Anonymous wrote:Watch your children- it’s known to be a high trafficking area.
The NP is big. You can’t do it all in one trip let alone one day. Here are a few options depending on what your family likes.Anonymous wrote:Thanks for all of the feedback! I am impressed so many of you can keep your kids in the car for so long. We are definitely going to need to stop along the way. Anyone have thoughts about Abington, Roanoke, Lexington, or Staunton?
The pass suggestion seems awesome! I think our youngest gets in free, so one pass plus two buddy tickets means we can all go in with just that.
Any favorite hikes/spots in the national park? And just one day for that too?
Anonymous wrote:Thanks for all of the feedback! I am impressed so many of you can keep your kids in the car for so long. We are definitely going to need to stop along the way. Anyone have thoughts about Abington, Roanoke, Lexington, or Staunton?
The pass suggestion seems awesome! I think our youngest gets in free, so one pass plus two buddy tickets means we can all go in with just that.
Any favorite hikes/spots in the national park? And just one day for that too?
Anonymous wrote:Dollywood is completely doable in 1 day. You definitely don’t need 2 unless you want to ride everything and see all the shows. It’s more six flags size, less Disney size.
Pigeon forge (where it is) is our stopover point on our way to another location. I would not stop on the way—it’s a reasonable day’s drive.
Spend the rest of your time a few ways:
-taking in the utter madness of pigeon forge (think ocean city in the middle of the mountains, then replace swim shops with trump stores and knife stores). There are approximately 4 million mini golf courses, go carts, mountain (gravity) coasters, escape rooms, dinner shows, and pancake restaurants. Family favorites include the lumberjack show (real competitive lumberjacks), the ax throwing place (no age limit, if you can hold it they’ll encourage you to throw it), and a place where you can get scoops of cookie dough like you would normally get ice cream.
-National park exploration. Lots of hiking trails of all levels/ability. We always end up there in March so it’s not terribly scenic since it’s still winter-ish, but the hikes are still nice
-gatlinburg has a lot of artisan shops along the trail outside town. On a rainy day we found a glass artisan who offers kids projects. They also have an aquarium, ripleys, a Sky tram
-I’ve never been when it’s warm, but there’s a huuuge water park that’s supposed to be great a few miles away