I have lived most of my life in the foothills of Appalachia, the mountainous region that stretches from Maine to Georgia.
In this collection, I publish prized images I captured while exploring Appalachia. I consider these photos Appalachian Treasures. Do you also treasure my treasures?
Words to live by: Let us enjoy life together!
(From a poem by Steve Madden called Enjoy Life!)
SAT49H Copyright 2024 Steven L Madden
Castle Rock makes hikers glad they climbed Bird Mountain Trail in Frozen Head State Park near Wartburg TN.
SAT48H Copyright 2024 Steven L Madden
You can drive to within a few steps of the overlook from which I captured this Roan Highlands image in upper east Tennessee.
Fit hikers can reach the overlook by hiking about two miles along Chestnut Ridge Trail in Roan Mountain State Park.
SAT46H Copyright 2024 Steven L Madden
This image of Roan High Knob was taken at sunset from the AT at Round Knob.
I marvel at God’s handiwork each time I visit the Roan Highlands of Upper East Tennessee and Western North Carolina.
SAT45V Copyright 2024 Steven L Madden
Pigeonwing plants, also called Butterfly Peas, are native to eastern, southern and central United States.
That’s news to me. I recall seeing just one Pigeonwing specimen in all my 66 years.
It bloomed beside Cherokee Lake along Hunt Knob Trail at Panther Creek State Park near Morristown TN.
SAT43H Copyright 2024 Steven L Madden
Which do you value more?
Grassy fields and flowering meadows
Deep blue skies painted with welcome clouds
Grassy fields, flowering meadows, blue skies and welcome clouds often appear together, as in this scene witnessed one July morning at Seven Islands State Birding Park near Knoxville TN.
SAT42V Copyright 2024 Steven L Madden
I sometimes forget the Cumberland Plateau is part of the Appalachian Mountains range.
This is a typical Cumberland Plateau scene. It is called Yahoo Arch, and my photograph does not fully capture its magnificence.
See Yahoo Arch in person by hiking about three miles round trip from Yahoo Falls Picnic Area in Big South Fork National River and Recreation area near Stearns KY.
SAT41V Copyright 2024 Steven L Madden
We were privileged to see ten Yellow Lady Slippers and more than sixty Pink Lady Slippers between April 25 and May 2, 2024.
Our trails included Schoolhouse Gap and Huskey Gap in the Smoky Mountains; and Squibb Creek, Turkey Pen Gap and Middle Springs Ridge trails in Cherokee National Forest.
SAT40V Copyright 2024 Steven L Madden
Sugarland Mountain and Rough Creek trails presented many blow downs to clamber over during our Smoky Mountains adventure.
Thankfully, our fifteen mile loop hike also featured Showy Orchis, Yellow Lady Slippers, Foamflower and many more Spring wildflowers.
SAT37H Copyright 2024 Steven L Madden
I began to notice wildflowers along East Tennessee hiking trails in mid-March 2024.
Among many other flowering plants, Rue Anemone grew beside Panther Branch Trail in Frozen Head State Park.
SAT36V Copyright 2024 Steven L Madden
Great White was one of four Trillium varieties I saw along Panther Branch Trail in Frozen Head State Park.
Others were Red Trillium, Yellow Trillium and Toadshade Trillium.
SAT35H Copyright 2023 Steven L Madden
An hour northwest of Knoxville TN is a wonder-filled wilderness that features some of the most difficult and dramatic hiking anywhere in the Appalachians.
You might doubt this when you learn that no peak in the natural area rises above 3325 feet.
Hike Frozen Head’s Chimney Top Trail, or better yet, North Bird Mountain Trail, and you will be convinced of their greatness.
SAT34H Copyright 2022 Steven L Madden
Don’t you just love ‘em?!
Evergreen trees, I mean. They retain their green color all year, even through severe Winter weather.
I hiked the Appalachian Trail near Grassy Ridge Bald (in the Roan Highlands) when I photographed these trees.
In their harsh environment, where average low temperatures are below 30 degrees F six months each year, and where winds above 30 mph are common, Evergreens are almost the only trees that grow.
SAT33V Copyright 2022 Steven L Madden
During Autumn in Appalachia, you find beauty like this along ‘most any trail you hike.
I hiked Russell Field Trail in Great Smoky Mountains National Park when I discovered this treasure trove of color.
SAT32H Copyright 2023 Steven L Madden
Mountain ranges seen from the Appalachian National Scenic Trail at a natural clearing called Beauty Spot, near Erwin TN.
SAT31H Copyright 2023 Steven L Madden
One of our greatest Appalachian treasures is the Appalachian National Scenic Trail.
I hiked north on the AT between Mount Cammerer and Lower Mount Cammerer trails when I climbed a rock outcropping to capture this image.
SAT23V Copyright 2022 Steven L Madden
The Appalachian National Scenic Trail is commonly called the Appalachian Trail or the AT.
It measures 2200 miles of mountains and valleys from Maine to Georgia. This summer evening view of the AT was within the Roan Highlands near Roan Mountain Tennessee.
SAT28H Copyright 2022 Steven L Madden
This mountain view is from a grassy bald in the Roan Highlands, a picturesque area shared by Tennessee and North Carolina.
You can enjoy similar views by hiking a few miles along the Appalachian Trail north from Carver’s Gap.
SAT27H Copyright 2023 Steven L Madden
Have you heard Aaron Copland’s composition Appalachian Spring? I highly recommend it.
This view from Max Patch on a Spring day reminded me of Copland’s masterpiece. His music and the mountains of Western North Carolina deserve our attention again and again.
SAT26V Copyright 2023 Steven L Madden
Creeks, streams, tributaries and rivers are a marvelous, vital part of God’s creation. As a hiker, my favorites are streams that rush over boulders and sing their peaceful, perpetual song.
This drop in the bucket of the Tennessee River is a nautical mile from the confluence of the Holston and French Broad Rivers.
It boggles my mind to consider how many Appalachian streams drain into these three rivers!
SAT24V Copyright 2022 Steven L Madden
Our beloved Smoky Mountains, in East Tennessee and Western North Carolina, are always amazing.
The Smokies were particularly beautiful on this January day in 2022.
SAT25H Copyright 2022 Steven L Madden
Ephemerals like Squirrel Corn announce the welcome arrival of Spring in Appalachia.
My long list of beloved ephemerals includes Bloodroot, Dutchman’s Breeches, Hepatica, Jack In The Pulpit, Showy Orchis, Spring Beauty and Trout Lily.
Which Appalachian wildflowers do you treasure most?