BRP French Broad River

The Mountains to Sea Trail crosses the French Broad River on the Blue Ridge Parkway bridge.
French Broad Sign

The Shut-In trail also crosses here on it’s way from the Biltmore Estate to Mount Pisgah.   This section of the MST in general is pretty easy hiking and it parallels the parkway closely.   In fact, from Asheville this is probably one of the most accessible areas for trail running as long as you don’t mind out and back runs.
French Broad River

The MST website recommends parking at the French Broad overlook for hiking on this section, but unless you’re a big fan of crossing road bridges it’s probably easier to park on the east side of the river at the pull out where the MST heads back into the forest. 

frog

This frog (and a garter snake) are about all the wildlife we saw between the French Broad River and the I-26 bridge (bikers don’t technically count).   So it’s not exactly much of a quiet wilderness experience but it’s very close to Asheville (and our house) so it’s good for a quick hike.  It’s also a good rehab hike (which we seem to be specializing in the last few years). 

Dry Creek / Phillips Hollow

This hike follows the less popular trail from the Margarette Falls trail head near Bethany, Tennessee in Cherokee NF. 
Swallowtails

The half mile gravel road that leads in from the parking lot to the trailheads has a high salt content in places and attracts butterflies.   These are pipevine swallowtails.

Phillips Hollow

The Phillips Hollow trail is dark blue blazed and leads across dry creek and up along the north bank.  Ultimately, this trail leads all the way up to the A.T. at the top of the ridge which is a very strenuous hike.   In the lower portions, to say that there are a few waterfalls might be an understatement.

trail crossing

At the first major stream crossing, a light blue blazed trail leads south across the stream and then winds up the valley with Dry Creek.   This would be the same Dry Creek (still poorly named) that Margarette Falls in on, although a different branch.  This trail is not listed on our map of Cherokee National Forest and the Cherokee NF website is more or less useless when it comes to trail identification.  Instead your best bet are some rocks at the trail junction which have been painted with names and arrows.  The trail up Dry Creek is identified on the rocks as Shoot Creek for reasons we can’t possibly explain.   Either way the further you go up this trail, the more impressive the waterfalls get and the more difficult the path becomes.   About 0.3 miles in, the trail crosses Dry Creek between ledge falls.

Dry Creek

There are plenty of good swimming holes along the way.  In fact, in several places it’s a lot easier to walk up the stream than it is to follow the trail over and around rhododendrons.   Somewhere along the way is Spruce Thicket Falls, which seems to be the only named falls.  We’re not sure which one it is but there is a 35 foot series of cascades about .6 miles in.   Above this, it becomes really difficult to travel further upstream.

Mushroom

Melanie became fascinated with the wide range of mushrooms along the way and might eventually put up a gallery of images on the site.  In the meantime, we’re mostly certain (after some time with the mushroom field guide) that this is a Yellow Patches.  If it isn’t, some mycologist out there can correct us. 

Mill Ridge / Pump Gap

Mill Ridge

Mill Ridge was a small farming community located on the east bank of the French Broad River just up from the town of Hot Springs.  Nowadays there are a couple of forest roads, a lot of mountain biking trails and a few foundations remaining.  The large open areas up here were once tobacco fields.

Mill Ridge Dam

The AT leads southbound up into the Mill Ridge area from Tanyard Gap (US 25/70 outside of Hot Springs).   There’s also a forest road that leads up to a parking area for the bike trails.  Where the AT leads back down into the forest there’s an old dam with a large pond above it.  We followed the AT as far as the Pump Gap loop trail which makes a circle with the AT.

Mill Ridge Cemetery

Along with the dam and some building foundations, the old Mill Ridge Cemetery is located just a little ways off the Pump Gap trail.  Most of the stones have fallen over or been broken but it’s still a curious thing to find out in the middle of the forest.  

Overall this is a fairly easy hike of about 5 to 6 miles.  It’s probably more difficult if done from Hot Springs due to the elevation gain.   We did come across a couple of salamanders, but they refused to hold still for photographs, so we have to include this fungus instead.

