Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Next Phase of Work on Newfound Gap Road Gets Underway

Great Smoky Mountains News Release

Release Date: Immediate
Contact: Dana Soehn, Dana_Soehn@nps.gov
Phone number: 865-436-1207
Date: May 21, 2013

Next Phase of Work on Newfound Gap Road Gets Underway

Great Smoky Mountains National Park officials announced that a project to repave 6.1 miles of Newfound Gap Road will begin in May. This work is part of a multi-phased rehabilitation project started in 2007. The section to be resurfaced extends from Chimney’s Picnic Area south to an overlook approximately 2 miles south of the Alum Cave Bluffs parking area where the last phase ended.

The work will be performed under a $13.2 million contract with Estes Brothers Construction of Jonesville, VA and will be administered by the Federal Highway Administration’s Eastern Federal Lands Highway Division. Funding is provided to the NPS through the Federal Lands Transportation Program to support this work.

Park Superintendent Ditmanson said, “In developing this contract we made every effort to minimize the disruption to visitor access to Park attractions and to our gateway communities. The contract incorporates a variety of work restrictions that are tailored to minimize lane closures during the busiest periods.”

Motorists should expect delays due to lane closures through June 15. There will not be any daytime lane closures from June 15 through August 15. After August 15, daytime lane closures will again be allowed. No work of any kind will be permitted on federal holidays or during the month of October.

This section of road was last repaved in the 1980s and is badly deteriorated. In addition to the repaving, major work items in this project include the replacement of drainage culverts and the repair of several guard walls. This work is the second of three phases to repair all 15 miles of the Road from Newfound Gap to the Park boundary at Gatlinburg - a process that Park managers expect to finish in 2016.

For more information about road closures, please visit the Park’s website at www.nps.gov/grsm and or call the Park’s Road and Weather Information Line at 865-436-1200.

Friday, May 17, 2013

CLOUDS ROLL IN FOR THE WEEKEND

 PURCHASE KNOB webcam - 7:45 am Friday, May 17
LOOK ROCK webcam - 7:45 am Friday, May 17

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

A BEAUTIFUL TUESDAY IN THE SMOKIES

 COLD MOUNTAIN WEBCAM - Shining Rock Wilderness   Pisgah National Forest, North Carolina

 LOOK ROCK WEBCAM - on Foothills Parkway in Blount County - overlooking the park

 JOYCE KILMER WILDERNESS WEBCAM     Nantahala National Forest, North Carolina
 
PURCHASE KNOB WEBCAM - North Carolina side of national park

Monday, May 6, 2013

LOOK ROCK AFTER A RAINY WEEKEND

Look Rock webcam, Great Smoky Mountains National Park, on Blount Co. portion of Foothills Parkway
 

 8:00 am Mon. May 6, 2013
 

Wednesday, May 1, 2013

Park Releases New Species of Predatory Beetles

Great Smoky Mountains News Release
Release Date: Immediate
Contact: Dana Soehn, Dana_Soehn@nps.gov
Date: May 1, 2013
Park Releases New Species of Predatory Beetles
Great Smoky Mountains National Park resource managers plan to release two new predatory beetle species to aid in control efforts to stop the spread of Hemlock Woolly Adelgid (HWA), an invasive insect pest that has devastated hemlock forests throughout the eastern United States.
The park began releasing predatory beetles, which feed exclusively on adelgids, as a biocontrol in 2002. Park managers are hopeful that the addition of these two new beetle species will further enhance our bicontrol treatment program. Both beetles, Laricobius osakensis and Scymnus coniferarum, will be released at biocontrol sites throughout the park. L. osakensis beetles come from Osaka Japan where the Smokies strain of HWA originated. S. coniferarum beetles come from Washington where a similar HWA species occurs and has been kept in check by natural beetle predation.
Park managers currently utilize two other beetle species for HWA control including Laricobius nigrinus from Washington and Sasajiscymnus tsugae from Northern Japan. Both of these species are established in the Park and are increasing in numbers and in their ability to control HWA. In the long term, Park managers expect beetles to control HWA as populations reach a natural balance as they have in Washington, British Columbia, and Japan.
The park employs a three-prong approach in managing HWA that includes foliar applications of horticultural oil in developed areas, stem and soil injections of systemic insecticides (imidacloprid or dinotefuran), and the release of predatory beetles. All of the chemical and biological control techniques are showing positive effects. Currently about 600 acres are being sprayed annually, over 250,000 hemlock trees have been hand-treated with systemic pesticides spread across 11,000 acres, and over 545,000 predatory beetles have been released.
Each of these species of HWA predatory beetles are very small black lady beetles and should not be confused with the larger red and black spotted lady beetle that is typically found overwintering in large numbers throughout the area. All introduced biological controls such as the HWA predatory beetles are first quarantined and researched in depth before given approval by the USDA for release.

