APPALACHIAN TRAIL
RHODODENDRON GAP TO PINE MOUNTAIN
MOUNT ROGERS - AUGUST 13-15, 1993
At Rhododendron Gap, the Appalachian
Trail makes a hard turn to the right for the northbound hiker and heads into
Grayson Highlands State Park. The park is adjacent to the Mount
Rogers National Recreation Area, a part of the
Jefferson National Forest.
Grayson Highlands, originally named Mount Rogers State Park, was established
in 1965. The community overwhelmingly supported this park, beginning with a
fund-raising
effort
for land acquisition and continuing with the donation of items on exhibit in the
visitor center. Many areas in the park are named after early settlers. Massie
Gap takes its name from Lee Massey, who lived in the gap with his wife and five
children in the late 1800s and early 1900s. Wilburn Ridge is named after the
famed hunter Wilburn Waters. His reputation as a bear hunter and wolf trapper
made him renowned throughout the region.
Grayson Highland State Park is more akin to the grasslands
of Montana than the typical meadows of Southwestern Virginia. There are
magnificent views from the wide open areas in the park and from the numerous
rock outcroppings along the trail. Herds of wild ponies roam these lands
and are often seen not far from the trail.
Slawdog and I combined the Appalachian Trail with some side
trails in the Grayson Highlands State Park and the Mount Rogers National
Recreation Area to complete a fifteen mile overnight hike in the area. We also
climbed a short 0.4 mile side trail to the 5,729 feet summit of Mount Rogers
which is the highest mountain in Virginia and is home to the northernmost Fraser
Firs on the Appalachian Trail.