Nashville

20 Reasons to Drive to Gatlinburg, Tennessee

The mountains are calling!

Courtesy of Ober Gatlinburg
Courtesy of Ober Gatlinburg
Courtesy of Ober Gatlinburg

If your impression of Gatlinburg, Tennessee is that it’s just a tourist trap filled with gift shops and bumper cars, we’re here to disabuse you of that notion. Sure, there are plenty of those, and they are often filled with tourists rapidly separating themselves from their traveling money, but you can craft whatever sort of experience you want in this prototypical mountain town. Most of the cheesier attractions are concentrated in a dense tourist strip or in the neighboring playground town of Pigeon Forge, but Gatlinburg has a real history of hospitality. As a primary gateway to the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Gatlinburg is the perfect staging point for exploration of that national treasure.

You can totally act like a tourist in your own home state

All that being said, sometimes it’s fun just to experience the attractions that draw tourists from all over the country. Jump into the stream of people strolling along the Parkway that runs through the middle of town and let down your inhibitions just a tad to remember what it was like to be a kid again. If you see the name “Ripley’s” or “Gatlin’s” on an attraction, you can bet you’re in for a “good kind of weird” experience, from multiple escape rooms to haunted houses to laser tag. Your friends back home never have to know that you played like a child, unless you buy the T-shirt.

Courtesy of Great Smoky Mountains National Park
Courtesy of Great Smoky Mountains National Park
Courtesy of Great Smoky Mountains National Park

Explore the fascinating history of Appalachia

For a more authentic experience, seek out some of the historical sites in and around Gatlinburg that are part of the Tennessee Heritage Trail. The settlement was originally named White Oak Flats for the numerous trees in the area, and an explorer named William Ogle hewed the logs for a home for his family in the early 19th century before heading home to gather his kinfolk. Unfortunately, he died before returning, but his wife Martha made the trek south from South Carolina and boldly built the cabin from her husband’s logs that awaited the family’s return. The cabin has been moved to the middle of downtown, and you can still visit it today. A drive along the Roaring Fork Motor Nature Trail will take you past many other historic farmsteads and ends at Ely’s Mill, a re-created example of an early 20th century mill that drove the economy before the tourists arrived.

Take a trip to the Alps without getting on a plane

While it’s sometimes hard to discern among the neon signs and Delta-8 shops along the strip, Gatlinburg does pride itself on being a quintessential little mountain town, modeled after an Alpine village. Set back from the sidewalk are The Village Shoppes, a charming little collection of locally owned stores that would be right at home in Bavaria. Take the Aerial Tramway from downtown or drive yourself up the mountain to Ober Gatlinburg, and you’ll feel like you’ve been dropped in the middle of an Alpine resort. While the ski area with its dozen not-too-difficult  runs is popular with skiers and snowboarders, Ober Gatlinburg is a four season attraction. The park offers ice skating, rock climbing, snow tubing, a mountain coaster, an Alpine slide, and all sorts of other fun activities throughout the year. Stop for an après-ski drink in their woodsy lounge and bar for an experience that is straight out of a 1970s ski bunny movie.

Courtesy of The Greenbrier
Courtesy of The Greenbrier
Courtesy of The Greenbrier

It’s easy to enjoy dinner with a view

Take a short drive up to The Greenbrier, a lovely restaurant perched on the ridge above downtown that was a hunting camp until the 1920s. Almost every table offers a view of the forests below, making diners feel like they are suspended above the valley. One of the only craft cocktail spots in town, The Greenbrier features an impressive collection of rare whiskeys that you can enjoy at the bar before dining on a menu of dry-aged prime steaks. Look over the bar for the beam that legend says a jilted bride-to-be used to take her life when the building was a lodge in the ’30s. Lydia is said to still haunt the restaurant, so warm that chill on the back of your neck with a nice nip of bourbon.

Add to the numbers at the most-visited national park in America

The Grand Canyon may draw five million visitors a year, but that’s less than half the number of people who travel through the Great Smoky Mountains National Park annually. One of the few national parks that still doesn’t charge an admissions fee, GSMNP was dedicated in 1940 when FDR gave a speech near the Tennessee/North Carolina border. Encompassing more than 500,000 acres, the park welcomes millions of visitors each year to explore the remarkable biodiversity, enjoy the views of the rolling Smoky Mountains, drive along the historic Cades Cove 11-mile Loop Road and hike the trails, some of which start right in Gatlinburg.

