leader. In a shorter version of the earlier singing schools of the Great Smoky Mountains region, David Sarten will teach participants how to sing the "do-re-mi" shaped notes. Taking place in the LeConte Hall South.
     
  • 4:30 to 5:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Secrets of Backyard Birds. Presented by Stephen Lyn Bales. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 2.
     
  • 4:30 to 5:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Pilgrim Walk: A Spiritual Field Guide. Presented by Paul and Susanne Hassell. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall A.
     
  • 4:30 to 5:30pm: Miracle of the Monarch: From Eggs on Milkweed to Tagging and Releasing the Monarch Butterfly. Presented by Glenna Julian and Lois Worthington. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall B.
     
  • 4:30 to 6pm: An Experience Thru-Hiking the Appalachian Trail Video Presentation for Mature Audiences. Presented by Bert Kunze. Taking place in the South Multi-Purpose Room 1.
     
  • 5 to 6pm: Nature Recording in the Smokies. Presented by Mark Dunaway. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 1.
     
  • 5 to 6pm: Wildflowers of the Smokies. Presented by Jack Carman. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 3.
     
  • 5 to 6pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! I Scream, You Scream, We All Scream for Ice Cream. Presented by Kathy Gwinn. Kathy will give you the inside "scoop" on America’s favorite food – Ice cream. Added "toppings" include old-time soda shoppes, famous ice cream parlors and Hash-House Lingo. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall C.
     
  • 5 to 6pm: LIMITED SPACE! Old Time Banjo Workshop for Beginners. Presented by Tony Thomas. Limited to 10 participants must bring own banjo. Taking place in the South Multi-Purpose Room 2.
     
  • 6pm: Saturday Hikes and Field Trips Sign-ups. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall A.
     
  • 6 to 7pm: Hymns and Songs of Faith. Presented by Whaley Family Singers. Join this large Smoky Mountain family from Greenbrier as they share their legacy through song. A YourSmokies Favorite! Taking place in the LeConte Hall South.
     
  • 6:30 to 7:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Looking for America: A 20th Century Hero’s Journey With Stories of Cross-Country Hitchhiking and Freight Hopping. Presented by Doug Elliott. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall C.
     
  • 7:30pm: Slow Jam. Presented by Tony Thomas and Friends. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 1.
     
  • 8pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! For the Love of the Smokies: A Lifetime of Experiencing the Majestic Beauty of Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Presented by Ken Jenkins. A Your Smokies Favorite! Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall C.
     

Wednesday, January 28, 2015

Schedule for Day 5 of Wilderness Wildlife Week 2015 in Pigeon Forge Tennessee Smokies

It is a bright cold clear day as day 5 of Wilderness Wildlife Week 2015 is about to start at the LeConte Center in Pigeon Forge to a packed house. The scenery in the Great Smoky Mountains national park with yesterday's fresh snow may be beautiful, but this is another day not all of the guided hikes may be able to take place again.

Just minutes ago the Gatlinburg Bypass was plowed and sanded enough to reopen As Little River Road and Newfound Gap Road remain closed due to snow and ice, but here inside the LeConte Center on Teaster Lane it's warm and cozy and the free programs taking place all day would keep any outdoor enthusiast satisfied enough to stay inside.

Today’s packed Wilderness Wildlife Week schedule includes such favorites as another limited class on The Art of Dowsing being presented by Charlie Monday, the Appalachian Music Concert. Presented by Carolina Bluegrass Boys and Appalachian Cloggers and Hiking the 900 miles of Trails in the GSMNP presented by Judy Bryant.

Wed, January 28th 2015 Wilderness Wildlife Week Schedule

  • 9 to 10am: Restoring the Whooping Crane to the Eastern Flyway Slide Presentation. Presented by Ken Dubke. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 1.
     
  • 9 to 10am: Hosting Hummingbirds. Presented by Regina Garr. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall C.
     
  • 9 to 10am: LIMITED SPACE! The Art of Dowsing. Presented by Charlie Monday. Limit 30. Participants join Charlie to see if they have the gift of dowsing. Taking place in the Bob Hatcher Memorial Room.
     
