Sugarland Mountain Trail

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Length12 mi (19 km)
TrailheadsFighting Creek Gap (along Little River Road, W. of Gatlinburg)
Junction with the Appalachian Trail near the summit of Mount Collins
UseHiking
Sugarland Mountain Trail
Sugarland Mountain Trailhead at Fighting Creek Gap
Length12 mi (19 km)
LocationGreat Smoky Mountains National Park, Tennessee, United States
TrailheadsFighting Creek Gap (along Little River Road, W. of Gatlinburg)
Junction with the Appalachian Trail near the summit of Mount Collins
UseHiking
Highest pointAppalachian Trail junction, 5,900 ft (1,800 m)
Lowest pointFighting Creek Gap, 2,300 ft (700 m)
DifficultyModerate-to-Strenuous
SeasonOpen year-round
SightsViews of Mount Le Conte, Gatlinburg and Sevier County to the east, Blanket Mountain and Upper Little River Valley to the west; multiple forest types
HazardsSteep ledges, ice hazards in colder months

The Sugarland Mountain Trail is an American hiking trail, in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park of Sevier County, Tennessee. The trail traverses Sugarland Mountain, a massive ridge running perpendicular to the main crest of the Smokies and effectively dividing the park's north-central section from its northwestern section. Sugarland Mountain is flanked by the deep upper valleys of two of the park's major watersheds— the West Fork of the Little Pigeon River (to the east) and Little River (to the west). The trail passes through several forest types, including deciduous forest at lower elevations, heaths ("hells") along the mountain's backbone formations, and a stand of Southern Appalachian spruce-fir forest in the upper elevations. Occasional breaks in the foliage allow for views of Mount Le Conte and Sevier County to the east and Blanket Mountain and the ridges above Elkmont to the west.

The trailhead is located at Fighting Creek Gap along Little River Road, between Gatlinburg and Elkmont. The trail's terminus is located just off Clingmans Dome Road, where the trail intersects the Appalachian Trail.

  • The Sugarland Mountain Trailhead at Fighting Creek Gap shares a parking lot with the popular Laurel Falls Trail (on the other side of the road). This parking lot fills up quickly on weekends, especially during Spring and Summer.
  • Backcountry campsite #21, formerly located on the Sugarland Mountain Trail near the Junction with Huskey Gap Trail, has been relocated to the Huskey Gap Trail near the junction with Little River Trail.
  • While there is a small parking lot (shared with the Fork Ridge Trail) near the trail terminus along Clingmans Dome Road, this road is closed December 1 through April 1. If the road is closed, the nearest parking lot is at Newfound Gap, 4.5 miles (7.2 km) east of the trail terminus.
  • The Mount Collins Shelter is approximately 11.5 miles (18.5 km) from the trailhead.
  • During cooler months, ice often forms on rock outcroppings along the trail between Huskey Gap and the Rough Creek junction. As the afternoon sun heats the western slopes of the mountain, this ice can break off and crash to the ground without warning. Ice and snow can also make the steeper ledges between the Rough Creek junction and the trail terminus slippery.
  • The Sugarland Mountain Trail— when conjoined with the Cove Mountain Trail, Laurel Falls Trail, Fork Ridge Trail, and Deep Creek Trail— forms a 40-mile (64 km) continuous path connecting the Sugarland Visitor Center (near Gatlinburg) with the Deep Creek Campground (near Bryson City).

Landmarks/overlooks

Looking west from an overlook appx. 6 miles from the trailhead
Sugarland mountain
  • Little River Road (0.0 miles)
  • Break in foliage allowing for view of Mount Le Conte (appx. 1 mile)
  • Mids Gap (appx. 1.5 miles)
  • Huskey Gap Trail junction (3.1 miles)
  • Small overlook (boulder pile) allowing for view of Miry Ridge and Blanket Mountain to the west (appx. 6 miles)
  • Rough Creek Trail junction (7.3 miles)
  • Break in foliage allowing for view of Rough Creek Valley and Sweet Ridge to the west and north (appx. 8 miles)
  • Trail passes just below summit of Sugarland Mountain (appx. 10 miles)
  • Mount Collins and Mount Mingus visible (appx. 10 miles)
  • Mount Collins Shelter (11.5 miles)
  • Terminus at the Appalachian Trail (12.0 miles)
  • Break in foliage allowing for view of the Deep Creek Valley (just west of trail terminus)
  • Mount Collins summit (0.5 miles west of trail terminus)
  • Appalachian Trail/Mountains-to-Sea Trail junction, path to Clingmans Dome Road (just east of trail terminus)

Geographical information

The trail crossing a backbone 9-10 miles from the trailhead. The snow on the left will eventually end up in Little River, 2000 feet below. The snow on the right will end up in the Little Pigeon River.

