Sunday, April 19, 2015

Rogers Creek Falls Another One Off the Bucket List



Vernal iris growing in the forest on the 
way to Rogers Creek


Rogers Creek Falls 

Dana & Kenny Koogler

Total hike distance 3 miles approx.

Saturday April 18, 2015

Photos are here starting with frame 137






   I had found a web site about Scotts Gulf after moving to Tennessee thirteen years ago.



I had no way of knowing then just how this place would capture my imagination.  I had no way of knowing
how I'd grow to love it. I did not know how much time and energy I'd spend exploring it.   I knew I was
going to be an off trail hiker. I'd already begun doing just that in the Smoky Mountains.   I began my hiking exploits in the Cumberland Plateau on the trails.  I started at Virgin Falls. I hiked off trail in the mountains
of Western North Carolina.   I don't really remember my first off trail expedition in the plateau.
I just know that my love of off trail exploring and waterfall finding has pushed my limits and given me the opportunity to see things not everyone gets to see.   It has caused me to forge an even stronger bond
with my husband.  We are a good team.   He is my comfort, my joy and helps my confidence.  
The trip to Rogers Creek Falls today was a tough but successful one that brings us both joy and makes us
an even better team.

               Rogers Creek Falls was one of two waterfalls in a far flung corner of Scotts Gulf that
I determined I would visit.   Back about a month ago I visited Puncheon Camp Creek Twin Falls.
It was very beautiful and the trip involved bushwhacking and rope down over the cliff.  We had been going to tackle Rogers Creek Falls after that on the same day.   We opted not to when it began to pour rain.
We did not want to make it into a more dangerous trip and have it become a miserable experience.
We were very glad we waited and did them both on separate days.  Either one is hard, but together
they are that much harder.  

         Preparation involved a lot of time spent studying maps and checking out Google Earth.
We returned home from attempt #1 and got on Google Earth and began seeing a potential better way to
 access the falls from a different approach.   It ended up being much better.  Rogers Creek Road by the time we first tried to reach the falls was no longer a through road which meant a longer hike to even reach it before going down over the cliff.     Tom Dunigan had visited the falls and told me it was possible to wait until
the Caney Fork was down for Summer and then ford it and walk up the gorge to see the falls.   The problem becomes that by the time the Caney Fork is down enough to be safe to ford... the falls will be nearly bone dry for Summer.     The only part of that trip which involves a trail is from Polly's Branch down to the river.
From there you'd still be off trailing it.   We decided we were not going to visit the falls to have them be
dry. We'd find a way to access them from the same side of the river that they were on in Spring.
Winter or Spring is usually the time to try this stuff.  Snakes are less likely.  Vegetation is a little less.
Usually plenty of water coming over the falls to make all that effort worthwhile.

            I had narrowed my focus down this season and was determined to see this falls.
Puncheon Camp Creek Falls was a good primer for this one.  Rogers Creek was harder since the rappell down to it was worse.   It was steeper, a lot less defined, with tons of downed hemlock trees.  I knew
that I'd be scared, but I'd have to feel the fear and do it anyway.   Do it afraid, but do it!


           Here are two views above of the first place we came to.  We realized at once we had not gone
far enough and that we were making this harder than it had to be.  We continued further out along the plateau
paralleling the way point for the falls.

   We did see some pretty wildflowers on the way, but Rogers Creek area is also not a great wildflower hike.    It is greatly disturbed because it is a pine plantation.  We finally came to a place where we could go down toward the creek.

 Above--Confederate Violet

      Above--bluets


           
 above... our first glimpse of the stream we had to follow down

  I don't know what kind of moss this is, but it is the prettiest and most different I've ever seen! I saw great carpets of it! I had to touch it!

     We had to bushwhack down stream.   We encountered lots of rhodo and downed trees, briers.
We have done worse though. That part of it was bad, but by comparison to other places the rhodo was not as terrible.   We finally could tell by the lay of the land that we were approaching  a side stream.. This would be Rogers Creek.  We walked up it to see a cascade and make certain nothing more was above this waterfall wise. We did not see anymore falls up above this small cascade area.  We had to cross here and continue downstream.  There is a pretty cascade on the branch down through the main gorge.   We got to a
vantage point to see it, but there is too much brush to make it a good photo op.  We could tell we picked the  correct side of the stream to be on. Across the gorge the terrain was even less forgiving.

