boots & black coffee
  • Home
  • Blog
  • Travels
  • Lifestyle
Home
Blog
Travels
Lifestyle
boots & black coffee
  • Home
  • Blog
  • Travels
  • Lifestyle
Browsing Category
adventures
adventures•Tennessee

Rainbow Falls Trail to Mt. Leconte Lodge- Great Smoky Mountains, Tennessee

We originally wanted to hike the Trillium Gap Trail up Mt. Leconte but it was closed for the season. Concerned about the steepness of Alum Cave, we chose the Rainbow Falls Trail though the trail had dried up over the dry summer.

Once we got to the lodge, we were informed that Rainbow Falls is actually the hardest trail but you can’t say we weren’t challenged. You can read more about the trip in my Mount Leconte post so I’ll keep this short.

I’ll post the info for this trail below but reach out if you have questions!


Length: 6.5 miles to the lodge

Elevation gain: 4,002 feet

AllTrails: https://www.alltrails.com/trail/us/tennessee/mount-leconte-via-rainbow-falls-trail

Recommended gear: water, hiking poles


mount-leconte-rainbow falls trail-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0422.JPG


mount-leconte-rainbow falls trail-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0425.JPG


mount-leconte-rainbow falls trail-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0426.JPG


mount-leconte-rainbow falls trail-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0427.JPG


mount-leconte-rainbow falls trail-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0428.JPG


mount-leconte-rainbow falls trail-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0429.JPG


mount-leconte-rainbow falls trail-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0430.JPG


mount-leconte-rainbow falls trail-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0431.JPG


mount-leconte-rainbow falls trail-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0432.JPG


mount-leconte-rainbow falls trail-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0435.JPG


mount-leconte-rainbow falls trail-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0437.JPG


mount-leconte-rainbow falls trail-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0438.JPG


mount-leconte-rainbow falls trail-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0439.JPG


mount-leconte-rainbow falls trail-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0440.JPG


mount-leconte-rainbow falls trail-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0441.JPG


mount-leconte-rainbow falls trail-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0442.JPG


mount-leconte-rainbow falls trail-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0443.JPG


mount-leconte-rainbow falls trail-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0445.JPG


mount-leconte-rainbow falls trail-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0446.JPG


mount-leconte-rainbow falls trail-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0447.JPG


mount-leconte-rainbow falls trail-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0449.JPG
Share:
adventures•Hiking•Tennessee

Hiking Mt. Leconte- Great Smoky Mountain National Park, Tennessee

I hobbled into a Starbucks on the Gatlinburg strip and ordered a couple lattes to fuel us for the drive back to my friend’s house outside of Nashville. We had finally gotten off the mountain after spending the night in kerosene lit cabin and then working our way down the slick rocky trail back to the part of the Smokies where tourists pull over just to point out rocks or trees mistaken as black bears.

The previous day we painstakingly made our way up the Rainbow Falls trail. I immediately knew I was wearing too many layers and had to quickly de-pants on the trail in order to take off the stifling base layers that had seemed like a good idea just earlier that morning. My friend watched out for anyone else coming up the trail. Our packs were too heavy and neither of us had used the summer to get in better shape before this chilly ascent.

In fact, we had a whole year to prepare but the reality of hiking up a mountain never really set in. To stay at the Leconte Lodge, you must enter a reservation raffle the year before. About 300 calls later and we had secured a cabin for October. The lodge sits at 6,593 feet elevation and can only be reached by foot.

As we climbed higher and higher, we reached the charred skeleton ridgeline where the fires had swept through a few years before. Some teenagers had carelessly tossed lit matches behind them along a trail which ignited a wildfire that devastated the region and wildlife. Lives were lost and the forest has not recovered but the arson charges against them were dropped. The heavy fog around them gave the illusion that they still smoked to this day. In sharp contrast, the ground beneath them was rich, anew with pines starts and wildflowers.

My friend’s too small boots and my labored breathing forced us to slow our pace even further as we wound up the mountain. The trail became harder and we rounded a corner to be greeted by a trail of solid rocks. Our poles blindly felt any sort of crevice that would support us as we climbed up the glossy, wet rocks. We had never been in so much pain or challenged ourselves to that extent. We were day hikers who bit off more than we could chew, but pushed through, determined.