Sugarland Mountain is a ridge that consists of a series knobs and peaks, each increasing in elevation as the mountain approaches its junction with the main Smokies crest. The northernmost knobs, which overlook Fighting Creek Gap and Mids Gap, have elevations of around 3,000 feet (910 m). Beyond Huskey Gap, the mountain rises sharply to its prominent 4,833-foot (1,473 m) northern peak as the crest narrows, and maintains an elevation of 4,300 feet (1,300 m) to 4,800 feet (1,500 m) for several miles. At the headwaters of Rough Creek, the mountain rises above 5,000 feet (1,500 m) for the first time, eventually reaching 5,494 feet (1,675 m) at its summit. The Chimney Tops, which consist of two barren slate capstones, crown a narrow ridge that branches off the southeastern slope of Sugarland Mountain, opposite the Rough Creek headwaters. Sugarland Mountain's various knobs and peaks are typically connected by narrow "backbone" ridges, some of which are just a few feet wide. The relatively broad Huskey Gap— between the mountain's northern peak and its lower northern knobs— is the exception.

Several mountain streams have their sources high on slopes of Sugarland Mountain. Streams on the western side of the mountain include Mids Branch, Phoebe Branch, Big Medicine Branch, and Rough Creek. These all empty into Little River, which proceeds northward to Elkmont, veers west through the Little River Gorge, and turns north again to traverse Blount County before emptying into the Fort Loudoun Lake impoundment of the Tennessee River. Streams on the western side of the mountain include Sugarland Branch, Hickory King Branch, and Road Prong. These empty into the West Fork of the Little Pigeon River, which proceeds northward through Gatlinburg, Pigeon Forge and Sevierville, where it merges with the Little Pigeon River proper before emptying into the French Broad River.

Historical information

The Sugarland Mountain Trail at Huskey Gap, with the northern peak visible through the treeline

In Cherokee lore, the eastern slopes of Sugarland Mountain— along with the northern slopes of Mount Le Conte— were part of a ridgeline known as Walasi'yi, or "Frog Place."[1] An ancient Native American trail— possibly predating the Cherokee— crossed the crest at Indian Gap and descended along Road Prong to the West Fork of the Little Pigeon Valley. The trail then followed the valley northward, where it intersected the Great Indian Warpath near modern Sevierville. This trail was expanded several times by Euro-American settlers throughout the 19th century. While the main road gradually shifted to the lower Newfound Gap, the Road Prong Trail still follows this ancient road.[2]

The Rough Creek Valley - Horace Kephart's "Godforsaken"

In the late 19th century, the residents of Little River (now Elkmont) and the Sugarlands built a log schoolhouse at Huskey Gap. To allow easier access to the school, they constructed a crude road along what is now the Huskey Gap Trail.[3] Although the schoolhouse had burned down by 1916,[4] the trail received continued use by Sugarlanders working in logging camps in the Elkmont vicinity in the 1920s.[5] By the time the Great Smoky Mountains Park Commission started buying up tracts of land in the late 1920s for the formation of the national park, the Little River Lumber Company owned the entire western side of Sugarland Mountain and the Champion Fibre Company owned the mountain's southeastern section.[6] Members of the Parton family and Huskey family owned small farms around Huskey Gap and the headwaters of Sugarland Branch, and members of the Quilliams family lived in the vicinity of Backcountry Campsite 21.[7]

Author Horace Kephart, writing in the early 20th century, described Sugarland Mountain as a "razorback ridge" that formed a "rampart tedious to scale from either side."[8] Kephart referred to the upper Rough Creek Valley on the mountain's southwestern slope as "Godforsaken" — a remote land that seemed "unearthly in its dreariness and desolation."[9] In "A Raid Into the Sugarlands," Kephart gave a quasi-factual account of a North Carolina deputy's excursion into the Sugarlands to apprehend a fugitive. The deputy and his hodgepodge posse chased the fugitive across Sugarland Mountain to "Barradale's upper logging camp" on Rough Creek, although they failed to locate him. They returned to North Carolina empty-handed the following day.[10]

George McCoy, writing in an early park guide in 1935, reported that the Sugarland Mountain Trail was "extremely rugged," but offered excellent views of Mount Le Conte.[11] In 1937, Laura Thornborough— who wrote extensively of hiking trails in the Smokies— echoed McCoy's description, calling the Sugarland Mountain Trail "rugged and rough," but well worth an all-day trip.[12]

Trail synopsis

References

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