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The Sheltowee Trace Trail is a 343-mile (552.00 km) [1] National Recreation Trail that was created in 1979 and stretches from the Burnt Mill Bridge Trail Head in the Big South Fork National River and Recreation Area in Tennessee) to northern Rowan County, Kentucky
Sheltowee Trace Trail: 333 536 Kentucky: Big South Fork National River and Recreation Area: Rowan County, Kentucky: Daniel Boone National Forest: Sierra High Route: 195 314 California: within Kings Canyon National Park, Inyo National Forest, and Yosemite National Park: Silver Comet Trail: 61.5 99 western Georgia: Smyrna, Georgia
Sheltowee Trace Trail; T. Tennessee River Blueway This page was last edited on 18 December 2024, at 00:38 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons ...
McKee is known for its outdoor recreation opportunities, such as hiking, biking, fishing and exploring the Sheltowee Trace National Recreation Trail, which runs through the city.
There is one designated National Recreation Area, the Big South Fork, located in the southwest corner of the forest, [4]: III-2 and one National Recreation Trail, the Sheltowee Trace, which stretches almost 290 miles (470 km) from northern Kentucky to Pickett CCC Memorial State Park near Jamestown, Tennessee.
Sheltowee Trace National Recreation Trail is over 300 miles of National Recreation Trail, established in 1979, in the Appalachian region of the Eastern U.S., and reaches from northern Rowan County, Kentucky to the Leather Wood Trail Head in the Big South Fork National River and Recreation Area just across the Tennessee border. The Trail runs ...
The Woodlands Trace National Scenic Byway, also known as "The Trace," is the major north–south roadway that traverses the Land Between the Lakes National Recreation Area in two counties in western Kentucky and northwestern Stewart County in northwest Middle Tennessee. [2] It is estimated to be 43.1 miles (69.4 km) in length.
The visitor center features a museum with interactive exhibits about the Gap's role as a transportation corridor, an auditorium that shows films about the area's cultural and natural history, a book store and the Cumberland Crafts gift shop with crafts from Appalachia. [4]