Hike to the Cumberland Gap and the Tri-State summit

View from the summit in the Cumberland Gap.
View from the summit. 

This walk covered over seven miles roundtrip. It started at our campsite and we reached the Historic Cumberland Gap Pass and the Tri-State Peak where you are a step away from Virginia, Tennessee, and Kentucky - or even can put a foot in one state and the other on another one. 

Trail marker with distances.
Trailhead by the campground. 

The trail was closed by a broken bridge and we had to make a detour through the small town of Cumberland Gap - photos of this place in the next post. 

We climbed back up to the trail through the Iron Furnace trailhead. 

The trail through the humid forest.
Beautiful forest in this trail. 

On the route, we passed a secondary trail that goes to the site of Fort Foote, an old fort from the Civil War - we didn't go. 

Markers at the point where the boundaries of Virginia, Tennessee, and Kentucky intersect.
The point of intersection of three states. 

The Cumberland Gap was a crossing point of the Appalachian Mountains used by Indians and white settlers during the 1700s. It opened the Ohio Valley to a wave of migrants. 

The gap is deeply associated to the explorer Dr. Thomas Walker and the legendary frontiersman Daniel Boone. 

(Posted from the phone.)

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