We
almost lost Drinkwater Pool, which is a shame because it was one of Harvey
Broome and the Smoky Mountains Hiking Club’s most cherished, wilderness sites.
I developed an obsession with Drinkwater Pool a few years ago, but couldn’t
seem to find anyone who knew exactly where it was. Harvey Broome wrote lovingly
about it, and he’d drop occasional, unintentional hints about its location, be
he never gave step-by-step directions. However, through a careful reading of
Broome’s writing, plus several trips above Ramsey Cascades, and finally some
pictures by Herbert Webster on the UT Libray’s website, we now know for sure
(and are putting in writing) the location of Drinkwater Pool (and Drinkwater
Gap and Buck Fork Cascade).
Sources
First,
let’s start with the sources. The book Harvey
Broome, Earthman is a big piece of the puzzle. The primary chapters of
interest are: “Guyot at Last!” (p.11 ) and “Mount Guyot via Buck Fork Creek”
(p.73) and “Buck Fork and Ramsay Prong” (p.81). Likewise, Broome’s book Out Under the Sky of the Great Smokies
is equally important, particularly his entries for July, 1955 and July, 1957.
There’s also a passing reference in Carlos Campbell’s book entitled Memories of Old Smoky. It would be
helpful if you would read these passages by Broome either before or after (or
both) reading the rest of this document.
In
trying to make sense of the various descriptions of Drinkwater Pool, the actual
trips up and down Ramsey Prong and Buck Fork were done by me and my most
consistent hiking partner, Greg Harrell, from 2009 to 2012. Later in the
process we received some help and confirmation from Ken Wise and his UTK
library photo archives website.
Topography
Above Ramsey Cascades
We
know for certain that Drinkwater Pool is an exceptionally beautiful pool on
Ramsey Prong, somewhere above Ramsey Cascades. Of course, there are thousands
of beautiful pools on hundreds of creeks in the Smokies, so we can’t simply
walk up Ramsey Prong and pick out the prettiest spot. It just doesn’t work that
way. Nevertheless, it’s somewhere above Ramsey Cascades, so let’s talk a bit
about the topography above RC.
Today
there’s a rough path that leads to the top of RC. (Ramsey Cascades is the
first/left star on the map below.) According to Broome’s July, 1955 entry in Out Under, the official trail used to
end at the top of RC, not the bottom as it does today. Once at the top one must
slosh upstream, either rock hopping your way up or simply giving in and wading.
While there was once a trail that paralleled the river, it was barely
discernible in the 1950s and has long since disappeared. About a half mile
above Ramsey Cascades is another, nameless cascade. It is not as vertical as Ramsey
Cascades; it consists of a long, tumbling series of plunge pools, one
immediately after another, that rise over a hundred feet vertical over a
distance of about two hundred feet horizontal. We’ll call this the Second
Cascade. (The middle star on the map below.) [Our altimeter and GPS readings, which
aren’t always highly accurate, tell us that this Second Cascade rises from
4,515’ to 4,645’ (about 130’ vertical) in about 200’ horizontal.]
At
the top of the Second Cascade, the creekbed levels out for a few hundred yards,
after which there is a Third Cascade. (The third/right star.) [Our GPS readings
indicate this Third Cascade begins about a quarter mile beyond the top of the
Second Cascade.] This TC is not as consolidated as the Second Cascade. That is,
it’s a series of plunge pools, but there is sometimes a bit more level creekbed
between them – sometimes 40 or 50 feet apart. It’s not exactly a single
cascade, but it is a series of adjacent plunges and terraces, so it’s easier to
talk of them as a Third Cascade simply because they are strung together with a
very clear beginning at the bottom and a very clear end where the creekbed
levels out at the top. From here Ramsey Prong continues up to the Stateline
Ridge near Mt. Guyot.
Notice
also that about a mile south of Ramsey Prong is another river that runs
parallel to it – Buck Fork. Buck Fork and Ramsey Prong flow down into the
Middle Prong of the Pigeon River. The ridge running parallel and between Ramsey
Prong and Buck Fork is Guyot Spur. If you look carefully at the map above
you’ll see a low swag in Guyot Spur just below the “u” in Guyot. This gap is
near the second/middle star. There’s also a swag (gap) in Guyot Spur near the
third star, at the number “5125” near the “t” in Guyot. These gaps are
important because Harvey Broome writes of “Drinkwater Gap” which is a gap in
Guyot Spur near Drinkwater Pool. These two gaps in the spur are the two main
candidates for Drinkwater Gap.