 Kenny ahead of me. We traded leads and took turns scouting the way.
 First look at Rogers Creek. We forded here and continued down along the bluff.


Nice deep hole of water and a cascade that is six feet tall and about 30 ft wide.  Too much brush and downed trees to really get a better view of it.  If you got right in the water and swam to it there is still too much crap in the way to see it much better.



        It was not too long until we came to a point we could hear Rogers Creek Falls below. It was crashing and thundering.   It is not the most massive waterfall we've ever seen by a long shot.  It is the challenge of reaching it that is the draw.   Being one of a few persons to make it is appealing to idiots like me.
I know of three men who have been here. Tom Dunigan, Mike O'Neal, Mike Gourley.   I know there have been others because I know none of these guys left behind the 2 liter Mountain Dew bottles and other
debris.  Some of it may have actually traveled there on its own in a flooding situation.  Not a lot of trash, but
a couple cans were the only thing we saw down in the gorge.  


       We found a place that was the possible spot to descend.   I knew no matter what I was not going to like it.   I went further out the bluff and found the terrain got no better.  Kenny went down ahead of me and scouted a place to set up a rappell to go down.   He was very discouraged and I began to reconcile myself
to the fact we might not make it down.   The dying and falling of the hemlocks is sad for sure, but I never
stopped to contemplate how the falling of the trees would affect me or anyone else.   Today it played a part.
He crawled through the branches of a massive downed hemlock and found on the other side of it... the way.
We had a lot of rope with us, but not enough to set two separate rappels.   We scooted down the first part
saving the rope for the last twenty five feet or so.  

     I found myself on the ledge looking at the upper cascade of Rogers Creek Falls.
It was so pretty!   I got to look down the cleft in the rocks where it was squeezed in a chute as it fell.
You could hear the sound of it as it entered the cave below.    I was thrilled to have gotten this far.
I did not think right then of the rest of the climb down.  I just wanted to enjoy the moment.  Kenny set the rope and I shot some video and took pictures of the upper part.  I knew we would not be back so I wanted to see plenty of it.

Upper cascade and slide of  Rogers Creek Falls 


 Squeezing into the chute!

Downed hemlocks on both sides of the falls!! 

           Once I shot the video and headed back toward Kenny he had the rope ready to go. 
He went down ahead of me.  He spotted me as I came down and was able to assist me by telling me  about foot placement.    We made it down past the point where it was dangerous and no slips. 
No injuries.  He was the first one to the falls. I walked over to them and as it hit me we had made it I let out a war whoop!  WOOOOO HOOOO!  Yes, Sharon McGee, I thought about you!  Stuff  like this is hard as hell for me, but it makes me feel VERY MUCH ALIVE!

       I was rejoicing that we made it!  

The gorge down here was coated in moss. Deep and green.   It is steep sided, rocky, craggy, and 
if you follow it down you arrive at the Caney Fork River eventually.    It is a hemlock gorge and many of them are dead or dying.   Recent ice storms have helped bring trees down in here.
Rogers Creek Falls is about twenty five feet high and it was flowing great today.  No stream leaves this spot above ground.  All the water is diverted into the ground or shunted to the cave on the left of the falls.  Two hundred yards down from this spot the stream resurges in a beautiful white ribbons coming up from the stone and all that moss.    

         
 Rogers Creek Falls


Kenny by the cave mouth. It shows you a little of the scale of the place.


 Resurgence of Rogers Creek 
A view of the craggy cliffs.  I am never satisfied with the photos I take in an attempt to show how 
steep these gorges are. 


              We stayed down there a little while and enjoyed it.   We had to climb back up out of this hole and up the bluff and back out of here.   We did not tarry too long since we wanted to get that part over with.     The climb up was uneventful.  Going up is usually easier than coming down!
Today I was kind of glad for that fallen hemlock to go through.  It was like a little security net over the treacherous cliff we had to climb out on to get back up.   One thing about it.. working your way through those branches it was hard to think about much else!    The climb out was tough. 
I sat down on my butt in the woods and ate an apple and drank some green tea.   I was hot and sweaty. I was muddy and had sticks and leaves all over me and in my hair.   We had made it! Success!   I could console myself all that way back up and out just realizing the worst was over.
I never have to do it again.   