Fungus

Potato Knob

Potato Knob

Potato Knob lies at the end of the Black Mountain Range on the border of the Blue Ridge Parkway and Mt Mitchell State Park. It’s the highest point in Buncombe County, although it’s unclear if the summit is in Bumcombe or Yancey.  While the summit is just over 6400 ft, Potato Knob is not part of the South Beyond 6000 peaks.  We however felt that it need to be climbed anyway.  This is a view up at Potato Knob from the Mountains to Sea Trail just south of Mt. Mitchell Rd.

So now lets get all the disclaimers out of the way.  This is not a casual peak hike, it requires orienteering which means some skill with a compass and topographic map.  There are some seriously large cliffs on all sides of Potato Knob which mandate good route choosing.  Also, the south and east side of this mountain are in the restricted Asheville watershed which means that sections of it are completely off-limits (use the MST basically). 

Potato Knob Summit

Here is Melanie on the highest rock we could find on the summit of Potato Knob.  Note that there isn’t much of a view here in the rhododendron thicket.  The actual summit is a survey stake with blue and pink ribbons.  The only reason this summit is even slightly accessible is because the county line crosses it, which means there is a old, generally unused survey trail over it.  We took the hard way up (a re-entrant off of the MST which required about 700 vertical feet of climbing up rocks and downed trees).  The survey trail to the southeast is a bit difficult to follow and skirts some serious drop-offs but it’s much easier than the way we came up.  There are also some protruding rocks both near the top and scattered along the way that have spectacular views along the Blue Ridge.

Potato View

Buck Creek

We’re pretty much willing to do anything that involves messing about in rivers or streams, so it seemed worthwhile to spend a few hours on our way through Macon County hunting for garnets in Buck Creek.

Buck Creek

It’s not really hunting.  Generally if you reach into the silt along the river you’ll pull out a dozen or so, although they’ll be so small it’s hardly worth isolating them.  Buck Creek is in Nantahala National Forest, just west of where US 64 crosses the Appalachian Trail.  We spent about an hour or so fishing around for some big enough to save before we started to lose interest and just ended up playing around in the creek.  Besides the garnets there is an old corundum mine on the hillside above the creek, and also some fairly large chunks of talc lying about the area.

Garnets

Here’s a pile of almandine garnets we found.  It’s traditional to include a coin in pictures like this to show scale but well, it’s more impressive if we don’t.

Craggy Pinnacle

Craggy Trail

With mom recovering from back problems, naturally we dragged her up a reasonably large mountain.  Actually, we’d never been up Craggy Pinnacle before but it was reportedly an easy hike with a good view.  Unfortunately the rhododendrons were not blooming yet.  The hike is about 3/4 of a mile, fairly steep.  I’m told that if you’re recovering from back problems it is quite challenging.

Craggy Dome

The summit of Craggy Pinnacle has several observation decks with good views in all directions along the Blue Ridge Parkway and back towards Asheville.  The Craggy Mountains are a small sub-range of the Blue Ridge which feature Craggy Pinnacle (we’re standing on it in this picture), Craggy Dome (that’s it across the parking lot from here), and Craggy Mountain (behind us).  Besides being creatively named, these peaks are all near 6000 ft although only Craggy Dome (the lump out there) is over 6000 ft.  We hiked it previously for the South Beyond 6000.  It looks gentle from here but there’s no real trail to the top so it involves foraging through blackberries and rhododendrons.  The summit does not have much of a view.  In fact, it looked vaguely like this up there when we previously visited:

Craggy Dome Summit

McDowell Woods Score-O

McDowell Woods

We were in Charlotte for a couple reasons.  First – we had to pick up a refrigerator so that we can brew lagers as well as ales, but that’s probably a whole separate entry.  The other reason was the Carolina Orienteering Klubb’s Score-O meet in McDowell Nature Reserve.  There was a two-hour limit on it but it’s still good practice for some of the 24-hour races we’re planning to do later this summer.

orienteering flag

It had been raining all morning so pushing through the foliage left us drenched fairly quickly.  Generally we weren’t real fast but I think our route choices and navigation were good.  We ended up in 4th place overall, including a stumbling sort of sprint through a swamp at the end to get back to the finish line inside the 2 hour time limit (actually it was more like right exactly at the 2 hour limit).