Making
Sense of Terminology
A
complicating factor in making sense of Broome’s references to DWP and its
location in relation to these three cascades is the unusual, changing
terminology that Broome uses. He often writes of “Ramsey Falls” and rarely if
ever uses the name Ramsey Cascades. Other times he makes reference to
“cascades” and “second cascade” and “upper cascades,” and there’s even a
reference to “Buck Fork Cascades.” Let’s make sense of this terminology….
In
the Earthman book, we find a chapter
entitled “Mt. Guyot via Buck Fork Creek.” On the first page (p.73) of this 1928
hike description, there is a note by Anne Broome telling us several interesting
pieces of information. First, what we today call Ramsey Prong was in 1928
called Buck Fork. This 1928 hike begins by hiking up the route of today’s road
from Greenbrier Cove to the Ramsey Cascades trailhead, following the Middle
Prong of the Little Pigeon (in 1928 called East Fork). Broome says, “Stay on
the left side of the stream, now the Buck Fork, for approximately four miles
more, until the trail crosses it to the right, just at the foot of Buck Fork
Cascade. A few sentences later, Broome mentions the Wild Cherry Orchard (a
section of today’s Ramsey Cascades trail), then he writes, “The Buck Fork
Cascade is easily the climax of the trip.... Another half mile scramble [past
Buck Fork Cascade]… brings one to the striking Drinkwater Pool.” In a footnote
to this hike description, Anne Broome informs us that this hike up Buck Fork in
1928 is essentially today’s Ramsey Cascades trail. Broome’s Buck Fork of 1928
is today’s Ramsey Prong. Sometime in the 1930s, presumably as part of the many
nomenclature changes that accompanied the creation of the national park, the
old Buck Fork was renamed Ramsey Prong and the river just south of Ramsey Prong
was given the name Buck Fork, as today’s maps show.
All
this could easily lead us to assume that Buck Fork Cascade in the 1928 hike
description is today’s Ramsey Cascades and that DWP is about a half mile beyond
that. Probably not. Anne’s footnote also mentions that in 1928 the Buck Fork
trail bypassed today’s Ramsey Cascades. (This is confirmed by Carlos Campbell
in Memories on p.117 in which he says
that in the early days (the 1920s), the footpath up this creek passed a few
hundred yards to the north of today’s Ramsey Cascades. In fact, at that time
the SMHC wasn’t even aware that Ramsey Cascades existed.) This means that the
Buck Fork Cascade that Broome mentions as the highlight of the trip is not Ramsey
Cascades but is instead either our Second Cascade or the Third Cascade. Having
visited both the Second and Third Cascades several times, I can attest that the
Second is the more dramatic of the two. I believe that our Second Cascade is
the Buck Fork Cascade in Broome’s 1928 hike. If so, Drinkwater Pool is about a
half mile beyond the Second Cascade. (Broome’s estimates of distances are not
always highly accurate. His “half mile” might be anywhere from a quarter mile
to a full mile. Nevertheless, we can take his estimate as a reasonable ballpark
figure which can be used for general locations but should not be adhered to as
a precise measurement.)
This
hypothesis that Buck Fork Cascade is our Second Cascade is supported by another
chapter in Earthman entitled “Guyot
at Last!” This describes the hike that Broome took in 1926 with a teenager
named Dys. It was on this trip that Broome encountered and named Drinkwater
Pool. He describes a beautiful cascade that they encountered:
Notice
the reference to a vertical fall of 100 feet in 100 yards. This does not
describe Ramsey Cascades nor does it describe our Third Cascade, but it does
describe the Second Cascade quite well. (Our estimate is about 130 vertical
feet in about 200 feet horizontal.)
Broome
continues,
He
describes the ups and downs of the trail which ultimately leads to the pool (6’
deep) and plunge falls (6’ high) they named Drinkwater. From his hike
description (p. 74 in Earthman) for
the SMHC he estimated that Drinkwater was half a mile beyond the 100’ high
cascade that he eventually (in the 1928 hike description) calls Buck Fork
Cascade. We also see that DWP is that last or highest plunge pool in this
section because Broome says that above and beyond it, the creek ran fairly
straight and level for about 200 yards. This indicates that DWP is at the top
of either the Second or Third Cascade. Given the fact that the Second Cascade
is the more dramatic, it is probably the beautiful cascade he and Dys admired
on this hike. About a half mile beyond this Second Cascade would put DWP near
the top of the Third.