           We grabbed some lunch in Crossville and boy were we hungry! We did not eat lunch until 2 pm or so.   We were drive thru material only on account of the dirt and stench.   I was wet and muddy and could hardly wait to get to the shower!   I felt myself growing sleepy even before I ate.  
Adrenaline highs are always followed by a crash.  I slept on the way home. The trip home was a fast one thanks to Eisen Fuß at the wheel.   (Eisen Foose= Iron Foot)

Below is a video of Rogers Creek Falls set to music Misery and Happiness by John Cowan.
Appropriate for describing my relationship with places like this.  I describe my relationship with hard to reach waterfalls like a girl with a bad boyfriend .



  
     

Friday, April 17, 2015

Jeffrey Hell

Hybrid wakerobin growing along the slopes of Jeffrey Hell


Jeffrey Hell 

Dana Koogler solo 

Total hike distance 3.4 miles
Thursday April 16, 2015

Pictures are here: 





    I had said for the past three years or so that I wanted to hike the Jeffrey Hell trail to see the 
Spring wildflower display.  I had read in guidebooks it was supposed to be an excellent Spring hike.
I saw Linda & Chuck's photos from last week and that was both the reminder and the decider.
I moved it up to the top of the list and planned to do it today.  I kept my word. We've been having 
a particularly rainy Spring season.    I am thankful for the rain for keeping everything growing and the
waterfalls gushing, but I admit I have grown a bit weary of it.  I decided to go rain or shine.

      The day dawned beautiful and clear and I was thrilled about it.  I was feeling hopeful
that our area might actually have a nice day with no rain for a change.    I was prepared though.
I brought along a picnic, extra clothes, rope, an umbrella, and new rain gear!


Reason to feel hopeful as the day dawns.   Sunrise over the Ellejoy Plain near my house.  You can see the veil of shaconage in the vales at the base of Chilhowee Mountain and our beautiful Foothills.


          Jeffrey Hell gets its name from the dense growth of rhododendron called "slicks" or "hells" by the 
settlers.   The rest of the story is that a hunter named Jeffrey lost his dogs in the area and swore he'd find them if he had to go to Hell to get them.   I have crawled through more than my share of rhodo and the all time worst was Defeat Ridge on the manway to Thunderhead.   Dan  Heimsoth and myself belly crawled through that mess until we positively ached to be able to stand up or move around.  We looked like we'd 
been in a cat fight and lost when we came out of there.    Jeffrey Hell does have rhodo patches, but 
there is a wide trail to follow and hikers today don't have to fret with it.   

    I tagged this hike as an all time BEST WILDFLOWER HIKE.  It was one of those trails that once I arrived and began hiking I was astonished at the number and quality of wildflowers. I wondered why on earth I had waited so long to do this? Thanks Linda and Chuck for the tip.  Once again.. you were right!
I also think this would be a promising Summer wildflower hike based upon what I saw sprouting.  We have 
hiked to Fall Branch Falls so many time's I've lost count.   I had never hiked the Jeffrey Hell trail though.
I am glad to have remedied that.

          Directions to Reach the Trailhead:  

From Tellico Plains turn and start up the Cherohala Skyway.  Drive to the West Rattlesnake 
Rock parking area just past the "Flying Bridge".   It will be on your left after the bridge about 1/2 mile or so.    The trail is through a gap in the stone retaining wall at the edge of the parking lot.
The trail goes down hill and at the bottom of the hill you will see a sign for Citico Creek Wilderness.       Jeffrey Hell trail #196 goes sharply RIGHT. 

Welcome to Citico!



If you want to hike to Fall Branch Falls turn left here at this sign and stay on Trail #87.


     

Trail intersection..  The trail here is in what I consider good condition. 
 I never saw another hiker all day.

      The wildflower display begins before you ever leave the parking lot.  The wildflowers 
were literally right by the parking area thick as hair on a dogs back! 
Great carpets of white squirrel corn were the first thing I saw.  Spring beauties were also present in large quantities, but they were closed when I first arrived.   I had not gone far until I began to see large
numbers of Dutchman's Breeches also.  



    
Closeup of Squirrel Corn


Dutchman's Breeches

Both these pretty flowers are in the fumitory family along with Bleeding Hearts which blood in our area, but 
I didn't see any along here today.   


   
The Jeffrey Hell trail is easy.   