After about 8 hours, we finally reached the lodge where we were informed that we were the last guests to arrive for the day. The dinner bell would be ringing in about 10 minutes but we were shown to our cabin and given a water basin to freshen up with. The cabin was largely encompassed by a wooden bunk bed with clean sheets and thick Pendleton blankets on each bunk. We also had a kerosene lantern, a few hooks, a single wooden chair, and a small table with plastic coffee mugs that we were to bring to dinner.

The bell rang and we were sat at a communal table with a young women and her aunt, then some older couples who were clearly more fit than us. At another table, it was announced that it was a woman’s 70th birthday. I hope to be that woman someday, climbing mountains in my 70’s and convincing my friends to come along.

One of the older hikers told us he had been coming to the Lodge since the 70’s and that the menu hadn’t really changed. Though I skipped the bowl filled with a round syrupy peach half, my vegetarian loaf was a welcome site for a hungry hiker. We finished with hot chocolate that we took to the deck to take in the fading light.

I took the bottom bunk since I’m scared of ladders and hoped that I wouldn’t need to leave the cabin again that night as a bear had been spotted recently. There was a little heater which was more than enough as we fell asleep to the sounds of a heavy rain storm.

We spent a little time in the lodge office in the morning, drinking coffee, writing, and shoving souvenirs into our already full backpacks. I made a little room by giving the guy running the shop a couple of beers that we hadn’t drank. He seemed more than happy to take them. The only way to bring anything up the mountain is on your back or on the back’s of the pack llama’s that hike up the mountain twice weekly.

We headed out in the rain, back down the path that brought us up the lodge. We stopped along the way to check out a red salamander that populates the Smoky Mountains. While it was easier going down, we struggled with our boots and our toes jamming with every step downhill. We didn’t see another soul the whole way down.

We eventually reached my car and hastily peeled off wet clothes for dry ones before more cars drove by. We were sore and dirty but so content in our accomplishment. We saw a part of the mountain that not many venture to as they drive through without ever leaving their car.

Now as I sit here in quarantine looking back, I would trade anything to be on that mountain, soaked through and happy.


mount-leconte-lodge-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0420.JPG


mount-leconte-lodge-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0422.JPG


mount-leconte-lodge-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0423.JPG


mount-leconte-lodge-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0424.JPG


mount-leconte-lodge-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0426.JPG


mount-leconte-lodge-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0444.JPG


mount-leconte-lodge-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0448.JPG


mount-leconte-lodge-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0451.JPG


mount-leconte-lodge-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0452.JPG


mount-leconte-lodge-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0456.JPG


mount-leconte-lodge-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0457.JPG


mount-leconte-lodge-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0460.JPG


mount-leconte-lodge-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0462.JPG


mount-leconte-lodge-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0463.JPG


mount-leconte-lodge-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0464.JPG


mount-leconte-lodge-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0465.JPG


mount-leconte-lodge-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0466.JPG


mount-leconte-lodge-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0468.JPG


mount-leconte-lodge-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0476.JPG


mount-leconte-lodge-great-smoky-mountains-gatlinberg-tennessee0482.JPG
Share:
adventures•Germany•Hiking

Bastei Bridge- Lohmen, Germany

There were tourists everywhere, ourselves included. I knew that the Bastei Bridge was a popular tourist destination yet I hadn’t imagine busloads of tourists making their way through the narrow, curved roads of the Saxon Switzerland National Park.

It was overwhelming, at one point my friend Kelly and I paid the 2 Euros to enter into the fortress remains that sit nestled in the looming rocks of Bastei. There were less people there though we both struggled with height and uncertainty of the grated, metal bridges connecting the former fortress areas.

After some exploring and snapping photos, we ultimately decided to grab a drink and snacks at the nearby Berghotel Hotel where we were staying the night. The hotel had been built in the 70’s and gave some serious The Shining film vibes, particularly as the tour groups filtered out for the day.