Before
we move to Broome’s references to DWP in his other book, Out Under the Sky of the Great Smokies, we should note one more detail.
Earthman (p.81) includes a 1941
description of a hike entitled “Buck Fork and Ramsey Prong.” This 1941
description uses today’s nomenclature for the rivers. Broome mentions the
Middle Prong instead of East Fork. He speaks of Buck Fork, but it is clearly
the Buck Fork shown on today’s maps. He also writes of Ramsey Prong, which
didn’t even exist in his 1928 hike description.
For
this hike, they would go up today’s Buck Fork, then cross over Guyot Spur at
Drinkwater Gap (“its lowest and narrowest point”) and reach DWP on Ramsey
Prong. He also speaks of going downstream from DWP to “the Cascades and Falls.”
The Falls is certainly today’s Ramsey Cascades (which in the 1920s they were
unaware of but by the 1940s they were aware of) and the Cascades is what Broome
had at one time called Buck Fork Cascades but we are calling the Second
Cascade. Finally, the “graded foot trail” that they would finish on would be
today’s Ramsey Cascades trail which ends at the “Falls” (Ramsey Cascades) in
this description.
My
conclusion from all of this is that on our map we have stars at today’s Ramsey
Cascades, the Second Cascade, and the Third Cascade. Our Ramsey Cascades
corresponds to Broome’s Ramsey “Falls”; our Second Cascade corresponds to Broome’s
“Cascades” (aka Buck Fork Cascade), and our Third Cascade is a series of pools
and terraces, the topmost pool being Drinkwater Pool. [In the Dutch Roth photos
in UT’s archives, there are several pictures labeled “Ramsey Falls” that are
clearly today’s Ramsey Cascades. There are several pictures labeled as Ramsey
Cascades that are clearly NOT today’s Ramsey Cascades. They are probably our
Second Cascade, although I haven’t yet tried to identify their exact
locations.]
Now,
Out Under the Sky....
In
Broome’s July, 1955 entry he speaks of Ramsey Prong, Ramsey Falls, hiking 1.5
miles on a road to the turn-around, and the trail ending at the Falls. All this
conforms to today’s Ramsey Cascades trail except his use of the name “Ramsey
Falls” instead of “Ramsey Cascades.” After they hiked past Ramsey Falls, he
writes of camping at the “second cascade” In his July, 1957 entry two years
later he specifically speaks of their campsite at the foot of the second
cascade. So, the Second Cascade on our map is almost certainly Broome’s “second
cascade” which in the 1920s was called Buck Fork Cascade, in the days when
Ramsey Prong was called Buck Fork.
Location
of Drinkwater Pool
Continuing
with Broome’s 1955 entry, the next morning they left their campsite at the base
of the second cascade and moved up the valley on the old, obscure trail and
reconnected with the creek several hundred yards below Drinkwater Pool. Having
explored this section of the creek, I can assure you that the entire length of
the second cascade is 100 yards at the most, and is probably more like 200’. To
hike upstream and emerge from the woods to the creek several hundred yards
below DWP means that DWP cannot be part of the second cascade. It must be
significantly beyond the top of the second cascade. This fits Broome’s 1955
entry (p. 166) in which he says they were caught by a thunderstorm about 300
yards below DWP while they were still about a half mile above their campsite at
the base of the second cascade.
Clearly,
then, DWP is significantly beyond the Second Cascade. In fact, it is almost
certainly a part of the Third Cascade; undoubtedly the top of the Third
Cascade. In Broome’s July, 1957 entry he speaks of DWP being the “culmination
of a succession of limpid pools.” Soon after, he describes hiking down from DWP
as moving “headlong back down the great terraces of the stream.” This sounds
like a series of plunge pools and terraces – which is exactly what the Third
Cascade on our map is – not quite a single cascade, but a succession of
pools/terraces and five to ten foot waterfalls creating those pools. Combining
this description with Broome’s statement (in Earthman, Guyot at Last, p.21) that the creek above and beyond DWP
is straight and flat for 200 yards requires that DWP be located at the top
of the Third Cascade – that is, it must be the last (uppermost) obvious pool of
the Third Cascade, after which the creek becomes flatter and tamer. (In
Broome’s April, 1950 entry in Out Under
he mentions a moment at which he was “half-way to the upper cascades and
Drinkwater Pool.” While I may be making too much of the details of his words,
it may be significant that he says “upper cascades” rather than “second
cascade.” Those “upper cascades” could very well be our Third Cascade, which
is, as we’ve said, not a single cascade but actually a series of plunges,
pools, and terraces.)