        

The slopes above and below were overflowing with ferns and wildflowers. I love this time of year!
Green is my favorite color and I was soaking up plenty of it!  

   I began to see wakerobin trillium in clumps along the trail and down the slopes below me. 


Cream wakerobin

Purple Wakerobin

and this is their psychedelic offspring below!  
This is the trillium I want to be... weirdo trillium!   I gotta be different!  I posted a close up of this guy
at the top of this blog entry.   Based upon what I have seen in other areas... these hybrids tend to come back
year after year with the exact same color pattern. I also know they can grow in "hybrid swarms". I am not sure whether the hybrids are spreading and capable of reproducing their own kind or if the parents are just 
producing more of them. 


       The forest here was extremely quiet. Once I got out of earshot of the parking lot I heard things, but they 
were sounds of the forest.   Water.  Wind.  Birds.   I heard the drumming of a grouse twice today.  I heard
a turkey hen clucking. I heard a woodpecker hammering several times.  I also heard some beautiful bird songs . I enjoyed the smells of fresh air and the fragrance of rain and flowers and damp earth. 

Below is a very short video of the songs of the birds and and quiet of the forest. 





  I hadn't gone very far when I saw something tiny and different along the trail.


Meet Prester John!  First time sighting for me. I found two of them not far apart.
It is a variety of Jack in the Pulpit, but with subtle differences.  
Arisaema triphyllum ssp. quinatum 
Prester John was a legendary Christian Patriarch. 


Image from a book of Prester John.

   I saw Spring beauties opening up at last as the day warmed.  I saw trout lilies galore.


Not sure if these are Carolina or Virginia spring beauties without looking them up.


Lots of trout lilies along the trail. 

   I saw open areas. I saw a few streams I had to cross. I saw springs of water flowing from the banks.
I had one area along the trail I had a partial mountain view.  Seen below is early Spring looking generally east off the trail.






   I came to an intersection and here is where my day got funky. 


From this spot.. It was the first place I was not absolutely sure which way to go.  
To my left a wide path like an old road bent left or westward... it was piled up with a wall of brush and downfall.  


My view to the left.

Straight ahead of me was a possible path, but it entered an area of briars and rhodo.

View straight ahead.  I could not tell for certain, but it did not appear it was being traveled.

   To my right was a snag and a tiny ditch with a lot of downfall that went steeply down.
It looked like of all my choices this was the part being traveled.  I didn't get a good shot of the dirt ditch, but below is a view of the old snag just above it.



   I had two maps with me. One was a computer print out from the Cherokee Hiking Club's past hike.
It was good, but not real detailed.  I had the TI map.  I had carried Tim Homan's guidebook with me.

I read it to see if it would help me figure out which way to go.  According to it I should go straight.
It talked about cresting the ridge and the path before me through the briars did just that.
I carried it because it is small and compact.  I brought along Will Skelton's Sierra Club Guide to the
Cherokee National Forest, but owing to its size I left it in the jeep.  
The Will Skelton guide is the one with an accurate, easier to understand directions. Had I carried this I'd have been better off.   It focuses on directions and way finding.  It mentions scenery, but they were smart
enough to realize knowing what wildflowers were where.. was not as high a priority.

   Unsure which way to go I had about decided to try down and right when the sky opened up and it began
to pour on me!! I donned my rain gear and decided to be smart about it.   I'd come back with Kenny
and a better guide and try again another day.      I made it back to the jeep in one piece, but cold and damp.
I began coughing and sneezing and my throat turned sore from the damp.

I got in and warmed up and tried to decide what to do?  I sat and ate lunch in the vehicle as the rain continued.   I finally decided I'd head back in the direction of Tellico Plains. If the rain kept up I'd just go home.   If the rain quit I'd hike to Ballplay Falls.

Gloomy view from the Flying Bridge on my way back.  

     **I only had 1/2 mile to go to finish the Jeffrey Hell Trail.  I will complete it to satisfy my curiosity, learn the trail and know more about what is down there.  It is worth mentioning this is a great trail for just about anyone since it is easy up to the intersection I came to.   The wildflower display within the first mile or so is
worth seeing if you just go out so far and back.  **

Monday, April 13, 2015

Seven Waterfalls in One Day


Southern Red Trillium 

Seven Waterfalls in One Day

Dana Koogler
Mike Gourley

Friday April 10, 2015

Total hike distance 3 miles approx. 

