Due to its location high in the crest of the Great Smoky Mountains, The Forney Ridge Trail is one of very few in the national park that actually descends from its trailhead.
The trailhead is located just at the front end of the Clingmans Dome parking area, about from U.S. Highway 441.
Landmarks/overlooks
Clingmans Dome
Forney Ridge
Andrews Bald
Trail synopsis
Trailhead to Andrews Bald
The Forney Ridge Trail begins easily enough at the base of the paved trail to the Clingmans Dome observation tower. The first of the trail consists of a series of leveled, rocky platforms, put together by the national park service apparently due to the previously hazardous, steep, rocky slope. At the end of these "stairs" the trail comes to a fork with a side trail that leads on to the Appalachian Trail about a half mile up, and the Forney Ridge Trail continuing on to the left, down along the ridge for which it is named. Although the trail is relatively easy, it is advisable to use caution. The early portion can be slippery in icy winters and may contain loose rocks. In the 1920s the trees here were swept by a wildfire which has given the area an awkward mix of young shrubbery and woods, but this portion is rather short and within a mile the trail passes into the spruce-fir zone, which has also had problems more recently with air pollution and the balsam wooly adelgid. At the trail comes to a split with the Forney Creek Trail, which, to the right, leads down to Fontana Lake. From here the trail actually rises up for about a quarter mile, the only such notable jaunt along its path, before leveling out and gently sloping back down to Andrews Bald at. Andrews Bald is a grassy bald, and, at, it is the highest bald in the national park. In mid-June, the bald provides a wonderful display of Catawba rhododendron and flame azalea, the best show for the least effort, although it can’t quite match that of the more isolated Gregory Bald. Due to the natural encroachment of the forest onto the once grazed open balds in the park, Andrews Bald has been designated as an experimental research zone, whereby the national park service will preserve the area as a grassy bald.
Andrews Bald to Springhouse Branch Trail
Down past Andrews Bald, the Forney Ridge Trail continues its descent down Forney Ridge, eventually coming down to Board Camp Gap and its junction with the Springhouse Branch Trail at. This trail can be taken in conjunction with the Noland and then later Forney Creek Trails back up to the Forney Ridge Parking Area for a long backpacking loop, or, by turning left at the Forney Creek Trail, down to Fontana Lake in North Carolina.
Maps and Directions
Topographic Maps
The Forney Ridge Trail is shown on the following 1:24,000-scale topographic maps published by the National Park Service: