When is the last time your kids went wading in a real river? The water in our Oconaluftee River originates from springs bubbling up and filtering through the ferns and moss in the neighboring Great Smoky Mountains National Park.
As the Oconaluftee passes through Cherokee, it is split by an amazing, grassy island – the Oconaluftee Islands Park – sheltered by canopies of oak and sycamore. The water ranges from ankle deep for toddlers to chest deep on Mom and Dad, and flows over soft sand and flat, time-smoothed river rocks shed from the world's oldest mountains. These rocks are the perfect size and weight for kids to build dams, or encircle Dad as he chills out in the shallows. This island is both physical and metaphorical. On this cozy island, the world at large just ... disappears. Wading. Splashing. Tubing. Salamander-hunting. Cloud-watching.
And this is a place where a kid can be a kid ... wading through clear, fresh water with nothing more than their imaginations, or perhaps with their parents, hand in hand. It's just what kids need today: unstructured, mind-freeing outdoor time to balance all the time they spend in class, in structured activities, or sitting in front of TVs, computers and video games.
Here, the frustrations and anxieties that feed sibling rivalry wash down the stream and are replaced with self-confidence and big smiles. To be complete, we Cherokee believe, one must allow time for the mind to get lost in the stream and then return. Especially children, who need such opportunities to learn who they are and who they can be. This is "duyuktv" or “the right way," the Cherokee Way.
Come to Oconaluftee Islands Park and enjoy a very happy irony. Here, the very moments too precious to measure in dollars, are free.
Oconaluftee Islands Park is a must for our family every summer. After a 3-hour drive and helping Daddy to set up our tent, all my daughter wants to do is take a nice refreshing dip in an icy stream- and the Oconaluftee Islands Park is happy to oblige! Some of the best pictures I've ever taken are of my daughter's smiling, laughing face as she watches ducks climb the banks of the river or tosses huge, flat stones into the water and makes the biggest splashes possible. A great place for a picnic, to cool off and just to hang out- Oconaluftee Islands Park is the place that makes great summer family memories.
On a trip with another family and after spending money on the tours and shopping, we discover this and learned that our day was much more enjoyable here! The water is clear and there are areas suitable for a 1 year old to play in and not be 1/2 mile away from the big kids! We purchased a small inflable boat and would float 1 adult aand 1 kid from one end of the island to the other and walk back to start all over again. It was the the closest I could get to floating the river with 5 kids under 5 and not have a heart attack!