  • 9 – Noon: LIMITED SPACE! Painting a Smoky Mountain Waterfall. Presented by Dick Ensing. Limit 16, ages 18+. Taking place in the Bob Kolb Memorial Room.
     
  • 9:30 to 10:30am: History of Bays Mountain Park. Presented by Rhonda Goins and taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 2.
     
  • 10 to 11am: HERITAGE! Flyin’ Bullets and the Resplendent Badge. Presented by Ersa Rhea Noland Smith. Join Mrs. Smith as she shares the riveting account of her father, Sheriff Ray C. Noland’s years in office in Sevier County. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 3.
     
  • 10 to 11am: Wonderful Waterfalls Slide Presentation. Presented by Bill Carter. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall A.
     
  • 10 to 11am: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Hiking Mt. Whitney in One Day. Presented by Jim Pader. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall B.
     
  • 10 to 11:30am: KIDS’ TRACK! LIMITED SPACE! Booger: A Tall Tale of the Mountains. Presented by Mary Phillips. Limit 60, ages 5-10. Participants join Mary as she tells the story of about a firefly, a boy named Booger and his faithful cat, Stinker. Kids learn to use the Great Smoky Mountain Wildflower guide book. Program meets curriculum standards for science, literature, life skills and art. Taking place in the South Multi-Purpose Room 1.
     
  • 10 to 11:30am: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! LIMITED SPACE! Ancient Rhythms: Learn to Play the Native American Flute. Presented by Megan Griffin. Limit 30, must bring own flute. If participants do not have one, educational Native American flutes can be purchased for a small fee from Great Smoky Mountains Heritage Center’s booth. Taking place in the LeConte Hall North.
     
  • 10:30 to 11:30am: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! How to Start an Herb Garden. Presented by Judy Felts. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 1.
     
  • 10:30 to 11:30am: The Spirits of Cades Cove Video Presentation. Presented by GSMNP Park Ranger Mike Meldrum. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall C.
     
  • 11 to 11:30am: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! 900 Miles and Then Some: Hiking the Trails of GSMNP. Presented by Judy Bryant. Join Judy as she discusses keeping a hiking journal and answers questions about hiking all the maintained trails of GSMNP. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 2.
     
  • 11 – Noon: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! LIMITED SPACE! Paint Your Own Watercolor Notecards. Presented by Melanie Fetterolf. Limited to 15 people ages 12+. Taking place in the Bob Hatcher Memorial Room.
     
  • 11:30 to 12:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Horace Kephart Monologue. Presented by Will Rabert. Join Will as he portrays Horace Kephart, author of "Our Southern Highlanders," hiker and explorer of the Smokies, as well as a founder of Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 3.
     
  • 11:30 to 12:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Restoring the Mighty American Chestnut to its Native Range. Presented by Tom Saielli. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall A.
     
  • 11:30 to 12:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Off the Beaten Path: An Up-close Look at the Obed Wild and Scenic River National Park. Presented by Veronica Greear. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall B.
     
  • 11:30 to 12:30pm: Appalachian Music Concert. Presented by Carolina Bluegrass Boys and Appalachian Cloggers. Attendees will enjoy this special bluegrass performance and have fun by getting up and clogging with the Appalachian Cloggers! Taking place in the LeConte Hall South.
     
  • Noon to 1pm: Audubon and His Birds of America. Presented by Stephen Lyn Bales. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall C.
     
  • Noon to 2pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! LIMITED SPACE! Carving and Painting an Owl, Part Two. Presented by Don Taylor. Limited to 10 people, two day session. Participants must bring own sharp carving tools and paint brushes. Taking place in the South Multi-Purpose Room 2.
     
  • 12:30 to 1:30pm: HERITAGE! The Story of Greenbrier Cove. Presented by Glenn Cardwell. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 1.
     
  • 12:30 to 1:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! LIMITED SPACE! Whittle a Mountain Flower. Presented by Jacki Proffitt. Limited to 10 people ages 16+ who must bring own sharpened pocket knife. Taking place in the Bob Hatcher Memorial Room.
     
  • 12:30 to 1:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! LIMITED SPACE! Making a Hand Broom for Decoration. Presented by David Ogle. Limited to 10 people ages 16+. Taking place in the Bob Kolb Memorial Room.
     
