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Camping In The Parks: Big Creek Campground At Great Smoky Mountains National Park

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Midnight Hole on Big Creek - GRSM

Midnight Hole is a popular swimming hole. The camp host stands in the foundations from the old Crestmont Lumber Company.

If you're looking for a small, quiet campground in Great Smoky Mountains National Park without being too far from a main road, you can't do much better than Big Creek Campground.

With only 12 tent sites, Big Creek is the smallest campground in the park. RVs are not allowed. The campground is described as a walk-in campground because you park your car in a small parking lot and walk maybe 100 to 300 feet to your site. Some sites are on a small mound above, others are closer to the river. All are within shouting distance of Big Creek - #6 and #10 may be the closest to the water. No generator noises, no large RV dwarfing your tent, just the gurgle of the creek. Yet, you're only a few miles from I-40, on the North Carolina/Tennessee border.

Like all front-country campsites, each site has a tent pad, grill, a picnic table, and a pole for a lantern. A restroom with flush toilets and cold water sinks is located in the small parking area.

You should bring everything you need with you since the closest grocery store is in Newport, Tennessee, about a 30-minute drive from Big Creek. If you're reading older descriptions of the campground, you might be taken in by the accessibility of Mountain Mama, a legendary campstore, with supplies, good hamburgers, and modest lodging decorated in cigarette motif. But Mountain Mama has been closed for several years.

A large picnic area, with its own parking lot, separates the tent-only campground from the horse camp. Like many Smokies campgrounds, the Big Creek area was a lumber mill before the land became part of the national park. Crestmont Lumber Company was located near the trailhead parking. You can still see some of the foundations in the parking area for picnickers and day hikers. Later, the site was occupied by the Civilian Conservation Corp's Big Creek Camp. The young men built trails, bridges across Big Creek and the fire towers on Mt. Sterling and Mt. Cammerer.

Big Creek Trail follows an old railroad grade for over five miles to Walnut Bottom Campsite #37. For an easy hike, take Big Creek Trail for 1.4 miles to Midnight Hole. The water flows between two huge boulders and into a large pool. This swimming hole is a favorite of children of all ages. Another 0.6 mile brings you to Mouse Creek Falls, a 25-foot cascade located on the left as you go up. Look for a horse hitching rail as your signpost for the Falls.

The campground is first come, first serve and reservations are not accepted. Good luck.

Comments

There's a great new country store around the corner from where Mountain Momma's used to be.

https://www.facebook.com/BigCreekCountryStore/


No, Big Creek still offers 12 tent sites, along with a group site and a horse packers area.


Hey is this a free to camp or a pay to camp site? If so what are the dates?


Can you have a camp fire at the tent sites


the text of the article is old. Reserve campsites on the recreation. Gov site 


You cannot reserve any campsites except the group one, either online on by phone. The reservation.gov person was not even aware that there are other campsites available other than the group camping. The smaller 12 sites are first come, first served. Also nearby Cosby Campground is the same.  Get there well before noon, ask around to see which campers are leaving that day and stake your spot. 

 


Both Group and Individual are by online reservation now, it is new. We just reserved ours online and two years ago it was first come, first serve... but for now it is online reservations. 


If you want to see bears drive the roaring fork road.  WE were dinning at the Green Briar Inn and had bears walking right by the window we were sitting at.  Used to see them in the Chimney Creeks pickic area, not so much anymore.  Cades code road at dusk is a good place.  Remember they are wild animals and can kill you, especially if you get between them and their young.  Stay a safe distance away from them.


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