illabelle
02-08-2017, 07:14
This is a report from our first visit to the burn area after the fire that devastated Gatlinburg and portions of the Smokies in late November, 2016.
Last Saturday, February 4, we learned that most trails were open that connected to the Roaring Fork Motorway loop from Gatlinburg. The exception is the Bullhead Trail, which remains closed. Still several closings closer to the Chimney Tops area. We had limited time, only hiked an hour up Rainbow Falls Trail. Below are selected photos from that walk. I expect we'll return late in the spring to see how things have changed.
Note the rhododendron on the left side of the road. The brown is where it was singed as the fire swept through. This was a common sight. In many places the brown goes up about 8-10 feet, with greenery above. In some places no green is visible two-and-a-half months after the fire. I guess those won't survive. I failed to get a picture, but we saw freshly sprouted beautiful green grass along the road banks in several places, obviously from recent seeding efforts.
38149
Charred stump of a large long-gone tree.
38150
Never used to see all these rocks littering the ground. Low vegetation is gone, along with much of the leaf litter.
3815138152
Similar to the road view, this trail view shows rhododendron singed as the fire swept through.
38153
This photo looks from the trail uphill at the edge of the charred leaf layer over the exposed mineral layer. This photo worries me. With a humus layer so thin, and yes I expect it's probably thicker away from the edge, how does a beetle, or an earthworm, or a chipmunk, or a centipede survive? How do the rhododendron survive? How long does it take for new organisms to move in? How much degradation and erosion occur before the soil is stable?
38154
Black and brown, bare and unprotected. Sad.
38155
Last Saturday, February 4, we learned that most trails were open that connected to the Roaring Fork Motorway loop from Gatlinburg. The exception is the Bullhead Trail, which remains closed. Still several closings closer to the Chimney Tops area. We had limited time, only hiked an hour up Rainbow Falls Trail. Below are selected photos from that walk. I expect we'll return late in the spring to see how things have changed.
Note the rhododendron on the left side of the road. The brown is where it was singed as the fire swept through. This was a common sight. In many places the brown goes up about 8-10 feet, with greenery above. In some places no green is visible two-and-a-half months after the fire. I guess those won't survive. I failed to get a picture, but we saw freshly sprouted beautiful green grass along the road banks in several places, obviously from recent seeding efforts.
38149
Charred stump of a large long-gone tree.
38150
Never used to see all these rocks littering the ground. Low vegetation is gone, along with much of the leaf litter.
3815138152
Similar to the road view, this trail view shows rhododendron singed as the fire swept through.
38153
This photo looks from the trail uphill at the edge of the charred leaf layer over the exposed mineral layer. This photo worries me. With a humus layer so thin, and yes I expect it's probably thicker away from the edge, how does a beetle, or an earthworm, or a chipmunk, or a centipede survive? How do the rhododendron survive? How long does it take for new organisms to move in? How much degradation and erosion occur before the soil is stable?
38154
Black and brown, bare and unprotected. Sad.
38155