Archive for the ‘Gorges State Park’ Category

First hike to Rainbow Falls in Gorges State Park

Tuesday, April 12th, 2011

Looking up from the base

The first time I landed in Transylvania County, I figured the “Land of Waterfalls” signs represented the typical rural region overselling its meager asserts. Well, two awesome waterfall hikes in two visits has turned me around.

Rainbow Falls post

This week’s source of wonder: Rainbow Falls in Gorges State Park, North Carolina’s remotest state park, about 55 miles southwest of Asheville. Gorges is a work in progress — the Rainbow Falls Trail is the only must-see amenity on the park’s western side, which I visited Sunday (only PortaPotties for your bodily duties; no running water, alas). I checked out the Upper Bearwallow Falls, but I wouldn’t recommend going out of your way to see it.

Still, seven hours of driving and $60 bucks worth of gas later, all I can think of is how soon I get back out there to see which Transylvania County experience bests this one.

Parking lot at Gorges State Park

About the hike: I drove to the eastern entrance about a mile south of the hamlet of Sapphire, and drove past one under-construction parking lot and parked in a big lot where the park road ended, above. It’s around 3,000 feet here, not super high by the standards of the Smokies, but there are some pretty impressive peaks nearby — some of which have transmission towers, so the cell-phone reception is good.

Tricky creek crossing

Trail maps rate the Rainbow Falls hike as a strenuous three-miler. Note that’s a mile and a half each way if you hike to the falls and turn back. The trail descends for about three-quarters of a mile to this creek crossing (be ready to get your feet wet), then heads up the canyon, eventually tracking the Horsepasture River.

Horsepasture River

Here’s the river. Pretty enough in its own right. Just when the climb has you almost out of breath….

Rainbow Falls

…. you turn a corner onto this breathtaking view. Look closely and you can see the faint rainbow at the bottom right. A decent (but steep) use path goes down near the base of the falls, but it starts getting extremely muddy and slippery. I was tempted to break out my rain poncho.

Pictures can’t do justice to the experience of standing less than 20 yards from the pounding behemoth of a waterfall like this one. There’s nothing like the sensation of cool mist hitting the skin after a hot, steep ascent.

The waterfalls I’ve seen in Transylvania County would not put Yosemite out of business, of course, but they do have some of that spine-tingling greatness.

Sky over a backroad at Gorges National Park

Another Gorges State Park trail goes down to Upper Bearwallow Falls. I walked a paved road that was closed to motorized traffic, so I had this part of the park all to myself. The pic here is just some sky along the way.

Upper Bearwallow Falls

The road continued down to a crosswalk with a right turn down to Bearwallow Falls, above, and a left turn to an observation deck overlooking the nearby terrain. OK, so after Rainbow Falls it was a bit of a letdown.

Overlooking the Blue Ridge Mountains

And the view up here was less than stupendous — mainly because there’s a clear-cut for power lines that I’ve cropped out of the image.

The west side of Gorges State Park is promising and will no doubt improve in the years to come; a trail from the east side looks like it dives deep into some rugged wilderness, so it could be worthy of extended explorations.

Links for this hike

Google map:


View 4-10-11 Gorges State Park in a larger map


Person dies at Rainbow Falls in Gorges State Park

Tuesday, June 8th, 2010
The Asheville Citizen-Times is reporting that a person is dead following an accident at Rainbow Falls in Gorges State Park yesterday evening. The waterfall is off Whitewater Road on the Horsepasture River in Transylvania County.

The incident was reported at 6 p.m., a Transylvania County emergency dispatcher said this morning. No information on the identity of the victim has been released.

BlueRidgeNow.com reports that the person fell 150 feet off of the falls and onto rocks.

The U.S. Forest Service is heading the investigation into the accident.

The death is the second in a little more than a week at a Western North Carolina waterfall. A 41-year-old Wake County man who was on vacation died at Elk River Falls in Avery County on May 29.


Jeff
HikingintheSmokys.com Detailed information on trails in the Smoky Mountains; includes trail descriptions, key features, pictures, video, maps, elevation profiles, news, and more.

