Showing posts with label Pigeon Forge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pigeon Forge. Show all posts

Monday, December 22, 2014

Smoky Mountain "Winterfest in Motion!" Lights! Camera! Action!

If you have neighbors who go EXTREME with the Christmas lights hanging outside their house, you will appreciate my neighbors in the Smoky Mountains region of East Tennessee.  This year, Smoky Mountain Winterfest is celebrating its 25th anniversary with more than 12 million lights illuminating the region between Sevierville, Pigeon Forge and Gatlinburg.
  
Making the drive to see the lights is an annual traditional for my family and it is definitely time well spent.  If you do not believe that you have the time to make the drive, let me take you on a fast trip that I call Winterfest in Motion! Watch video. 

The excitement begins with a driving tour at Shadrack's Christmas Wonderland located near I-40, exit 407 at Smokies Stadium.  Except for paying for admission into Shadrack's and Dollywood, the remainder of the tour is free.

In addition to the communities making things bright, entertainment theaters offer themed shows that also echo the wintery sentiment. Dollywood adds to the magical fun with its own award-winning Smoky Mountain Christmas. Chilly weather adventure is at Ober Gatlinburg and the spellbinding mystique of the Great Smoky Mountains offer a priceless opportunity for guests who visit.  There is no shortage of lodging options either that range from resorts and cabins to the more traditional hotels and bed & breakfast inns.

I recently wrote about this in a Tennessee Triptales blog for the state tourism office.

Saturday, August 7, 2010

Snow in the Forecast for Titanic Pigeon Forge

The Titanic Museum Attraction in Pigeon Forge, Tennessee is guaranteeing snow this holiday season. Starting Saturday, November 13, 2010, guests are assured real snow at the Titanic every FRIDAY and SATURDAY evening at 7:00PM. The two-day snow event will take place through January 1, 2011 as part of the museum's "Christmas in a Winter Wonderland." The attraction has invested $150,000 in snow equipment (the same type of equipment used to make it snow at Walt Disney World's Magic Kindom every Christmas) that will produce real, falling snow every week-end at the museum. An additional $100,000 will be spent on Christmas trees, carolers and musical events, holiday lights, and ornamentation to decorate the interior and exterior of the Titanic. Tickets are available online at http://www.titanicpigeonforge.com/. Visitors are strongly urged to purchase tickets in advance or make reservations by calling 1-800-381-7670.

Sunday, April 26, 2009

Braggin’ Rights

You know someone has had a fabulous vacation when they come home with braggin' rights. In the Smoky Mountains region that might include, "saw Dolly at Dollywood," "touched a stingray at Ripley's Aquarium," "hiked to Mt. LeConte," or "saw a bear in Cades Cove."

Usually, braggin' rights are documented with a photo and digital cameras have made the process so much simplier and cheeper. And now, thanks to the social media, such as MySpace, Facebook, YouTube and Twitter, someone's brag can be heard around the world in just a few moments.

Sometimes, braggin' rights come in the form of the unexpected. (Can someone say Susan Boyle?) Last year while my daughters and I were waiting for a ride out of Elkmont, we met Toni, the park ranger. We were returning home with the braggin rights we came for: synchronus fireflies. However, it was our encounter with Toni and her inspiring story that made that evening an unexpected pleasure. Seth Godin might call it a "purple cow."

Last Saturday, some new friends from the AAA Auto Club joined me and my friend Walter for a short, guided hike behind the Sugarlands Visitor Center. There to greet us was our guide, Toni. She can really "wow" an audience with her humor, her heart and her perspective on nature and life.

Along the hike, a young lady out from nowhere with a book in her hand, caught up to Toni and asked for her autograph. (Gathering braggin' rights I'm sure.) Toni's story is now in a book sold at the park's gift shop.

Along the hike, Toni took us to the smallest waterfall in the park, Cataract Falls. One blogger called it "nothing great." Too bad the writer was not on Toni's hike. Someone missed out on a life lesson from a park ranger with cerebral palsy. She reminded us that waterfalls and people don't have to all be alike to be beautiful and useful.

That day, numerous guests on the hike documented their own braggin' rights: standing next to Toni in front of the smallest waterfall in the park. Two unexpected treasures inside the Great Smoky Mountains National Park.