Cumberland Plateau Waterfalls


   I want to get Rogers Creek Falls off my bucket list THIS Spring.   Plan A was for me, Kenny
and Mike to hike there and finish it.  Mike has been before, but was unaware when he visited that
there was a second waterfall about 1/10th of a mile from the one listed as a Tennessee Landforms 
waypoint.   He also visited during a time of low water flow.  He was keen to go and hit up the second 
waterfall and once we'd done those we'd revisit Puncheon Camp Creek Twin Falls as well.

      The forecast called for ninety percent rain on Friday. Kenny was not sure he'd be home from 
Nebraska and able to go.   None of us wanted to attempt a descent into the gorge to visit Rogers Creek 
Falls in the rain.  We decided to have a Plan B in store so that if the day turned rainy we could still meet
up and hike. I thought of several good falls Mike was interested in visiting.  We would not mind
going back either since we'd only been once before ourselves.   Friday dawned raining as predicted.
Kenny did not make it back Friday.   We settled on Plan B.

        We headed down the road to Van Buren County having agreed to leave it loose and just 
enjoy the day.    One thing about hiking on a rainy day is that if you're hunting waterfalls in many ways it is easier.  Driving along the road they just jumped out at me in several places.    Some were of the wet weather variety and almost certainly don't have water on them during drier times.   Others were authentic waterfalls
worth submitting to the database.  We were the dynamic waterfall finding duo today.  I had conned Mike
into driving my jeep which left me free to navigate.    I wanted to be certain I was focused fully on that task.
I did not want to let my friend down and fail to find the area. No worries about that.
We found it just fine.  On the way we kept stopping to see various other falls.  We had visited three
before we ever got to the planned, main event!

This is a new one which has water all the time.  Mike named it DK falls.  good a name as any.


   Next up I got a HUGE surprise off my wish list.  I had long dreamed of hiking off trail in the Dry Fork 
Gulf addition of Fall Creek Falls State Park and finding something beautiful.  We found it today! 
A verdant Springtime gorge with ribbons of white water, green velvet moss, pale green budding leaves, redbud trees drew our eyes and we stopped again.    Before I knew it we were bushwhacking out along
the banks of this ravine and my dream was coming true!  We saw three varities of trillium in bloom.
Southern Red, toadshade, and prairie trillium!  Jack in the pulpit was also found along with
Virginia pennywort.   
Above and below are a couple views of the waterfalls and cascades in Dry Fork.


 Looking out of a large rock shelter high above the stream.  You can barely make out Mike's blaze orange hat in the distance.

View of the beautiful pale pinks and greens along the road.  


A pretty waterfall pair framed up by red bud trees.  Wet weather falls. 


The Destination
(July 31, 2020-- Edited to add- The property in question is for sale. I reached out to Kristen Hanratty of TennGreen to see if the state would consider purchasing it.  I pitched it too.  ) 
       
The rain was easing up as we made our way toward Spencer.   It started and stopped a number of times. The forecast called for it to stop for good around two p.m. which is exactly what it did.
We arrived at our destination and parked the jeep.  We had spied a large waterfall gushing out of the face of a rock down in a quarry area or gravel pit on our way.  We thought if it worked out right we'd try to get back there to see it for ourselves.     We wanted to get going though.  

        The area where we parked was littered with trash of every sort. It looks like at some time in the past it was someone's combination party spot and dumping ground for unwanted household items.  We passed a couch which has grown mossy from being out so long.   All this was here on my previous visit.   It doesn't look any worse, but it is surely no better.   We passed the ruins of an old house, outbuildings and a barn. The barn is damaged, but still solid and standing.  
        Cool looking formations on the little side road. 
 We continued and today we turned down a side road to the right that Kenny and I had not
noticed before.   It was lined with some interesting rock formations.  We couldn't be sure it would lead us to where we needed to go.  In the interest of time we had to stick with the original route.
We will have to return for a more thorough investigation of where that path leads. It may provide
a more sensible route to see all these falls.   I had told Mike today was going to be a short, easy hike.   He identified a problem with me which IS:  Yes, the hike is short and easy to FIND the waterfalls.  The Hike is very DIFFICULT to reach a point to actually VIEW the falls and photograph them!  Well stated.   Honest. I had to own it.    

