The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Towns in Smokies beckon visitors

Attraction­s in Gatlinburg, Pigeon Forge, Seviervill­e spared by wildfire.

- By Mary Ann Anderson Tribune News Service

It’s a spectacula­r drive northward along Highway 441 from small town of Cherokee on the North Carolina side of Smoky Mountains National Park to Gatlinburg on the Tennessee side. In the lower elevations, the spring wildflower­s of mid-March — mostly trillium — pop from the ground, offering bits of color that soon disappear the higher we climb toward 5,046-foot Newfound Gap at the center of the park. At the highest elevations, patches of snow and ice among the fir and spruce trees prove that winter still hangs on.

As my husband, Roy, and I approach Gatlinburg on Highway 441, we pass a near a trail called Chimney Tops. It is here we see the first signs of the massive wildfires that ravaged East Tennessee and Smoky Mountains National Park this past autumn.

Chimney Tops, as it turns out, is ground zero, the place where the human-caused fires first began to smolder. The trunks of the trees, their tops bare in winter, are solemn and scarred black in places, but undergrowt­h is fast returning with the mild weather that enveloped the Southeast during January and February.

Four months after the last flames of the wind-whipped, droughtfue­led monster wildfire were finally annihilate­d by firefighte­rs and doused by rain, glorious rain, the phoenix that is Gatlinburg, Pigeon Forge and Seviervill­e is rising from the ashes amid the shadows of the Smokies.

Because of the intense internatio­nal spotlight the wildfires thrust upon this vacation haven for honeymoone­rs and families alike, some believe that the entire area was completely obliterate­d and that there’s nothing left. But that’s oh so untrue. This entire East Tennessee region is alive and well and completely thriving, and its message is essentiall­y this: Come on down. Or over. Or up. Fly in. Drive in. Even hike in. We’re open for business, and we welcome you with open arms.

“The perception is still out there that there’s nothing left to see, that it all burned up,” says Leon Downey, executive director of Pigeon Forge Department of Tourism. “But the attraction­s are still operating, and the views from the parkway are still as beautiful as ever.”

That’s not to say there isn’t much damage, he points out, because as the entire world knows by now, there is plenty of it, primarily in Gatlinburg, with much of it in the cabin rental business.

In Pigeon Forge and Seviervill­e, none of the businesses are affected. But Downey also says it was the horrific images splashed across the internet, television and newspapers that made potential visitors believe that Pigeon Forge and Gatlinburg were destroyed and that Great Smoky Mountains National Park, America’s most visited national park, was wiped off the map.

But no attraction­s or major hotels are destroyed and the park is as hauntingly beautiful as ever. As Roy and I drive the Highway 441 strip between Gatlinburg, the most southern of the three cities, through Pigeon Forge, and then to Seviervill­e on the north, everything looks much the same as it did when I last visited some dozen years ago — except now there’s much more to do.

The great attraction­s of Ober Gatlinburg, the only ski resort in Tennessee, and Dollywood have no damage and are fully operationa­l. The Aquarium of the Smokies is right where it’s always been, and so are the Dixie Stampede and Splash Country Water Park. Roy and I visit the new Titanic Museum and Wonderwork­s in Pigeon Forge, as well as the Old Mill, a circa-1830 grain mill that is one of the most iconic images of Pigeon Forge.

Gatlinburg’s iconic wedding chapels are ready for your “I do’s,” and honeymoon cabins, also beloved symbols of the region, are plentiful. As a matter of fact, we opted to stay in a lovely two-bedroom hilltop cabin at Eagles Ridge Resort in Pigeon Forge with nary a sign to be seen of the vestiges of wildfires.

When we visit, it is the beginning of spring break, although snowflakes are falling and would soon cloak and transform the Smokies into winter wonderland. For some, at least, the word has apparently gotten out that this region is indeed open for business, as the traffic, while not bumper to bumper, is heavy although navigable. The cars are sporting plates from Mississipp­i, North Carolina, Georgia and Alabama. There are more Florida tags than any other state, but mixed in, too, are plates from as far away as California and Washington to New York and Massachuse­tts.

Nestled into these ancient mountains near Gatlinburg is the park’s Sugarlands Visitor Center and headquarte­rs. We talk to Dana Soehn, a management assistant in the public affairs office.

She tells us that of the 17,904 total acres that burned, 11,410 were in parklands within the park’s boundary and another 6,494 were on private lands.

“Those 11,410 acres represent only 2 percent of (the) 522,076acre park,” Soehn says. “Fortunatel­y, the fire occurred outside of the growing season and most of the vegetation was dormant. As for the critters, most wildlife has the inborn ability to escape by burrowing undergroun­d, fleeing or flying away, so we have no anticipate­d losses among the threatened and endangered species in the park.”

She added that there was no fire damage to historical structures, and that of the park’s 848 trail miles, only 31 of those miles were affected, adding, “Sixteen trails suffered some damage but are now reopened. Only four trails will likely have long-term closures for further assessment­s for damage and stability and for repairs.”

The park forest, which she calls an “incredibly resilient ecological community,” will return, although some of it that sustained the highest degree of burn and which represents only a tiny, tiny percentage of the park, may take decades to regrow.

One cold morning over breakfast at Crockett’s Breakfast Camp in Gatlinburg, where the portions are huge and served in cast iron skillets, we meet and talk with Marci Claude, who is public relations manager of the Gatlinburg Convention and Visitors Bureau.

She wants to clear the air of smoke, so to speak.

She explains that all told some 2,400 structures were affected by the wildfires, and those were predominan­tly homes, cabins and condominiu­ms. Half of those were in Gatlinburg, with Mayor Mike Werner and City Manager Cindy Ogle’s homes among those destroyed.

From the aftermath of what Claude termed a “historic and unpreceden­ted wildfire” came an outpouring of support from around the world.

“People love Gatlinburg,” she states emphatical­ly. “It’s a sentimenta­l place that we hold in people’s hearts. We have 13 to 14 million visitors a year in our area. People are just drawn here because they love it. Generation­s of families travel here, and everyone wants to contribute something to rebuilding. But we have to recover from the perception that Gatlinburg is no longer here, because clearly we are.”

 ?? COURTESY OF PIGEON FORGE DEPARTMENT OF TOURISM ?? Of the 17,904 total acres that burned in last November’s devastatin­g wildfires in and around the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, 11,410 were park lands within the park’s boundary. Those 11,410 acres represent only 2 percent of the 522,076-acre park.
COURTESY OF PIGEON FORGE DEPARTMENT OF TOURISM Of the 17,904 total acres that burned in last November’s devastatin­g wildfires in and around the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, 11,410 were park lands within the park’s boundary. Those 11,410 acres represent only 2 percent of the 522,076-acre park.
 ?? MARY ANN ANDERSON ?? Crockett’s Breakfast Camp in Gatlinburg, Tenn., serves the Huntcamp Skillet, a hearty breakfast of cheese grits, sausage, ham, pancakes, hash browns and more.
MARY ANN ANDERSON Crockett’s Breakfast Camp in Gatlinburg, Tenn., serves the Huntcamp Skillet, a hearty breakfast of cheese grits, sausage, ham, pancakes, hash browns and more.
 ?? MARY ANN ANDERSON ?? Pigeon River Pottery at the Old Mill in Pigeon Forge features artisans hard at work at their craft.
MARY ANN ANDERSON Pigeon River Pottery at the Old Mill in Pigeon Forge features artisans hard at work at their craft.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States