Smoker Holler RV Resort is located in Wears Valley. The landscape is open so the views of the mountains are awesome. With a rural setting, peace and quite come standard. Smoker Holler comes with quite a bit of history behind its name - you'll have to ask about it when you stop in.The main roads through the campground are gravel.
- Level gravel sites with picnic tables and fire rings on most.
- A total of 33 full hookup sites with 9 pull-throughs.
- There is a pavilion, and a bath house.
- Free cable TV and WI-FI Internet completes the amenities.
Campground open all year.
No Pop-ups or tents please.
DIRECTIONS:
From exit 407 travel south on HWY 66 and connect to 441. Once in Pigeon Forge you will turn right at stop light #3 which is Wears Valley Road - HWY 321. Follow for 11 miles and campground will be on your left. Easy access for big RV/Motorhomes.
Smoker Holler RV Resort is close to Townsend and Cades Cove. There are craft malls, shopping, river tubing, horseback riding, grocery store, and some restaurants nearby.
Townsend got its name from Col WB Townsend. He purchased thousands of acres of woodlands (of what is now the Smoky Mountains) and began logging it. The Little River Lumber Company was created and served as the local saw mill. Then later, the Little River Railroad served to haul the lumber using a 70-ton Shay engine. The museum in Townsend still proudly displays the train. Tuckaleechee Caverns, a mile long cave system with 150 drops is north of town.
The main attraction for this area is of course the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. On June 15, 1934, Franklin Delano Roosevelt set aside 814 square miles of the Appalachian Mountains. It is the largest and most visited Park in the United States. The highest point is Clingman's Dome at 6,643 feet above sea level.
And the most visited attraction of the Smoky Mountains is Cades Cove which draws thousands of visitors daily. An 11 mile paved road circles inside this geographically isolated one-way loop. The preserved 19th century homesteads, scenic views, open meadows, and abundant wildlife make this area so popular. Hiking trails to Abrams Falls and Gregory Bald, bicycling, and horseback riding are common activities.
The mountains get there name from a natural haze. Hydrocarbons produced by the trees and vast vegetation combined with the high humidity and rainfall produce a bluish/smoky cast. Thus the Great "Smoky" Mountains.
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