Courtesy of The Village, Gatlinburg, TN
Courtesy of The Village, Gatlinburg, TN
Courtesy of The Village, Gatlinburg, TN

You can walk over some pretty extreme bridges

Speaking of the Grand Canyon, its glass-floored SkyWalk has become a popular attraction for thrill-seeking tourists seeking a breathtaking view of the canyon floor below. If that’s your kind of thing, Gatlinburg has you covered with numerous walking bridges, including some of those transparent ones. The Gatlinburg SkyBridge is the longest pedestrian suspension bridge in North America, including a thirty-foot section that dares you to “Pass the Glass” as you look down 150 feet into the valley. The mountaintop attraction, Anakeesta, boasts the longest tree-based skywalk in the world with its Treetop Skywalk. Stroll sixty feet up in the tree canopy across 16 bridges while you observe the wildlife of the forest. Keep your eyes peeled because you’ll possibly…

See a bear

Black bears run rampant around Gatlinburg, and while they’re generally pretty harmless, some of them have become a little too comfortable with human interaction. If you follow the rules of storing your food when in the woods and don’t try to approach them, spotting a black bear in the wild can be a thrilling part of your trip. Bears are often seen ambling the hills around Anakeesta, all over the National Park, along the Roaring Fork Motor Nature Trail or on the drive up to Ober Gatlinburg. But really, let’s face it, you’re also likely to see a couple of them rummaging around the dumpsters in your hotel parking lot. Just keep your distance, and everything will be fine!

Discover the vibrant local arts and crafts scene

It’s not all just gift shops in Gatlinburg. If you venture a little bit out of town, you’ll discover the largest group of independent artisans in North America, with more than 120 studios, galleries, and shops where they showcase their wares. Pottery and textiles are especially popular media for area artists, but you can find many styles of art. They’ve even set up an 8-mile loop featuring many of the artists, so that’s a great way to get out of the crowds for a little while. Notable stops on the route include the Cliff Dwellers artists collective, Ogle’s Broom Shop, and the Mountain Arts Complex. Arrowmont has been integral in preserving Appalachia art culture for decades, hosting artists-in-residence and offering studio space for them to teach and further their crafts.

Courtesy of Hollywood Star Car Museum
Courtesy of Hollywood Star Car Museum
Courtesy of Hollywood Star Car Museum

It’s fun for the whole family

Gatlinburg is a multi-generational destination. The kids will go crazy for all the amusement park-like attractions like bumper cars, mirror mazes and arcades. Car nuts shouldn’t miss out on the Hollywood Star Cars Museum where they can see two Batmobiles, the General Lee from The Dukes of Hazzard, and several speedsters featured in the Fast and Furious franchise. If the grandparents volunteer to watch the kids by the pool while the parents spend the day exploring, reward them with a night out at Ole Red, country music star Blake Shelton’s restaurant and live music club. Oh, and remind Grandpa to show that AARP card everywhere he goes for lots of discounts.

You can leave your car parked and let somebody else do the driving

Gatlinburg is blessed with a better public transportation system than most metropolises, thanks to a convenient trolley system that you can ride all day for just $2.00. With more than 100 stops around town spread over multiple routes, you’re never more than a short walk away from not having to walk anymore.

Let a skylift take you to the mountaintop without having to climb

We’ve already told you about the lift to Ober Gatlinburg that will carry you from mountain floor to mountain top, and in fact, the original builder of the tram ended up buying the ski resort since he figured more skiers would mean more revenue from skylift riders. Shrewd dude, that one. Anakeesta also offers trips up the mountain either in wide open ski lift chairs or enclosed gondolas if you prefer a more controlled environment for your ascent and descent. Any way you go, the views are breathtaking.

Courtesy of Anakeesta
Courtesy of Anakeesta
Courtesy of Anakeesta

Raise your heart rate with some thrilling rides

There are actually plenty of other ways to get your breath taken away in Gatlinburg. It seems like everytime you turn a corner, there’s another thrill ride awaiting you. The Gatlinburg Mountain Coaster lets gravity do all the work as you hurtle down a track at up to 35 mph in single or double cars. At Rowdy Bear Mountain Adventure Park, visitors have options of a traditional mountain coaster or one where you hang from a harness and glide down under the track. If you’re the competitive sort, you can actually race another daredevil on Anakeesta’s Dueling Ziplines. There are no real losers in a zipline race, though.