      We soon heard rushing, roaring water.   We were at the top of the falls!
I was stupefied to realize that while we waded the creek straight across last time with no problem, 
today that was going to be trickier.    The water was deep enough to be running fast and 
would be a wet foot crossing to start the day off.   You are crossing within twenty feet of the top
of the main plunge of the falls. Getting swept over would plunge you sixty feet to your death.
No pool at the bottom of this to catch you to give you even a slight chance of making it. 
The water re-enters the ground.   Sullivan Falls source stream comes out of the ground, flows across a logging road, plunges sixty feet, re-enters a labyrinth of pits, channels and caves,
flows back out of the ground as a split stream and goes back in the ground for good.  All this takes place in about a hundred yards.  

      The cave above this area is dry.  We decided rather that start off wet we'd enter the cave, come out the other side.. and walk out on dry ground.  It was a good plan.   The cave is 
sitting above a rushing stream, but is powder dry.  The ceiling of it is alive and busy making formations.  We did not touch it.  
 
        Looking out of an un-named cave above Sullivan Falls. 
Living mineral formations on the ceiling of the cave.
Touching them kills them. We used care to avoid harming the cave.
Don't litter. Don't touch.  No graffitti. No rock cairns.  This cave did not have any creatures living in it that we could see.

     We walked a short distance past Sullivan Falls.   I found the spot to climb down and being the pro off trail hiker that he is.. Mike spotted it without any help from me.   Down over the bluff we went.  No trail exists here. You cannot even see where anyone else has trod really.  The ground was soft and loamy.   A small cane brake is starting to form along the slope.  


Switch cane growing in the steep bank.  The photo does not illustrate how steep this area is.
I was taking my time getting photos of wildflowers. I saw my first fire pink of the season here.
Mike was down the bluff like he had a magnet pulling him toward something.  He was shortly hollering for me to get down there that I was gonna wanna see this!!  I worked my way carefully down the bluff by circling round to the left and back down gradually.   I saw a tiny drip coming off the embankment.  I could hear a roar below me which grew louder as I approached.  
I had suspected based on the sound down in the gorge below the logging road on a previous trip
that there was some sort of pit cave.  It took Mike a matter of seconds to find it!  What a find it was too.   The pit is about thirty feet deep.  No telling if the water coming out the bottom really falls in a torrent straight down or if it only comes from part of the distance?  Perhaps a future trip
will reveal the answer.   It is very hard to get an idea of what this was like so rather than post an image I am embedding a video.  It is very cool!  We'll call this one Pit Cave Falls. 





You can see from the video all that water goes right back into the ground. 

     We stood and took it in for awhile.  At last we climbed back up the bluff toward Sullivan Falls.
I remembered we just had to work our way round the side of the hill to get to the falls last time.
Today was going to be worse.  All the rain had the ground spongey, soft, and slippery.  The thin, black loamy soil gave way easily as did the thin sheets of rock scattered on the ground.  We avoided stepping on any of those.  The approach to the falls had Mike and I both gaping.
I knew I had done it before, but standing here now I was not any better off than he for having 
the past experience.   We were finally able to get close enough for an unobstructed view 
of the main waterfall without sliding over the cliff.    


Front on view of Sullivan Falls main drop.

Once we had that hard part over we climbed down the bluff further and were able to approach this bottom portion of Sullivan Falls with a lot less difficulty.   You can see the falls splits into at least two above ground parts as it comes back to the surface!

    It had completely quit raining!  It dawned on me and I was really glad.  The sun was trying to come out.  It was warm.   It was humid.  I realized it was about 2 pm and I had not eaten lunch yet.
I made myself sit down to eat my peanut butter and banana sammidge.  I enjoyed my surroundings.  The green trees, the roar of the waterfall, the shush of the water as it re-entered the ground.  Around us on the cliffs other small falls pattered down.   Wildflowers and ferns grew lush on this slope.   Moss clung to the ancient boulders.   Below me Molloy Hollow spread out.
I could not help wondering what else is down there?  I hope we get the chance to find out.
Our waterfall count was up to five thus far.  


Clump of long spurred violets growing on the slope near the falls.