  • 12:30 to 1:30pm: Never to Young, Never Too Old. Presented by W.C. and Glenna Julian and Tammie and Olivia Browning. Join the Julians and Brownings as they discuss how no one is ever to young or too old to work on a backyard habitat. They will also provide encouragement for attendees to certify their backyards with National Wildlife. Taking place in the South Multi-Purpose Room 1.
     
  • 1 to 2pm: To Niagara and Back by Waterfall Slide Presentation. Presented by Bill Carter. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 2.
     
  • 1 to 2pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! HERITAGE! Books, Blue Jeans and Basketball. Presented by a Panel featuring Gwendell Cody, Donna Allen and Ron Rader with Veta King, Pigeon Forge Public Library, interviewer. Join former Pigeon Forge Grammar School students as they reminisce about the old white building on the hill. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 3.
     
  • 1 to 2pm: HERITAGE! Smoky Mountain Ballads and Songs. Presented by Boogertown Gap a YourSmokies favorite. Taking place in the LeConte Hall South.
     
  • 1 to 2:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Walking the Via Tolosana and More in France. Presented by Olga Pader. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall B.
     
  • 1:30 to 2:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Adventures of an African Game Ranger. Presented by Don Richards. Join Don as he shares stories of personal adventures while leading wilderness trails in big game country of South Africa. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall A.
     
  • 1:30 to 2:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Sail On, Honeybee: Adventures in the Bee Yard. Presented by Doug Elliott. Join master storyteller, harmonica wizard and longtime beekeeper Doug Elliott as he tells outlandish tales from the world of bees and beekeeping. Learn from Doug practical advice on how to treat a bee sting, catch a bee swarm and also what to do if you are way up high in a tree and 50,000 bees fall on your head! Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall C.
     
  • 2 to 3pm: It’s Puppy Time at Bays Mountain. Presented by Rick and Rhonda Goins. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 1.
     
  • 2 to 3pm: LIMITED SPACE! The Art of Dowsing presented by Charlie Monday. Limit to 30 Participants who will join Charlie to see if they have the gift of dowsing. Taking place in the Bob Kolb Memorial Room.
     
  • 2 to 3pm: KIDS’ TRACK! LIMITED SPACE! Garbage Pizza. Presented by Keep Sevier Beautiful. Limited to 25 people ages 8+ who will learn about solid waste disposable options comparing Sevier County to the United States. Taking place in the Bob Hatcher Memorial Room.
     
  • 2 to 3pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! KIDS’ TRACK! Natural Treasures of the Obed: Use Your Senses to Discover Natural Features of the Park. Presented by Veronica Greear. Taking place in the South Multi-Purpose Room 1.
     
  • 2:30 to 3:30pm: HERITAGE! History of the Old Mill District: From the Original Settler to the Present Day: Jimmy Edge. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 3.
     
  • 2:30 to 3:30pm: String Band Music of Our American Roots. Presented by Lost Mill String Band. Taking place in the LeConte Hall South.
     
  • 3 to 4pm: Ranger Family Recollections. Presented by Joe Kelley and Sons. Join Joe and his sons as they share experiences of life in a ranger station. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 2.
     
  • 3 to 4pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! HERITAGE! The History and the Stories of the Cherokee in the Smokies. Presented by Jon Elder. Join Jon, a fifth generation Sevier County resident and member of the Eastern Band of the Cherokee Indians, as he shares the history and some Indian folklore of the earliest inhabitants of the Smoky Mountains. From the earliest traces of the Cherokee presence to the first encounters with Europeans to the removal and rebirth of the Eastern Cherokee tribe, Jon will share his family history and stories of growing up "on both sides of the mountain." Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall A.
     
  • 3 to 4pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! The Birds of Prey: History and Biology of a Variety of Live Birds and Prey. Presented by David Haggard. Live birds including a Bald Eagle, hawks and owls. Meet and learn about these fascinating birds! Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall B.
     
  • 3 to 4pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Adventure Course Team building at Bays Mountain Park. Presented by Mark Kilgore. Join Mark as he discusses the Bays Mountain Park Adventure Course and what elements it has to offer and how they work on teamwork, leadership, trust and stamina. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall C.
     
  • 3:30 to 4:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Life Circle of Butterflies. Presented by Lois Worthington. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 1.
     