Monday, April 15, 2013

NEWFOUND GAP ROAD OPEN IN GSMNP


Work to reopen U.S. 441/Newfound Gap Road after the Jan. 16 landside is now complete. The main road through America's most visited National Park is officially open, just in time for spring and all it has to offer!

Thursday, April 11, 2013

Early April in Great Smoky Mountains National Park

 FROM RICH MTN. ROAD OVERLOOKING CADES COVE
 HYATT LANE IN CADES COVE
 FROM GATLINBURG BYPASS OVERLOOKING GATLINBURG AND THE PARK
 CADES COVE AS SEEN FROM RICH MTN. ROAD
TRILLIUM BLOOMING ALONG LITTLE RIVER ROAD

Monday, April 8, 2013


VIEW FROM ALONG U.S. 411 JUST NORTH OF THE TOWN OF OLD FORT, TENNESSEE LOOKING SOUTH INTO GEORGIA.  The mountains here are in the Cherokee National Forest in Tennessee and the Chattahoochee National Forest in Georgia.

Saturday, April 6, 2013

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

MIDDLE PRONG LITTLE RIVER - GSMNP

Just another "winter" day, even though it's March 26th.

HYATT LANE - CADES COVE -GSMNP


2 DAYS OF LIGHT SNOW....2ND DAY (Tuesday, March 26) ALSO HAD SLEET.  BUT TOURISTS CAME OUT ANYWAY AS ROADS WERE CLEAR.  BEAUTIFUL TIME IN THE COVE.

Thursday, March 21, 2013

APPROPRIATELY NAMED COLD MOUNTAIN

 8 AM FEBRUARY 21, 2013
webcam
Shining Rock Wilderness
Pisgah National Forest,  North Carolina
 

Thursday, February 28, 2013

Campgrounds to close if Federal budget cut

http://www.thedailytimes.com/Local_News/story/Campgrounds-closed-Two-Blount-campgrounds-affected-by-federal-budget-cuts-id-033621

Newfound Gap slide repairs under way





 
(as appeared in The Daily Times, Maryville, TN. Feb. 28)


By Dick Byrd

Tourism leaders and businesses on both sides of the Tennessee-North Carolina state line are hoping, and some are pushing, for quick completion of a huge landslide on Newfound Gap Road in Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Work has already been underway for 6 days to rebuild the slide area located about 7 miles below Newfound Gap on the North Carolina side.
The slide is huge. Park spokesperson Molly Schroer says an underground spring, unknown until the slide, exacerbated the problem caused by the heavy rainfall in January, estimated at 14 to 17 inches in all. The road has been closed since the slide. Roadblocks are in place at Indian Gap about a mile below Newfound Gap and at the Collins Creek Picnic Area...both on the North Carolina side of the park. Tennessee traffic can still travel from Sugarlands to Newfound Gap and on to the Clingmans Dome Road and Indian Gap. Though the Clingmans Dome Road has been closed for winter the park is opening it again weather permitting.
Construction workers at the slide site are filling the yawning hole with rock, some from the slide and more trucked in. In all an estimated 4 thousand truckloads of rock will be used to fill the giant hole. Below the roadway itself, where the side of the mountain spread out through the forest there is a giant mud field. The Park service has already seeded that area with native plant seeds and plans on letting nature take its course rehabilitating the area.
Tourism businesses from Townsend to Gatlinburg, from Cosby to Cherokee have been feeling the dent being made in tourist visits because of the huge landslide. Park visits were down in January 1.4%. Schroer has no idea right now if February will be similar.

Phillips& Jordan, Inc. of Robinsville, NC won the bidding process to repair the road and has a May 15 deadline. The contractor will be paid $3,989,890 if the work is completed by May 15th. If it finishes before then it can earn $18,000 for each day before May 15th. The incentive money would come from the Eastern Band of the Cherokee Indians for each day up to 14. An additional incentive of $18,000 per day up to 14 more would come from the National Park Service. If the work is not completed by May 15th an $18,000 per day penalty would be accessed. Molly Schroer told The Daily Times any penalty money would not go to the tribe, but would go to the park service.




Saturday, February 23, 2013

FEB. 22 2013 TIME LAPSE LOOK ROCK WEBCAM

THIS IS THE LOOK ROCK WEBCAM ON THE FOOTHILLS PARKWAY IN BLOUNT COUNTY, TN. OVERLOOKING THE TENNESSEE SIDE OF THE GREAT SMOKY MOUNTAINS NATIONAL PARK.  This is from before dawn till after sunset.