      We took plenty of time checking this place out.   I dreaded climbing back up the bluff.  It was
tough, but it was not far.  It turned out to not be easy hard as I thought.   I was very glad to be back on level ground and have what I knew to be the hardest part of the trip today over with.
Out the logging road we went.  We passed one more wet weather falls that looked like a massive, rocky set of steps. It was barely wet.    Not far past that we began to hear the roar of Laurel Creek Falls.    There is no trail to the base and the terrain is rugged around the fifty or sixty foot drop, but not as bad as the previous falls.  We carefully worked our way to the bottom.  The slopes around the waterfall were dotted with great masses of deep purple phacelia and green maiden hair ferns.    The trout lilies had been thick there, but they were long done blooming.   Lots more
water coming over Laurel Creek Falls today than my first visit!


 Laurel Creek Falls above, Below a closeup of the purple phacelia that grew on the banks all around it.    


      Laurel Creek Falls is a photographers dream.  It is approachable from all sides if you use care.   Mike having never been before provided me with another excuse to sit down on a rock and spend more time just enjoying being there.   I really need to do more of that.  It turned out to be one of the more enjoyable points of the trip. The sitting down and soaking in the surroundings. The sounds of the birds in the forest and the falls.  The smells of the fresh air and flowers.
The appreciation for the healthy hemlock forest and the sun coming out.  Mild temperatures.
The perfect day for hiking.   Below is a short, nice video of this waterfall.



        I am slow in my hiking and out of shape, so I began easing up the bank ahead of Mike.
I did not want to rush him, but I just wanted to go ahead and see what was beyond.  I had not gone
far until I came to a very scenic cascade right at the logging road.   It appeared to continue down
as another falls.  I hurried back to wait on him so we could see it together.   It turned out to be the the prettiest falls of the day in many ways.   It had four or five very scenic drops. The little shelves around the
various drops were lined with masses of purple phacelia.  The rock forms around it were incredibly carved.
We spent considerable time taking pictures. Shooting video.  Just enjoying the scenery.    Again there is no
trail down to the base of this, but if you are careful you can pick you way down the bank further out and come gradually down to it.   The water was gushing out of springs all around the logging road and the terrain
around the falls was more slopping wet mud.   Lots of yellow violets, canada violets, rue anemone, trilliums bloomed by the falls.   The little cove flattens out and it looks very inviting to just stroll on down through there.  It was growing late in the day. I was shocked to learn it was after five pm at this point.  I think
it was closer to seven when we finally tore ourselves away from our explorations.

    Sitting at Lick Branch Falls with the evening sun glowing down through the forest in those surroundings
was a sublime experience.   Today was one of those times when the "finding treasure" dream was realized.
I have a dream that recurs.  Sometimes I'm in a house with many rooms and I keep going from room to room finding unexplored secret passages and neat things in each place.  Sometimes I dream of being on a trail in the forest and this peaceful, elated feeling washes over me of finding treasures in nature.
Today I was living it.     To me there is nothing like it unless it is sharing it with a fellow nature lover.

 Looking at the various perspectives of an un-named falls.  I named it Lick Branch Falls, but it is not ON Lick Branch so it doesn't have a name now. 
This one was not on the database. 

Below is a short video of Lick Branch Falls which shows the various drops of it, 
even the uppermost cascade. 


The music in this video is Waterfall by Geoffrey Castle who is an electric violinist!  

    We had a great time.  We kept on exploring on the hike out.  Mike found two smaller cascades and 
a cave spring that all form the source water for Laurel Creek Falls!  He crawled in it.  I was over to one side 
taking pictures of that final small cascade and the pretty forest. I came back round and I saw this.

A blaze orange hat and a camera case by the cave mouth.  

 I got ready and waited for it.....


Here he comes out of the cave.   He's sure a good sport.  


             We made our way back to the vehicle.  We loaded our stuff up.  We did try to go see the rock quarry waterfall, but it was gated and they said no one admitted without a pass.   We left. 
We were tired and hungry.  We stopped by McDonald's in Sparta and grabbed some fast food.
It tasted mighty good and I was thankful for it! Our total for the day came in at seven waterfalls.
That is not counting the two smaller cascades Mike located!

   
What a good day with a great friend.   Thanks Mike for driving the Peep.

The waterfalls on this blog are listed in Tennessee landforms.  Beyond that I am not providing directions.   I look forward to many more days on the trail with this fellow and the rest of our hiking buddies.