Pretend you’re a competitor on “Holey Moley”

Outside of Myrtle Beach, Gatlinburg probably has more miniature golf courses per square mile than anywhere in the world. From black light golf to indoor golf to outdoor golf to rooftop golf to Hillbilly golf, you could play a different course every hour over a long weekend and never repeat a hole.

Courtesy of Flapjack's Pancake Cabin
Courtesy of Flapjack’s Pancake Cabin
Courtesy of Flapjack’s Pancake Cabin

There’s no better place on earth to eat pancakes

For years, Gatlinburg was a logging and sawmill town with a strong lumberjack culture. Even though the saws no longer rip logs, the preferred food of hungry woodsmen is still prevalent all over Gatlinburg with multiple pancake houses spread out around town. Favorite flapjackeries include Pancake Pantry, Log Cabin Pancake House, Little House of Pancakes, Flapjack’s Pancake Cabin, Atrium Pancakes, and Crockett’s Breakfast Camp. Don’t skimp on the butter and syrup, but maybe consider a salad for lunch.

Wet a line and chase some trout

The Great Smoky Mountains National Park has about 2900 miles of streams inside the park boundaries and represents one of the last great wild trout habitats in the eastern half of the country. A valid fishing license from either Tennessee or North Carolina works for anglers seeking brook, brown, or rainbow trout, and there are also smallmouth bass hiding behind those rocks for the clever caster. Herbert Holt Park on the outskirts of downtown actually raises and stocks rainbow trout and maintains a fishing pier just for children, so the odds are good that they’ll reel one in.

Courtesy of Ripley's Aquarium of the Smokies
Courtesy of Ripley’s Aquarium of the Smokies
Courtesy of Ripley’s Aquarium of the Smokies

Get eye-to-eye with a shark

If you didn’t get lucky fishing in the GSMNP, we can guarantee you’ll find fish at Ripley’s Aquarium of the Smokies. Consistently voted among the favorite aquariums in America, Ripley’s features multiple huge tanks filled with freshwater and ocean fish, plus the ever-popular penguins. An innovative shark habitat carries visitors on a moving sidewalk through the middle of the tank as sharks swim through clear tunnels inches over your head. It’s not an experience for galeophobes!

Camp out under the stars

Whether you are a new adoptee of the RV life after being cooped up at home for the duration of the pandemic or you prefer outdoor camping with just a tent and a sleeping pad, Gatlinburg offers many wild lodging options. In addition to campgrounds in the national park, many spots closer to town offer comfortable places to pitch our tent with easy access to bathing facilities and other amenities. Just remember to secure your food because you remember what we said about the bears.

Or… enjoy the great outdoors without having to actually sleep outside

At a certain age, maybe you don’t want to sleep on the ground anymore. We get it. Glamping is all the range in Gatlinburg, with options like the treehouse, luxury tents, and twee little vintage campers at Camp LeConte or the amazing Swiss Family Robinson-style elevated dwellings at Treehouse Grove at Norton Creek that were designed by television’s “Treehouse Master,” Pete Nelson. You can really get above it all at this collection of airy aeries. Another option is the Appalachian Trail-themed Appy Lodge where each room is named after and decorated with a photo of a real sleeping shelter along the famed 2,193-mile hiking trail. That way when people ask where you stayed on vacation, you can boldly respond, “We slept in the Hurricane Mountain Shelter” and sound like a real badass!

Courtesy of Tennessee Homemade Wines
Courtesy of Tennessee Homemade Wines
Courtesy of Tennessee Homemade Wines

Find some wine and ‘shine

Appalachia is notorious as moonshine country, but the local distillers have gone legit with regulated production facilities, tours, and retail sales along with tasting rooms to sample you on their latest delicious creations. Ole Smoky is the biggest and best-known, but smaller upstarts like Sugarlands and Tennessee Shine Company are also worth dropping in for a sip. Tennessee isn’t especially known for winemaking, but while we don’t grow a lot of Vitis vinifera grapes, there are plenty of other sweeter grapes and fruits that make their way into bottles in Gatlinburg. Tennessee Homemade Wines, Smoky Mountain Winery, and Gatlinburg Wine Cellars are some of the most popular stops on a wine tour. That last one is best known for their Cotton Candy wine, but we can’t recommend it in good conscience.