http://www.outragegis.com/weather/img/animation/yesterday/LookRock.gif

Friday, February 22, 2013

MOODY MORNING ACROSS THE SMOKIES



                                     Look Rock webcam 8 am Feb. 22

Thursday, February 14, 2013

NPS OPENS CLINGMAN'S DOME ROAD EARLY

Release Date: Immediate
Contact: Molly Schroer, Molly_Schroer@nps.gov, 865-436-1203
Date: February 14, 2013
 Clingmans Dome Road to Open
 Great Smoky Mountains National Park has announced that Clingmans Dome Road, a popular high elevation visitor destination, will open to traffic as weather conditions allow as early as February 15. The road will continue to be monitored for hazardous conditions throughout the remainder of the winter season, and will still be subject to closure pending inclement weather.
 Winter weather, especially at high elevations, is often unpredictable, which is why the Park typically closes the road from December 1 through March 31 of each year. Milder temperatures over this season have allowed for better access to the road for visitors wanting to reach the popular park destination of Clingmans Dome, the highest point accessible by vehicle.
 The road will not be plowed, though, if snow or ice develops. It will instead be closed so visitors may utilize the area for winter recreation, such as cross country skiing or snowshoeing.
 For the most current road closure information, please call 865-436-1200 x 631 or follow SmokiesRoadsNPS on Twitter.

THE AMAZING GRACE OF MY MOUNTAINS

from 4 webcams aprox. 9am in The Smokies Feb. 14, 2013

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

LOOK ROCK MOODS


Look Rock webcam sits along the Foothills Parkway...a part of The Great Smoky Mountains National Park.  The webcam overlooks much of the park, particularly the Tennessee side.  That view has many moods.  Here are some of them.

Friday, February 8, 2013

Cherokees partner with Park on landslide repairs


Great Smoky Mountains News Release
Release Date: Immediate
Contacts: NPS: Dana Soehn, Dana_Soehn@nps.gov, 865-436-1207
Date: February 8, 2013
Park and Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians Partner to Offer Early Completion Incentive for Newfound Gap Road Repairs
 Great Smoky Mountains National Park and the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians (EBCI) have partnered together to offer an early completion incentive for repairs to Newfound Gap Road (US 441) which was closed due to a January landslide. An extended road closure has significant economic implications for our tourism-based gateway communities.
 Park officials and the EBCI worked together to offer a monetary incentive of $ 18,000 per day to the selected contractor for each day of completion prior to May 15, 2013, up to a maximum of $500,000. The amount donated by the EBCI will apply to the first 14 days of the incentive period at the above rate.
 EBCI Principal Chief, Michell Hicks, and Park Superintendent, Dale Ditmanson, recognize the importance of Newfound Gap Road as a vital economic artery linking the NC and TN communities, as well as its importance to park visitors who enjoy the unique driving experience.
 “We are grateful that our Cherokee neighbors offered to match the National Park Service $250,000 incentive proposal in order to motivate the contractor to complete the rehabilitation of the road as efficiently as possible,” said Superintendent Ditmanson.
 In addition to the monetary incentives, the contract also includes monetary disincentives. The contractor will be charged $18,000 per day past May 15, 2013 to help insure the project is completed on schedule.
 The contracting piece for phase 2, involving the actual road reconstruction, was initiated on Friday January 25, when Federal Highways Administration (FHWA) posted a pre-solicitation for contractors with interest in repairing the landslide. Through this process a number of successful contractors submitted acceptable technical proposals and are now eligible to submit a bid to for the project. Bids from these contractors are due February 15, 2013. The contract for this phase of work is estimated to cost between $3,000,000 and $7,000,000. Final construction work will begin soon after.
 Phase 1 of the reconstruction project is on schedule. Phase 1 contract crews from APAC –Atlantic Harrison are in the process of building the haul road, stabilizing the site, and removing debris to prepare the site for Phase 2 reconstruction. Soil erosion mitigation efforts to stabilize the debris field and minimize siltation into Beech Flats Prong stream have been completed. In addition, Park biologists have completed all environmental compliance associated with the road reconstruction.
 Newfound Gap Road will remain closed to thru traffic during the construction, but visitors are still able to access the park to Newfound Gap from the TN side and to Collins Creek Picnic Area from the Cherokee, NC entrance.

Thursday, February 7, 2013

Great Smoky Mountains News Release


Park Roads Suffer Flood Damage

Great Smoky Mountains National Park suffered significant damage to park roads and trails following a flood event last week resulting in the temporary closure of sections of gravel roads within several popular areas. Closed areas include Greenbrier Road past the Greenbrier Ranger Station, Cataloochee Road past Palmer Chapel, and Parson’s Branch Road.
During the rain event on January 30th, the Park received over 4 inches of rain in 24 hours resulting in flooding of streams throughout the park which were already swollen from higher than normal precipitation throughout January. Average rainfall during January across the Park averages 5-7 inches of rain, but the Park received 14-17 inches of rain this January.
The gravel roads in Greenbrier, Cataloochee, and Parson’s Branch were washed out exposing underlying rock and culverts. Park crews are assessing the damage and estimate that repairs will be completed by the end of March. In addition to replacing culverts, roads will need to be graveled and re-graded.
High waters also destroyed the pedestrian bridge across Walker Camp Prong along the popular Chimney Tops Trail. The 70-foot long pedestrian bridge, originally built in the late 1950s, will have to be entirely replaced to allow trail access. Trail crews are assessing bridge replacement options and do not yet have a date estimate for completion