Bridge’s

Having already involved beer (or beer-related acquisitions) and orienteering in the day, there was nothing left to do but go visit a new site (for us) on the North Carolina BBQ Trail.  This is Bridge’s in Shelby, NC.  Here you can find, well… pork.  Bridge’s has a fairly strict interpretation of the NC BBQ menu with pork and slaw dominating (although the deviled egg sandwich is vaguely intriguing).  The pork is chopped, the sauce is a warmed tomato-vinegar concoction and the hush puppies are particularly good in pimiento cheese.  (That was sort of an accident originally but it worked out well.)

Harmon Den Mountain

Harmon Den is a mountain along the NC/TN border just south of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park.  It actually has its own exit off of I-40, which is just a gravel road that leads down the valley towards Max Patch.  We hiked from Brown Gap (accessible via a rough road up from Harmon Den) to Deep Gap at the base of Snowbird Mountain and then back along the Appalachian Trail.
Sign

In late April, this highlight of this hike were the wildflowers, particularly trillium which were prolific on the wetter, cooler slopes of the mountains.
Pink Trillium

The top of Harmon Den Mountain, a spot also known as Hawk’s Roost in some AT guides is not as impressive as nearby mountains such as Max Patch and Snowbird.  Even without leaves on the trees, the views are good but not fantastic. The Smokies, Newfound and Snowbird mountains surround Harmon Den. 
Red Trillium

From Harmon Den it’s a steady long descent to Deep Gap (one of dozens of gaps with the same creative name in and around the Smokies).  Deep Gap itself is a nice shaded campsite.  An old abandoned logging road led up to the gap from the Tennessee side so sections are nicely graded.  Groundhog Creek flows into North Carolina from the gap and the Groundhog Creek AT shelter is just a quarter mile east of the gap.

Harmon Den AT

Margarette Falls / Dry Creek

The trailhead for this hike is in the vicinity of Greystone, TN.  It’s not the easiest place to find but there is a big parking lot once you arrive.  A gravel road leads about a half mile through a private land easement into Cherokee National Forest where trails split off in all directions. Several of these trails go up to the AT near Camp Creek Bald.  For Margarette Falls, basically follow the main stream of water, although the trail itself is blue-blazed and mostly easy to follow.  There are at least 4 stream fordings along the way and numerous small waterfalls.  There are also a couple decent pools for swimming if you’re so inclined.  About .6 miles up from the trail junctions the canyon will narrow and there is an enormous rock spire on the south bank called Cathedral Rock.  Cathedral Rock

Just upstream from Cathedral Rock is Margarette Falls which is about a 50 foot drop, most of it in a single cascade.
Margarette Falls

There’s a very nice deep hole at the base of the falls.  On our hike this water was far too cold for swimming, unless maybe you’re a dog.Margarette Pool

The trail ends at Margarette Falls but our hike did not.  To continue upstream of Margarette the easiest path is to scramble up the hillside on the north bank of the creek, cross the rock outcropping, and come back down the hill to the creek upstream of the falls.  (Usual Warning: The top of the falls is slick and very dangerous, you should give it a wide berth if you are hiking further upstream.)  Once above the falls, it’s easiest to ford back across to the south bank and bushwhack your way along the banks.  Why would you do this?  About a tenth of a mile upstream the two branches of Dry Creek come together.  Here you’ll find the 8 foot Glen Falls which is pretty but not spectacular.
Glen Falls