Outdoor events this weekend

Thursday, February 11th, 2010
The following are a few outdoor related events you might be interested in participating in this weekend:

Waterfalls Link with Love: Gorges State Park will offer a special Valentine’s Day weekend walk and talk, “Waterfalls Link with Love,” at 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. Saturday Feb. 13 and at 2 p.m. Sunday Feb. 14.

Find out why so many people are attracted to waterfalls and learn the scientific explanations as to how a positive mood is affected by negative ions. The program begins at Upper Bearwallow Falls trailhead, at picnic area No. 2, off N.C. 281 south in Sapphire. The walk is a mile long with a stopover at the Upper Bearwallow Falls observation platform. Bring suitable clothing and footwear for cold and wet conditions. For more information, please call the park office at 828-966-9099.


Great Backyard Bird Count: The 13th annual Great Backyard Bird Count, a nationwide effort to count all species of birds, will happen this Friday through Monday. The count is open to anyone in any location.

Sponsored by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology and the National Audubon Society, the GBBC is an effort to identify and count millions of birds across North America and beyond. Data gathered will help scientists spot bird-population trends, while the event also helps to increase public awareness of birds' needs for places to safely feed and rest.

HOW TO JOIN THE COUNT

The only tools you'll need are a pair of binoculars or a good set of eyes, and the Internet. Just follow these three steps:

1. Count birds for at least 15 minutes on one or more days of the count. Submit a separate checklist for each new day.

2. Count the greatest number of individuals of each species that you see together at any one time. Print out your regional bird checklist before you start for an idea of the kinds of birds you're likely to see.

3. Enter results through the GBBC Web page, www.birdsource.org/gbbc/, through the deadline of March 1.

For more information, please click here.


Prescribed Fire Awareness Week: Many ecosystems require a periodic fire for maintenance to increase productivity, for good health, and to reduce the risk of catastrophic wildfires.

From 1-2:30 p.m. Saturday, at the Pisgah Center for Wildlife Education, wildlife biologist/forester Dean Simon will lead the “Fire on the Mountain” program to discuss prescribed fires. The program is for ages 18 and older. It's free, but registration is required. For directions to Saturday’s program, visit www.ncwildlife.org. To register, call 828-877-4423.


Jeff
HikingintheSmokys.com Detailed information on trails in the Smoky Mountains; includes trail descriptions, key features, pictures, video, maps, elevation profiles, news, and more.

New map for Western North Carolina waterfalls

Friday, October 16th, 2009
Waterfalls of North Carolina is the very first map available that features over 300 waterfalls in the western North Carolina region. To create the map, photographer Kevin Adams partnered with Larry Odoski of Outdoor Paths Publishing and two of the best cartographers in the business, Jack Mohr and Pete Kennedy. The four of them devoted more than a year of painstaking work to complete this comprehensive source of information.

The falls are color coded and rated: Blue for higher beauty rating and ease of access or Red for lower beauty rating and more difficult access. On the back is a chart with detailed information and directions to 128 falls.

Features of the Waterfalls of North Carolina Map:
* Map measures approximately 26 x 38 inches and folds to 4 x 9 inches
* Printed on waterproof and tearproof paper
* Includes 301 waterfalls
* Detailed information for 128 falls
* 44 waterfall photographs
* GPS coordinates for the waterfalls and the waterfall trailheads

Detailed inset maps for:
* Looking Glass Rock region of Pisgah National Forest
* Wilson Creek Region of Pisgah National Forest
* Standing Indian region of Nantahala National Forest
* Snowbird Creek region of Nantahala National Forest
* DuPont State Forest
* Lake Jocassee Gorges region
* Great Smoky Mountains National Park (including falls on the Tennessee side of the Smokies)

You can purchase the map through Amazon by clicking here.


Jeff
HikingintheSmokys.com Detailed information on trails in the Smoky Mountains; includes trail descriptions, key features, pictures, video, maps, elevation profiles, news, hiking gear store, and more.