Free Range Horses Cades Cove Art
by Reid Callaway
Title
Free Range Horses Cades Cove Art
Artist
Reid Callaway
Medium
Photograph - Photography
Description
Free Range Horses....by Reid Callaway
Cades Cove Horses Art
Great Smoky Mountain Art
A horse rolling over and over on its back is not a sight you expect to see every day but as I was photographing these Cades Cove horses that is exactly what several horses began doing. The fresh rain shower was just what these horses needed as they rolled for joy in the pasture grasses of Cades Cove....
Cades Cove is an isolated valley located in the Tennessee section of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, USA. The valley was home to numerous settlers before the formation of the national park. Today Cades Cove, the single most popular destination for visitors to the park, attracts more than two million visitors a year because of its well preserved homesteads, scenic mountain views, and abundant display of wildlife. The Cades Cove Historic District is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
The Great Smoky Mountains are a mountain range rising along the Tennessee�North Carolina border in the southeastern United States. They are a subrange of the Appalachian Mountains, and form part of the Blue Ridge Physiographic Province. The range is sometimes called the Smoky Mountains and the name is commonly shortened to the Smokies. The Great Smokies are best known as the home of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, which protects most of the range. The park was established in 1934, and, with over 9 million visits per year, it is the most-visited national park in the United States.
The name "Smoky" comes from the natural fog that often hangs over the range and presents as large smoke plumes from a distance. This fog is caused by the vegetation exhaling volatile organic compounds, chemicals that have a high vapor pressure and easily form vapors at normal temperature and pressure.
Along with the Biosphere reserve, the Great Smokies have been designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The U.S. National Park Service preserves and maintains 78 structures within the national park that were once part of the numerous small Appalachian communities scattered throughout the range's river valleys and coves. The park contains five historic districts and nine individual listings on the National Register of Historic Places.
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Uploaded
May 30th, 2017
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