It's Philosophical Friday again, and we're continuing on with yesterday's post into the creepy interior of the Palmer House. The image above might be crying out "What happened? Where did the time go? It seems like just yesterday that Jarvis and his wife were rising at...
Cataloochee: Beech Grove School
Beech Grove School was built in 1901 and was one of three schools in the Cataloochee area of the Smoky Mountains. The school term, oriented to the agrarian society, ran from November through January or sometimes through March. Beech Grove had two rooms and is the only...
Cataloochee: Palmer House
The Palmer House in Big Cataloochee Valley was originally built around 1860 by George Lafayette Palmer. It was a "dog-trot" house, with two log cabins joined by a common roof. By 1900 the Palmers were prospering, and the house was fancied up with siding on the outside...
Cataloochee: Palmer Chapel
Cataloochee Valley is one of the hidden wonders of the Smoky Mountains. The best way from Gatlinburg is to schedule an entire day for the journey to Cataloochee. Either take the back road from Cosby, or exit 20 off I40 in North Carolina, then meander into Catalochee...
Smoky Mountains Footbridges
If you do much hiking in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, you've certainly found yourself in the situation pictured above. Love them or hate them, footbridges are common along Smokies trails. Some are vertigo-inducing challenges, and others are tame...
Spring Snow on Mt. LeConte
A spring snow dusted Mt. LeConte on Tuesday night, closing the road to Newfound Gap in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. It's not unusual to see the contrasts of winter and spring in one scene as in the picture above. The summit of Mt. LeConte is around 6500...
Smoky Mountain Cantilever barns
The picture above is from the Tipton Homeplace in Cades Cove in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. It's a great example of the vernacular architecture known as the cantilever barn. The style of hanging a large upper loft area over two cribs below is unique to...
Smoky Mountain Llamas
A packtrain of llamas is used to carry bed linens and supplies to Mt. LeConte Lodge. The llamas are easier on the heavily used Great Smoky Mountains National Park trails than horses. In the picture below the llamas are passing behind Grotto Falls. Normally, the...
Those Crazy Kayakers
Whenever the creeks of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park swell with rainfall, which is often in the springtime, the kayakers come forth. It seems like a daring adventure to me, and a paradoxical compromise between going with the flow and aggressively making your...
Green Rocks of the Roaring Fork
Something green for St. Patrick's Day. Nothing greener in the Great Smoky Mountains than the moss-covered rocks of the Roaring Fork. Conditions on the north face of Mt. LeConte create an extremely wet environment and a rich lushness of plant life. There may be no...
The Life of Wood
There are many old pioneer cabins in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Most of them were constructed from native wood, shaped with hand tools such as the broad ax, froe, adz, and drawknife. The wood in these buildings seems unique and different, with a life of...
Smoky Mountain Spirituality
The picture above is the footbridge leading to the Ramsey Cascades Trail in the Greenbrier section of the Smoky Mountains. Yes, it's still cold and quiet around here. Another cold, snowy scene from the Greenbrier is below. But to warm things up on the waning days of...