Happily,
this location at the top of our Third Cascade fits well with the topography of
Drinkwater Gap. Recall that our map shows two candidates for the title of
Drinkwater Gap. While the topo map might give one the impression that the gap
in Guyot Spur adjacent to the Second Cascade is a more obvious, significant gap
than the gap adjacent to the Third Cascade, this is not the case. A close
examination of the map and the location of the Second and Third Cascades shows
that Ramsey Prong is much closer to the crest of Guyot Spur at the Third
Cascade than at the Second Cascade. To hike from the Second Cascade to its
adjacent gap involves a climb of about 300’, whereas a climb from the Third
Cascade to its adjacent gap involves a climb of only about 100’. The climb from
creek to the crest of Guyot Spur is surprisingly quick and easy from the Third
Cascade; from the Second Cascade it is a predictably tough push through the
rhododendron to the crest. This is important because in Broome’s April, 1950
entry in Out Under he says: “We
reached the low point in the divide between Ramsey and the Buck Fork after five
or ten minutes of bucking the rhododendron. The altimeter showed an ascent of
150 feet from the pool, although it seemed much less than that.” The topography
virtually requires that Drinkwater Gap is the gap adjacent to the Third
Cascade, not the Second. Again, having explored this section, the hike up from
the Third Cascade to the gap in the crest really does take no longer than 10
minutes. It is shockingly quick and easy. The climb up from the Second Cascade
to its gap is two to three times longer as measured in both time and distance.
Therefore,
Drinkwater Pool is at the top of the Third Cascade. Its approximate GPS
coordinates are: 83 17.446W; 35 42.309N. Drinkwater Gap is the spot on the topo
map where “5125” is printed. In the picture below, the “falls” of DWP are about
6 feet high (and the depth of the pool is about 6 feet), which conforms to Broome’s
description.
Drinkwater Pool: Top of the Third Cascade
|
There
are a couple of details that don’t fit well into this interpretation, but only
a couple, and they are rather minor; furthermore, I think I can explain them
(at least, to my own satisfaction).
The
main problem is that Broome says in his July, 1955 entry (p.162): “I spotted
Drinkwater from far downstream by the casket-shaped rock on its shelving rim.”
Early in our explorations, as Greg Harrell and I became hone in on the location
of DWP, we were unable to find a casket-shaped rock at the top pool of the
Third Cascade. I should add, however, that there are several rocks that one can
lie on (see the picture of Greg Harrell and Charlie Roth below; Charlie is
lying on the most likely candidate).
After
more thought on the casket-shaped rock, here’s what we’ve concluded. We were
thinking about this casket-shaped rock the wrong way. Broome told us about a
casket-shaped rock, so we hike up the river looking for the rock that looks
most like a casket. When we find it, we think we’ve found DW Pool. But that
approach is backward. We should find a
pool that we think is Drinkwater and then look to see how we would describe the
rocks that we see there – could any of them reasonably be described as
“casket-shaped” rather than “car-shaped” or “house-shaped” or “bowling
ball-sized” or “refrigerator-sized” or whatever. In other words, there are
thousands of rocks that could be called “casket-shaped” – is one of those
thousands at Drinkwater Pool? I’d say, yes, the rock Charlie is lying on in the
picture below could reasonably be called “casket-shaped.” The fact that there
may be other rocks in the river that look a bit more like a casket is irrelevant
and misses the point.
Greg Harrell (standing), Charlie Roth (lying on casket rock) Drinkwater Pool: Top poof of Third Cascade |
There
are some “Drinkwater Pool” pictures on the internet of a casket-shaped rock
that sits at the base of the Third Cascade, but there is simply no possible
way, based on a careful reading of Earthman
and Out Under, that DWP is at the base
of this, or any other, cascade. Only at the top of a cascade can the
creekbed above run “straight and almost level for nearly 200 yards” (Earthman, p.21). People who claim this
is DWP because of this casket-shaped rock are mis-thinking exactly as I
described in the previous paragraph. They look for the “best” casket rock and
then name that pool Drinkwater – which is exactly backward from the way rocks
and other features are described by hikers.
