Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Only about a half hour’s drive southwest from Cumberland Falls, you’ll find the largest waterfall in Kentucky, measuring 113 feet high. Compared to the cascading Cumberland Falls, Yahoo Falls ...
Cumberland Falls in 2005. The following is a list of waterfalls in the US state of Kentucky. Bad Branch Falls Kentucky, in Letcher County near source of Cumberland River; Cumberland Falls, located in the Cumberland Falls State Resort Park; Dog Slaughter Falls, located downstream of the Cumberland Falls State Resort Park [1]
Bad Branch Falls State Nature Preserve has an uneven terrain resulting in about 7 miles of strenuous hiking trails and foot bridges throughout the nature preserve. The moderate 1.8 mile loop leading Bad Branch Gorge where the 60-foot waterfall flows over the sandstone cliffs, starts from a small parking lot that can hold up to 10 cars and one bus.
The falls are one of the few places in the western hemisphere where a moonbow can frequently be seen on nights with a full moon. [2] The park is also the home of 44-foot (13 m) Eagle Falls . The section of the Cumberland River that includes the falls was designated a Kentucky Wild River by the Kentucky General Assembly through the Office of ...
The falls are a short walk or bike ride from the park's waterfall entrance at 2158 Old Dublin Road, Columbus. Hocking Hills State Park A photo of the reopening of hiking trails in Hocking Hills ...
Rough River Lake near Leitchfield, Kentucky. The Rough River is a 136-mile-long (219 km) [1] tributary of the Green River in west-central Kentucky in the United States.It's located about 70 miles southwest of Louisville, and flows through Breckinridge, Hardin, Grayson, and Ohio counties.
All rivers in Kentucky flow to the Mississippi River, nearly all by virtue of flowing to its major tributary, the Ohio River. Also listed are some important tributaries to the few Kentucky rivers that originate in, or flow through, other states.
Elkhorn Creek is an 99-mile-long (159 km) [5] stream running through several counties in central Kentucky in the United States. The stream drains an area of 499.5 square miles (1,294 km 2). [6] It derives its name from the shape, as seen on a map, of its main stem with its two primary forks. Wallace Dam on North Elkhorn Creek in Scott County.