Archive for the ‘Laurel Falls Trail’ Category

Laurel Falls Trail to be Closed next Tuesday

Wednesday, April 13th, 2011
Great Smoky Mountains National Park officials announced today a one-day closure of the Laurel Falls Trail on Tuesday, April 19th for litter clean-up and graffiti removal. Mangers say that the closure will both improve the experience of hikers and reduce the likelihood of bears being attracted to the litter and food waste along the trail.

The Trail closure will only affect the 1.7-mile paved section from the trailhead on Little River Road to Laurel Falls. Not only will trash will be cleaned up from the Trail itself, but personnel will be rigging ropes to safely remove litter that has been discarded over the side of the Trail. A full closure was deemed necessary to provide for the safety of visitors and the workers.

Employees will also be removing graffiti that has been building up over the years. Graffiti including such things as people’s names and the dates they were in the park can be found on rocks and trail markers along the route. Both littering and defacing Park features with graffiti are illegal and Park visitors are advised to refrain from doing either.

The Laurel Falls Trail is highly used due to its low-moderate difficulty rating, its handicapped accessible features, and its accessibility from a main road. Paper and aluminum litter is not the only form of trash that accumulates and causes problems.

“Sometimes visitors do not think of bio-degradable items like apple cores and orange peels as trash, as they would soda cans or food wrappings.” Park Superintendent Dale Ditmanson said, “But these items are powerful attractants to bears and other wildlife that can quickly become dependent on these foods sources, causing them to lose their fear of humans and pose a hazard to future visitors to the area.”

The trail is expected to be closed from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. It will be open to all visitors for the remainder of the day once the clean-up is complete.

It's 2011 - can you believe people are still littering in a national park...and leaving graffiti for crying out loud!!

For more information on hiking the Laurel Falls Trail, please click here.


Jeff
HikingintheSmokys.com

Misdemeanor charges for “Laurel the Bear” man

Thursday, June 24th, 2010
The Knox News Sentinel is reporting that the man who was bit by a bear on the Laurel Falls Trail last month has been charged with a misdemeanor. The encounter resulted in the bear's death, and caused a firestorm of criticism on the internet.

National Park rangers cited Sean Konover, 26, of Wilton, Conn., on a misdemeanor charge of disturbing an animal for crossing paths with a black bear.

According to the federal citation, Konover got to within about a foot of the bear to shoot a photo.

Konover was quoted in the story: "I'm in no way a villain, I didn't feed the bear. I knew better than that. I'm just as upset as other people are, but I'm the one they're pointing their fingers at."

You can read the full story here.


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

Bear backlash against Smokies ‘misguided’

Sunday, May 23rd, 2010
Is the so called "Black Bear backlash" against the Great Smoky Mountains 'misguided'?

That's a question that's being explored in an article posted on the WBIR website this morning.

The article points out that the Park continues to endure an emotional online backlash after rangers euthanized a bear that bit a visitor at Laurel Falls almost two weeks ago.

As of this morning, 6532 Facebook users have joined a group to aim criticism at the park's policy of euthanizing any bear that injures a visitor. Some angry user comments have even conveyed a desire to boycott the park.

Yet experts who work with bears say taking the frustration out on the park is a misguided exercise that ignores the extraordinary efforts of the park to protect bears.

The article points out some misconceptions and explains some of the reasons why they were forced into their only option of euthanasia, namely that when a bear becomes habituated to humans it's more likely to act aggressively or "attack" another person - someone likely to be innocent of any misconduct.

The article also points out the Park has posted a couple of new signs on the Laurel Falls Trail that say, "Did you kill this bear?" The signs explain the circumstances leading up to the recent bear attack, blaming the incident on visitors who knowingly fed the black bear and made it aggressively approach humans as a food source.

The article is a great read. You can check it out 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, and more.

Laurel Falls Trail Closed / Other Smokies News

Wednesday, May 19th, 2010
The Great Smoky Mountains has a brief announcement on their website that the Laurel Falls Trail will be closed today from 6:00 a.m. until 9:00 p.m. No reason was given, but I would assume that it has something to do with the recent bear issues.

An article on the WBIR website states that the park is set to euthenize the bear that bit a man while taking photographs near Laurel Falls last week. The article quotes GSMNP spokeswoman Nancy Gray as saying; "We have rangers monitoring Laurel Falls to make absolutely sure there are no other bears active in that area that could have been responsible for last week's incident."

So it's likely that today's closing is for rangers to monitor the area one last time to make certain they have the right bear.

I also wanted to point out a pretty good article in today's Knoxville News Sentinel regarding the Sinks.

I didn't know this, but the Sinks was created during an 1896 flood when about 900 logs being floated down the river to a sawmill became jammed at a horseshoe bend, creating a diverted channel across the neck of the bend. The England Lumber Company solved the problem by drilling into the rocks nearby, loading them with dynamite and blasting a new streambed, creating today's 20-foot cascade across huge jagged rocks.

You can read the entire article, which includes information on the renovation work at the Sinks, 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, and more.

Bear bites hiker in Smokies

Friday, May 14th, 2010
Tourists behaving badly:

The Asheville Citizen-Times is reporting that a visitor sustained a minor injury when he was bitten on the foot by a black bear while hiking the Laurel Falls Trail in the Great Smoky Mountains on Wednesday.

In his effort to photograph the bear, the visitor allowed it to approach within inches, resulting in the bear biting the man’s foot and leaving a small puncture wound. The injury didn't require medical attention.

Wildlife biologists captured a 60 pound female bear, similar to the description provided by visitors on Thursday. While they have a bear in custody, they will continue to observe and evaluate the Laurel Falls Trail to see if other bears frequent the area.

Once Park biologist feel confident that they have the involved bear, they will have to euthanize it. Park policy requires that a bear that contacts and/or injures a person must be euthanized. The park said in a statement that it cannot take the risk of allowing a bear with this type of behavior to remain in the wild.

Park officials said the bear sited along the Laurel Falls Trail had become food conditioned most likely from visitors leaving food remains along the trail or even feeding the bear. Food conditioned bears may be bold in their attempts to get food.

You would think that after years, or even decades, of education on the part of parks and wildlife experts, that people would know a little better by now.....

You can read the rest of the story 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, and more.