Glen Falls is nice but not really a reason by itself to deal with circumventing Margarette Falls.  The reason for that is another 0.1 miles up the stream.  If you’re standing at Glen Falls, that would be the branch on the left (i.e. the one that isn’t a waterfall). There is no way up but by canyoneering – walking, climbing, and swimming directly up the stream.  On our trip there were several pools that were 4 to 6 feet deep.  The rock walls of the canyon lend themselves nicely to traversing if you have even the most basic rock climbing or bouldering skills (or want to start).  In warmer weather, it wouldn’t be an issue to just swim the pools.  Not far upstream by distance (but a decent amount of effort) is the 45 foot high Bailey Falls which has at least three drops before pouring into the narrow canyon shown here.  Note that this would be a very bad place to be if a flash flood were possible. 
Bailey Falls

If you happen to do this hike with a dog make sure he can swim.  I ended up lifting Trout up over several of the steeper ledges anyway.

Yellow Creek Gap to Fontana Dam

This hike is just slightly under 8 miles in length.  We did it by shuttle with help from the friendly folks at the Hike Inn in Fontana.  We parked the car at the Fontana Dam, they shuttled us (and our dog) back around to Yellow Creek Gap and we started from there.

About a mile in is Cable Gap Shelter which is practically right on the trail and has a nice little stream running past it.  After Cable Gap there’s a long climb through a series of knolls.  Most of this section runs parallel to Fontana Lake and offers nice views.  This picture shows a section of the lake and the dam.
Dam Through Trees

Somewhere along here is Walker Gap where the Yellow Creek Mountain trail comes in.  This does not appear to be a well marked trail but we’ll save that for some future hike.  From Walker Gap to the road at Fontana is an endless series of steep descending switchbacks (unless you happen to be hiking up / south / towards the NOC).  There are several nice water sources through here and it ends at the road / marina / shuttle pick up for the Fontana Village (which also has restrooms).  From there, the AT continues up and over a knoll along Fontana Lake before descending to the assorted parking areas.
Dam Sign

Note that post 9/11 – this section of the trail will be closed during “security threats”.  There is an alternate path through Fontana Village and into the Great Smokies downstream of the dam.  Just off to the right of this picture is the Fontana AT Shelter which is better known as the Fontana Hilton (because of its relative size for a shelter). 

Fontana Dam

The interior of the dam is now closed to visitors although the overlooks are impressive.  On the far side is the boundary of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park where the AT begins a grueling ascent to Clingman’s Dome (30-some miles away by trail).  The dam is probably more impressive when the spillways are open into the Little Tennessee River below.

Roan Mountain

There are several ways up Roan Mountain by trail and one by road.  The AT ascends to Toll House Gap from both north and south.  From the north (near the town of Buladean) is a rugged 2000 ft climb over about 3 miles.  The AT intersects the road in Toll House Gap which was once the site of the Cloudland Hotel.  Now it’s just a nice grassy bald with great views into both Tennessee and North Carolina.

cloudland

From here there is a spur trail that leads along the ridge, parallel to the road out to Roan High Bluff.  This is a particularly worthwhile hike in shoulder seasons (like March) because the road up isn’t open yet so the top of Roan is almost certainly going to be deserted.  The view from Roan High Bluff is also fantastic.

Roan High Bluff

From Toll House Gap to the north along the AT is a more popular hike down to Carvers Gap which has a large parking area.  Along the way is the highest shelter on the AT at a slight side trail to Roan High Knob.

Roan Benchmark

At 6285 and 6267, both Roan High Knob and Roan High Bluff qualify among the 40 peaks that make up the South Beyond 6000 challenge sponsered by the Carolina and Tennnessee Eastman Hiking Clubs.  In fact, these are two of the easier peaks to get to (no bushwhacking).  The Knob is marked by a USGS benchmark and is a basically a rock outcrop just past the shelter.

Roan High Knob

Welcome

This blog is intended to record some of our outdoor pursuits that are closer to home and thus not covered in the trips pages elsewhere on the site.  This blog will specifically cover day and weekend trips from our home in Asheville, NC. so western Carolinas and eastern Tennessee will be the primary focus.