Raft the Roaring Nantahala
River rats can paddle through surging whitewater down the Nantahala River a nine-mile stretch of world-class whitewater that rips through the dramatic Nantahala River Gorge. The Nantahala, or"Nanty" as locals call it, is a class II-III river kayaks, canoes, and rafts are the vessels of choice. The Nantahala Outdoor Center, headquartered in Bryson City, offers a variety of river trips suitable for first-timers and experienced rafters. Paddling is also available on the Nolichucky, Chatanooga, French Broad, and Ocoee Rivers.
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Hike amidst 400-Year-Old Giants
The figure-eight Joyce Kilmer National Recreation Trail is a two-mile hike through one of the largest stands of old growth trees in the eastern United States 400-year-old virgin hemlock and yellow poplars tower above a carpet of wildflowers and ferns. Hikers can walk amongst the moss-covered logs of fallen giants beneath a living canopy suspended 100 feet above the forest floor. Some of the trees boast trunks with circumferences of 20 feet try and wrap your arms around a tree like that.
Hundreds of miles of carefully cut trails wind their way through the forest some are multiple-use and allow horses and mountain bikes. The Snowbird Backcountry Area provides 37 miles of trails reserved exclusively for hikers.
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Mountain Bike in Fat-Tire Nirvana
If you're craving technical single-track (mountain-bike speak for difficult and narrow trails) then you'll find fat-tire nirvana at the Tsali Recreation Area near Almond just off N.C. Highway 28. Several loops provide up to 42 miles of challenging trails rated as"more difficult" but even if you're just learning to pedal, you'll find a variety of low-impact routes that wind their way through the forest. The Left Loop, a 12-mile trail along the edge of Lake Fontana, was rated as one of the 10 best rides in America by Bicycling magazine.
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Fish for Trout in Solitude
At Lake Chatuge and Fontana Lake, you can reel in jumbo-size bass, sunfish, walleye, and catfish. If it's trout you're after try the Chattanooga River, the Upper Nantahala River, Standing Indian's Kimsey Creek, and Park Creek.
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Camp Near a Mountain Stream
Nearly all the campgrounds in the forest are located near a lake, river, or stream they include Chain of Lakes, Hanging Dog Recreation Area, Jackrabbit Mountain Recreation Area, Fires Creek, Tsali Recreation Area, Horse Cove Campground Area, Cheoah Point Recreation Area, The Snowbird Area, Cable Cove Recreation Area, Rattler Ford Group Campground, and Big Santeetlah Creek.
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Drive Underneath a 120-Foot Waterfall
The Mountain Waters Scenic Byway is a 61-mile drive that snakes its way through the southern Appalachian hardwood forest and two river gorges at Bridal Veil Falls, the road allows you to drive under a 120-foot waterfall.
More on sightseeing in Nantahala National Forest
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