  • 3:30 to 4:30pm: KIDS’ TRACK! LIMITED SPACE! Pioneer and Historical Toys. Presented by Roy Henson. Limited to 20 participants ages 10+ who will join Roy as he instructs them on how to make historical style toys pioneers would have had in days gone by. Taking place in the Bob Hatcher Memorial Room.
     
  • 3:30 to 4:30pm: Learn to Play Spoons and Washtub Bass. Limited to Boogertown Gap. Taking place in the South Multi-Purpose Room 2.
     
  • 4 to 5pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! HERITAGE! Great Smoky Mountains National Park in Historic Photographs. Presented by Steve Cotham. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 3.
     
  • 4 to 5pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Gardens, Weeds and John Barleycorn: Celebrating the Culture in Agriculture. Limited to Doug Elliott. Join master storyteller, harmonica wizard Doug Elliott as he celebrates all things agriculture related in story and song. Taking place in the LeConte Hall South.
     
  • 4 to 5:30pm: LIMITED SPACE! Drawing to Identify Trees. Presented by Maurice Edwards and William Hurst. Limit 12 participants ages 18+ who will join a professional botanist and an artist to draw tree parts toward the goal of species identification. Bring own art supplies and plant material or use instructors’ pencils, paper and subject matter. Taking place in the South Multi-Purpose Room 1.
     
  • 4:30 to 5:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! HERITAGE! The Cemeteries of the Smokies. Presented by Dr. Gail Palmer. Join Dr. Palmer as she discusses the various cemeteries of the Smokies. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 2.
     
  • 4:30 to 5:30pm: HERITAGE! The Civilian Conservation Corps: FDR’s Tree Army. Presented by Bill Deitzer. Join Bill as he discusses the legacy of the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) which built several of our national parks including the Great Smoky Mountains and Shenandoah National Parks. Bill will cover the why, the who and the results of this unique corps of 1930’s young men. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall B.
     
  • 4:30 to 5:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Conservation of America’s Birds: History and Modern Issues. Presented by Dana Ripper. Join Dana as she discusses extinct native birds and the conservation issues facing birds today. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall B.
     
  • 4:30 to 5:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! How Bear Cubs Learn to Be Bears. Presented by Kathy Sherrard. Join Kathy as she illustrates the differences of black bear cubs living in the wild to those rehabilitated at Appalachian Bear Rescue. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall C.
     
  • 4:30 to 6pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! LIMITED SPACE! Workshop for Teachers to Utilize Storytelling and Booger’s Tall Tales in the Classroom. Presented by Mary Phillips. Limit 30. Taking place in the Bob Kolb Memorial Room.
     
  • .
  • 5 to 6pm: LIMITED SPACE! Beginners Acoustic Guitar Workshop. Presented by Tony Thomas. Limit to 10 participants must bring own acoustic guitar. Taking place in the South Multi-Purpose Room 2.
     
  • 5:30 to 6:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! HERITAGE! The Blue Mountains Sing of Rivers, Old Men, Trails, and Trout. Presented by Ron Rader. Join Ron, a Pigeon Forge native son, and hear his boyhood chronicles as he and his friends come of age in the 1940s and 1950s era as they roam in yesteryear’s Pigeon Forge, Great Smoky Mountain National Park, Elkmont and beyond. Taking place in the North Multi-Purpose Room 3.
     
  • 5:30 to 6:30pm: Appalachian Music Concert. Presented by Carolina Bluegrass Boys and Appalachian Cloggers. Attendees will enjoy this special bluegrass performance and can even get up and clog with the Appalachian Cloggers! Taking place in the LeConte Hall South.
     
  • 6pm: Friday Hikes and Field Trips Sign-ups in the Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall A.
     
  • 6:30 to 7:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! Giving Bears a Second Chance: Rehabbing Black Bears. Presented by Coy Blair. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall B.
     
  • 7:30pm: NEW Wilderness Wildlife Week Program! HERITAGE! The History of the University of Tennessee’s Internationally-Recognized "Body Farm". Presented by Dr. Bill Bass. Join Dr. Bass as he discusses the history of the original "Body Farm" founded at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. Taking place in the Greenbrier Hall C.