The next morning, I went back down to the bridge and was delighted to find that I had beat the impending crowds. A fog permeated the landscape, slowly breaking up as the air changed and the morning sun cut through. I shot a few photos then took in the landscape before making my way to breakfast and moving on for the day.


baste-bridge-lohmen-germany-hiking_0304.JPG



baste-bridge-lohmen-germany-hiking_0306.JPG


baste-bridge-lohmen-germany-hiking_0307.JPG


baste-bridge-lohmen-germany-hiking_0310.JPG


baste-bridge-lohmen-germany-hiking_0311.JPG


baste-bridge-lohmen-germany-hiking_0314.JPG


baste-bridge-lohmen-germany-hiking_0315.JPG


baste-bridge-lohmen-germany-hiking_0316.JPG


baste-bridge-lohmen-germany-hiking_0318.JPG


baste-bridge-lohmen-germany-hiking_0320.JPG


baste-bridge-lohmen-germany-hiking_0321.JPG


baste-bridge-lohmen-germany-hiking_0323.JPG


baste-bridge-lohmen-germany-hiking_0324.JPG


baste-bridge-lohmen-germany-hiking_0325.JPG


baste-bridge-lohmen-germany-hiking_0329.JPG


baste-bridge-lohmen-germany-hiking_0330.JPG


baste-bridge-lohmen-germany-hiking_0331.JPG


baste-bridge-lohmen-germany-hiking_0332.JPG


baste-bridge-lohmen-germany-hiking_0339.JPG


baste-bridge-lohmen-germany-hiking_0341.JPG


baste-bridge-lohmen-germany-hiking_0344.JPG
Share:
adventures•ecola state park•indian beach•oregon•Travel

Indian Beach, Ecola State Park- Cannon Beach, Oregon

After spending the day at Cannon Beach, we headed to Indian Beach for sunset with some snacks and beers. It was the first time I had seen anyone surfing and it was mesmerizing to watch.

A lady was leaving with her family and offered us their fire pit which was much appreciated as it got darker. The beach is located in Ecola State Park and I’m excited to return to explore the trails next time!


public.jpeg


public.jpeg


public.jpeg


public.jpeg


public.jpeg


public.jpeg


public.jpeg
Share:
Page 1 of 71234»...Last »

About Me

Hi! This site is a work in progress- come back soon 🙂

Recent Posts

  • Rainbow Falls Trail to Mt. Leconte Lodge- Great Smoky Mountains, Tennessee
  • Hiking Mt. Leconte- Great Smoky Mountain National Park, Tennessee
  • Hike 7- Marquette Park & the neighborhood, St. Louis, Missouri
  • Hike 6- Limestone Hill Trail- Mastodon State Park- Imperial, Missouri
  • Hike 5- Lime Kiln Trail- Rockwoods Reservation- Wildwood, Missouri

Recent Comments

  • Ginny Carpenter on Fern Clyffe Waterfall Trail, Fern Clyffe State Park- Goreville, Illinois
  • Sidney Rehg on Fern Clyffe Waterfall Trail, Fern Clyffe State Park- Goreville, Illinois
  • Ginny Carpenter on 5 Podcasts to Inspire Wanderlust
  • Shelby Stanger on 5 Podcasts to Inspire Wanderlust

Categories

  • 52 Hike Challenge
  • adventures
  • California
  • camping
  • cannon beach
  • Day Trip
  • ecola state park
  • gear
  • Germany
  • haystack rock
  • Hiking
  • Illinois
  • indian beach
  • Lifestyle
  • Local Travel
  • Lousiana
  • Midwest
  • Missouri
  • Nashville
  • New Orleans
  • Notes
  • oregon
  • podcasts & books
  • Review
  • Saint Louis
  • Tennessee
  • Travel
  • Uncategorized

Popular Posts

Fern Clyffe Waterfall Trail, Fern Clyffe State Park- Goreville, Illinois

May 30, 2018

5 Podcasts to Inspire Wanderlust

February 6, 2018

Rainbow Falls Trail to Mt. Leconte Lodge- Great Smoky Mountains, Tennessee

April 17, 2020

Fall Creek Falls State Park – Pikeville, Tennessee

March 3, 2016

Laumeier Sculpture Park- St. Louis, MO

April 23, 2016

Instagram Feed

[instagram-feed]

© 2021 copyright boots and black coffee blog