CBL002
Location: 35.6211090087891, -83.4038009643555
Turn R @ T onto Sweat Heifer Creek Trail
CBL003
Location: 35.6136703491211, -83.3862533569336
Trail cuts to NE @ old logging landing; continue descent to creekbed
CBL004
Location: 35.6188812255859, -83.3808135986328
Cross Sweat Heifer Creek, a sun-dappled stream with rippling cascades and a swimming hole
CBL005
Location: 35.6102294921875, -83.3686828613281
Pass Kephart Prong Shelter, a large stone hut tucked into a glade. Turn L @ T; follow Grassy Branch Trail to N
CBL006
Location: 35.6260185241699, -83.3575897216797
Turn L @ T for steady ascent up Dry Sluice Gap Trail
CBL007
Location: 35.6381301879883, -83.3691329956055
Turn L @ T onto Appalachian Trail
CBL008
Location: 35.6384048461914, -83.3722534179688
Traverse S edge of Charlies Bunion, a bare, rocky bluff with 1,000-ft. dropoffs to N
CBL009
Location: 35.6374969482422, -83.3767852783203
Rock outcrop provides views of layered Smoky Mountain ridgelines; traverse ridgecrest to SW
CBL010
Location: 35.6300086975098, -83.3863677978516
Pass Icewater Spring Shelter (one of the fi nest on the AT)
CBL011
Location: 35.6283798217773, -83.3906707763672
Stay straight on AT @ 3-way with Boulevard Trail. Follow NC/TN state line for SW descent on lush ridgeline back to WPT 2. Return to car.
A mere footnote in the geologic record, Charlies Bunion may lack the fame other Smoky Mountain hikes. But stand on this weatherworn promontory and peer past the dizzying 1,000-foot dropoffs to a quintessential Smokies skyline, and there's no doubt: This is a destination worth getting up early for. In fact, a predawn alarm isn't a bad idea, since you'll be bagging the standout summit in the most visited U.S. national park. There's a reason the softshell-clad masses trek through an evergreen tunnel along the spine of the Appalachians: A jaw-dropping panorama stretches from Mt. LeConte eastward to the jagged peaks of the Sawteeth Range. A 1925 wildfire that incinerated the slopes of this 5,565-foot knob is responsible for the exceptional view--and the peculiar name. Noted outdoorsman Horace Kephart named the bulbous peak in 1929 after observing its resemblance to his hiking companion's inflamed big toe.
TIPS TO DO IT RIGHT
- Spring brings the thru-hikers, and summer and fall bring everyone else. Visit the Bunion in winter, and you'll enjoy even better views through the leaf-bare trees, plus likely avoid a bottleneck at the outcrop. A bonus: The low humidity and cool, dense air help confine that famous Smoky Mountain fog to the valleys.
- Take a short detour from the Appalachian Trail onto the Boulevard Trail, 2.7 miles from the Newfound Gap trailhead, to reach The Jumpoff, an overlook with a great view of the Bunion.
Text by Thomas Wilmes. Mapped by Tim Johnson
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