If you want a mountain town that’s scenic, relaxed, and close to the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, this Bryson City North Carolina travel guide covers the top things to do, best places to eat, and where to stay. For an itinerary-style breakdown, see my Weekend in Bryson City & Dillsboro guide.
Bryson City is quiet, walkable, and surrounded by mountain views. It’s minutes from waterfalls, scenic drives, and one of the most popular train rides in the Smokies. Downtown is small but full of cafés, bakeries, and locally owned shops.

A quick, scenic drive that ends at a graffiti-covered tunnel. Walk through it (bring a flashlight), take photos, and enjoy mountain views. An easy add-on stop.
One of the most popular outdoor areas near town with waterfalls, picnic areas, and summer tubing. The loop to Juney Whank Falls, Tom Branch Falls, and Indian Creek Falls is short, beautiful, and great for most visitors.
The GSMR departs from downtown with multiple scenic routes. For details, see my Great Smoky Mountains Railroad First Class Review.
Quick overview of the seating options:
• Open Air Gondola – Best for wide-open, unobstructed mountain and river views.
• Crown Class – Panoramic windows, climate control, and unlimited non-alcoholic drinks.
• First Class – The most spacious and comfortable option with big windows and table seating.
I chose First Class, and the comfort and views—especially if you sit on the North/street side on the Tuckasegee River Excursion—made the upgrade worth it. The 1.5-hour stop in Dillsboro is just the right amount of time to explore shops, grab a snack, or stretch your legs. Your ticket also includes free admission to the Smoky Mountains Train Museum.

A bakery-general-store hybrid with pastries made in-house (they laminate their own dough). Must-orders: morning bun, cinnamon roll, apple galette, and the Brunchable breakfast sandwich.
See my Bryson City Bakery Review for a full breakdown.
Great seasonal lattes (I loved the butterscotch latte). They also recommended the white chocolate–brown sugar latte.
Fresh cupcakes, donuts, cookies, and apple fritters. Everything sells out quickly — go early.
Classic diner food with long weekend waits. Get the Dixie Benedict and a side of pancakes.

A rustic boutique with clothing, jewelry, home décor, and gifts. Cozy mountain-town vibes and always-changing inventory.
A stylish women’s boutique with curated clothing and accessories. Trendy but approachable pieces — great for vacation outfits.
A shop filled with local pottery, regional art, handcrafted wooden pieces, soaps, and candles. Perfect for unique Smoky Mountains gifts.
A general-store-style shop with local food items, jams, snacks, branded Smoky Mountains merch, and small-batch pantry finds.
A fun stop for vintage finds, old books, rustic décor, and antiques with real character. One of the best spots if you love secondhand treasure hunting.
Bryson City is a fly-fishing hub, and several local outfitters downtown carry gear, apparel, and Smoky Mountains-themed gifts — even if you’re not fishing, they’re fun to browse.
If you love shopping, you’ll also want to check out my guide to Shopping in Dillsboro — a charming nearby village loaded with artisan shops.
One of the best overlooks on the Blue Ridge Parkway. A short, steep summit trail leads to panoramic views — beautiful at sunrise or sunset.
One of the tallest waterfalls in the region. A staircase-style trail leads to a massive waterfall payoff. Easy detour near Cherokee.

Luxury glamping with mountain views and private decks. Learn more in my Sky Ridge Yurts Review.
A renovated boutique hotel in downtown Bryson City, walkable to shops, cafés, and the train depot.
• Nantahala Village – Lodge rooms + cabins near rafting
• Lakeview at Fontana – Adults-only, peaceful, spa-like
• Hemlock Inn – Family-run lodge with sweeping sunrise views
Bryson City is the perfect home base for exploring the Smokies — easy hikes, scenic drives, great bakeries, cozy shops, and one of the region’s best train experiences. For more ideas, check out my Best Scenic Day Trips Near Bryson City & Sylva guide.


10 stops. One very full day. Zero regrets. Amsterdam has one of the best food scenes I’ve experienced anywhere in Europe, but the honest caveat is that some of the viral spots come with lines that will genuinely test your character. I skipped a few. I regret nothing.
Here’s what actually made the cut on my self-guided Amsterdam food tour:
Fresh stroopwafels at Hans Egstorf: made right in front of you, warm caramel, no line. This one won.
Lourens cookie croissant: flaky outside, gooey chocolate inside. Did not share.
Café Winkel 43 apple pie: one of the rare viral places that fully lives up to the hype.
Davie’s Amsterdam for the Lelie sandwich: pastrami, pickles, marbled bread. Deceptively simple. Absolutely excellent.
De Kaaskamer to end the day: 400+ cheeses, grilled cheese with what they call ketchup (it’s not ketchup, and it’s better), and bunker cheese aged in underground military bunkers.
The full route covers 10 stops through Jordaan, the 9 Streets, the canal district, and the flower market area with a Google Map included so you can just follow along.
Full guide with every stop, tips for beating the lines, and what I’d skip vs. do again | link in bio.
#amsterdam #visitamsterdam #netherlands #travel #visitnetherlands #traveleurope
There’s a version of Gatlinburg that’s all fudge shops and tourist crowds, and then there’s the version that actually makes you want to come back.
Here’s everything worth doing downtown, in the order I’d do it: 🏔️
✨ Start at @gatlinburgskypark before the crowds hit
✨ Walk the strip mid-morning when it’s still manageable
✨ @googooclusters stop (see my post from Tuesday: don’t skip it)
✨ Dinner at one of the local spots off the main drag
✨ Wander back out at night when the lights are on and it gets actually pretty
This isn’t your overscheduled Smoky Mountain itinerary. It’s more of a “here’s what I’d actually do if I had one solid day” kind of list.
Full downtown Gatlinburg guide linked in bio. 🔗
If someone told me I’d spend five hours at SkyPark, I would not have believed them. And yet. 😅
Gatlinburg SkyPark sits above the strip and it’s one of those places that looks like a quick stop on paper and turns into most of your afternoon. The SkyBridge alone is worth it — longest pedestrian suspension bridge in North America, and yes, you will look down.
✨ SkyBridge (longest pedestrian suspension bridge in North America)
✨ SkyLift ride up with views of the Smokies
✨ Walking trails with mountain views in every direction
✨ Way less crowded than downtown
Fair warning: if heights genuinely freak you out, the bridge might not be your thing. The rest of the park is still 100% worth it. Full guide with tickets, tips, and what to skip linked in bio. 🔗
I walked into Goo Goo Cluster in downtown Gatlinburg thinking I’d spend five minutes and leave with a small piece of candy. I was wrong on both counts. 😅
You build your own chocolate cluster at a kiosk: caramel, sea salt, pretzels, cocoa pebbles, you name it, and then watch them make it right in front of you. The whole thing takes about 15 minutes and costs $15.
The caveat? This is not a snack. This is a full-size brick of chocolate that I was still eating two days later.
If you’re already walking the Gatlinburg strip, this is an easy yes. Especially if you have absolutely no self-control around caramel. (Asking for a friend.) Full experience breakdown linked in bio. 🔗
Your Knoxville Airport survival guide, from someone who’s flown through TYS 100+ times is now up on my blog🛫
Parking, TSA wait times, where to grab food before your flight, rental cars, all of it, from someone who actually knows this airport. No guessing, no googling at the last minute.
TYS is small, easy to navigate, and honestly one of the less stressful airports I’ve been through. You just need to know a few things going in.
Full guide linked in bio. 🔗
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