Conquer your acrophobia

If rope bridges and ziplines are more than you can handle, can you take an elevator or climb a few flights of stairs? Because that’s all you’ll have to do for commanding views from the top of the Gatlinburg Space Needle and its observation deck 400 feet above the ground in downtown. Or once you ride whatever conveyance you choose to the top of Anakeesta, keep going up until you reach their AnaVista Tower with a 360° view of three states. The tower also has some of those glass floor panels, so don’t look down if you’re not ready for that particular thrill yet.

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Chris Chamberlain is a Nashville born and raised food, drink and travel writer who is a pretty accomplished cook in his own right. But even he has trouble cooking a decent medium-well burger over an open fire, so you can often find him at one of these places leaving it to the professionals. Follow the burger-meister on Twitter @CeeElCee.

Nashville

How to Get into Nashville’s Best Speakeasies and Secret Bars

Nashville's speakeasies have impeccable cocktails and even better vibes.

One More Cocktail Club
One More Cocktail Club
One More Cocktail Club

It’s not like it’s difficult to find a spot for a proper cocktail in Nashville, except when it’s intentionally hard. Some of Nashville’s finest bars are a little more hidden away, to create a sense of exclusivity and limit crowds so that talented bartenders can offer the sort of individualized attention that their inventive drinks deserve. Besides, it’s nice to have a conversation at a bar where you don’t have to yell to be heard. Here are some of our favourite places to chill.

The Fox Bar & Cocktail Club
The Fox Bar & Cocktail Club
The Fox Bar & Cocktail Club

The Fox Bar and Cocktail Club

South InglewoodThe talented mixologists at The Fox are a big part of the attraction, and some of their novel takes on classic cocktails have actually won national awards in recipe contests. But even if all you want is a proper gin and tonic, you’ll be delighted by the cozy library vibe of the East Nashville emporium. The bar staff insists on seasonal, locally sourced ingredients, so the drink menu changes frequently. Don’t worry if your favourite rolls off, because there’s sure to be something new to delight you.

Danielle B. Atkins
Danielle B. Atkins
Danielle B. Atkins

Attaboy

East NashvilleAn outpost of the James Beard Award-nominated NYC cocktail bar, Nashville’s version of Attaboy is no slouch either. Well, the building is kindy slouchy, a cinderblock edifice hidden away in an alley where guests are invited to “knock gently” to gain entry. If the bar is full, you’ll have to wait outside, but once you gain entrance, the fun really begins. Bartenders interview patrons about their drink preferences and then compose cocktails on the fly to fulfil their wildest dreams. Sit at the bar or settle into a blue velvet booth to enjoy a completely crafty cocktail or two.

Hidden Bar
Hidden Bar
Hidden Bar

Hidden Bar

DowntownThis subterranean lair in the Noelle hotel downtown is intentionally difficult to find. The entrance is through a door you’d probably never pass through unless you work for the hotel cleaning staff, but it’s a passage to something wonderful. Hidden Bar often stages thematic pop-ups that extend to both the riotous decor and the drink list, and large-format drinks are designed for sharing, so bring a few friends.

Skull's Rainbow Room
Skull’s Rainbow Room
Skull’s Rainbow Room

Skull’s Rainbow Room

Printer’s AlleySkull’s has been a Printers Alley institution since the middle of the last century, except for the few years it was closed when notorious club owner David “Skull” Schulman was murdered, reportedly by someone that knew he always kept the evening’s cash receipts in the top pocket of his trademark overalls. Since reopening, the showroom has revived the old-school vibe with nightly jazz and burlesque shows, classic cocktails served from an elaborate wooden bar and a restaurant that features an excellent chophouse menu. It’s easy to forget the time during an evening at Skulls. Heck, it’s easy to forget what decade it is.

Bar Sovereign
Bar Sovereign
Bar Sovereign

Bar Sovereign

SoBroTucked away in a nondescript strip mall among the towering hotel buildings of SoBro, Bar Sovereign’s entrance is marked only by a small golden plaque that is fortunately close to eye level. Inside is a wonderland of bold artwork covering the walls, a sculpture created from a disassembled piano behind the bar and a menu of interesting and affordable cocktails that is rare to find amongst the nearby tourist destinations. The atmosphere gets a little wilder late at night when DJs spin tunes for the party people and industry folks looking to blow off a little steam at the end of a shift.

Bay 6
Bay 6
Bay 6

Bay 6

East NashvilleThis microbar has a double punny name. First of all, it is, indeed, crammed into the sixth bay of what used to be a self-service car wash before the building was converted into an elevated food and drink court with international carryout restaurants occupying the other quintet of stalls. Secondly, the menu is intentionally basic, with simple, well-made cocktails designed to be served quickly so that guests can enjoy them in one of the very few seats in Bay 6 or carry them out to the lively outdoor patio where patrons enjoy their food from one of the options at The Wash.

Green Hour
Green Hour
Green Hour

Green Hour

GermantownBy day, Tempered Fine Chocolates occupies this space, but on Thursday through Saturday evenings, they unpack the bottles, build a bar and flick on the green light that lets tipplers know that Green Hour is now in session. Dedicated to the exotic “Green Fairy,” absinthe, the bar offers pours of more than a dozen versions of the anise-flavoured spirit. Enjoy a classic absinthe service with drops of water to open up the aromas and flavours or order a flight of three for comparison. The bartenders also employ absinthe in an array of exotic cocktails, but if you don’t like licorice, you might want to pass.

Never Never
Never Never
Never Never

Never Never

Wedgewood-HoustonIt’s not like they’re trying to hide Never Never. It’s just that the former welding shop is so non-descript and hidden away next to the railroad tracks, you might need someone to show you the way to the front door. It’s worth the hunt, though, because the cocktails are both clever and cheap. Enjoy small bites, beer, wine and cocktails at the amiable dimly-lit bar or discover the patio oasis out back that feels like being a guest at a friend’s house party.

Minerva Avenue
Minerva Avenue
Minerva Avenue

Minerva Ave

North NashvilleDress to impress at this Tennessee State University neighbourhood cocktail lounge. A tall fence surrounds the compound to provide privacy, but once you knock for admission, you’ll encounter an expansive outdoor deck with cabanas, fire pits and an outdoor bar. Inside, it’s a little more vibey with plush booths, dramatic lighting accents as well as nostalgic music and artwork. Smokers can enjoy hookah service and cigars, and bottle service is available for high rollers.

One More Cocktail Club
One More Cocktail Club
One More Cocktail Club

One More Cocktail Club

DowntownTucked away in the hallway outside of Level 3 South at the Assembly Food Hall, One More Cocktail Club feels like worlds away from the tourist throngs below. There’s only room for a couple of dozen guests in the chic lounge, so everyone is treated like a VIP. The menu is a mix of new craft cocktails and classics, with special attention paid to creating beautiful works of art including appropriate garnishes. A tight menu of red, white and bubbly wines is also available for those in the know.

Pushing Daisies Underground Margaritas
Pushing Daisies Underground Margaritas
Pushing Daisies Underground Margaritas

Pushing Daisies

DowntownIf you park on the top deck of the garage below the Fifth + Broad retail/dining/entertainment complex across from the Bridgestone Arena, you’ll actually have to walk down to get to Pushing Daisies, home of “underground margaritas.” Named after the class of cocktails that feature citrus, sweet and sour, this hot new lounge concentrates on the tequila version of the whiskey sour or daiquiri. Margaritas are crafted using luxury ingredients and quaffed by a hip crowd of guests enjoying pumping music and dramatic lighting. It’s definitely a scene to be seen.

The Late Great
The Late Great
The Late Great

The Late Great

Demonbreun/Music RowFor the first year this cocktail lounge at the Virgin Nashville was open, it wasn’t really open. Instead, it was a private membership club with an entrance hidden away even from hotel guests. Now, we civilians can make reservations for a three-cocktail “experience” in this shrine to music and creativity, decorated like the writers’ lounge outside the legendary recording studios on nearby Music Row. Private memberships are still available if you’re so inclined and still flush with those songwriter royalty checks.

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Sarah Carter is a writer and country music lover living in Lebanon, Tennessee. Follow her (mostly southern) regional exploits and stories on Instagram.

Chris Chamberlain is a food, drink, and travel writer based out of his hometown of Nashville. Find him on Twitter @CeeElCee.

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