A nice casket, but the wrong place -- at the base of the Third Cascade |
The
other nagging detail in this mystery is Broome’s description of the length and
width of DWP. Broome mentions that DW Pool was about 25 feet long and 12 or 14 feet wide. Our top pool doesn’t fit those
dimensions, unless…
I
would estimate that the pool is 25 feet across
from one bank to the other, and 12 or 14 feet long from the falls to the rock shelf. In other words, Broome and I might be using
exactly opposite terminology, which makes sense if we were standing in
different places. What I mean is this… every time I’ve approached DWP, it’s
been in the river, sloshing our way upstream to the top of the Third Cascade.
Looking from downstream, the dimension from one bank to the other would be
“across” or “width,” not “length.” On the other hand, if Broome were standing
on the river bank at the side of the pool, that dimension from bank to bank would
be described by him as “length” rather than “width.” In other words, Broome and
I were standing in different spots as we looked and described the pool.
Do
we have any pictures of DW Pool from the past that are labeled as Drinkwater
Pool?
For
several years of my obsession, I couldn’t find any. There is a fuzzy, black and white copy of a
single, small plunge falls accompanying a description of a 1974 SMHC hike to
Drinkwater Pool. It is attributed to Charlie Klabunde, a long-time member of
the SMHC. In 2012 I asked Charlie if he remembers anything about the picture or
the location of DWP. He said he can’t remember the location of the pool, and he
does not remember how that picture came to be on the page with the DWP hike. He
doesn’t know if that picture really is DWP.
This
(below) is an old Dutch Roth picture of the top pool of the Third Cascade – the
pool I believe to be Drinkwater Pool. It’s not labeled as Drinkwater Pool. Its
label says: “Just above the cascades on
Ramsey Prong.” It’s probably safe to say that there is some significance to
this spot. After all, there are hundreds of fine plunge pools on Ramsey Prong.
So, why choose this one? Unfortunately,
one picture and a vague title don’t tell us what that significance is. And I
must admit… I really, really wish Dutch had labeled this “Drinkwater Pool.”
Finally
and thankfully, in 2013 Brian Reed (a member of SMHC who is presently living in
exile in Florida) informed me that he had found some online pictures by Herbert
Webster of Drinkwater Pool. Apparently, Webster knew Harvey Broome and had
hiked with him to Drinkwater and had taken pictures of it. These pictures have
been posted on the UT-Knoxville library website by Ken Wise. Here’s an excerpt from the UTK library page:
Within
a few years, he was visiting the mountains regularly, venturing into the
backcountry with many of those whose names are synonymous with early twentieth
century exploration of the Smokies—Dutch Roth, Jim Thompson, Carlos Campbell,
Guy Frizzell, Wiley Oakley, and Harvey Broome—and capturing on film the
vanishing way of life of the mountaineer, the Smoky Mountain backcountry, and
his own adventures in the wilderness. The images in the Herbert M. Webster
Photograph Collection rank with those of Dutch Roth and the Thompson Brothers
as an enduring historical record of the Great Smoky Mountains.
The
Herbert M. Webster Photograph Collection is maintained as part of the U.T.
Libraries’ Great Smoky Mountains Regional Project.
Visit http://digital.lib.utk.edu/collections/webstercollection/ and search for Drinkwater. These pictures match perfectly our thesis that DWP
is at the top of the third cascade. This
is the photographic evidence from the past that had been eluding us for the
first few years of our search.
Finally,
I don’t think the top pool of the Third Cascade is fabulously beautiful. Or,
more accurately, it is fabulously beautiful, but no more nor less than a
thousand other pools in the Smokies. I honestly don’t know why Harvey Broome
was so mesmerized by it. Based on my own hiking experiences, it probably had to
do with the fact that they were in a fabulous wilderness and the moment Harvey
and Dys stepped out of the woods and back into the creek, this pretty spot
mixed with the magic of the moment simply spoke to them in a special way.
Anyone who has spent much time hiking off-trail has had that same experience…
many times. [Greg Harrell and I were both stunned by the beauty and drama of
Mill Creek Cascade on our first, truly off-trail hike. We sloshed down from
Russell Field over many, small falls and plunges. Around 3,000’ we found
ourselves at the top of a long cascade, seeing only air and treetops in front
of us. It was magical. We are reluctant to go back because we’re afraid we
might be disappointed with it, simply because magical moments are nearly impossible
to re-create.]
1 comment:
I am glad I found this article as I have searched numerous times for DWP pool. Fighting the rhododendron was most of the battle finding amazing pools above RC. I am not sure that I ever found the exact DWP but nevertheless found sights not all visitors to the park have seen. I wish I would have camped a couple days to soak it all in.
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