Notice: All Conserving Carolina trails are closed at this time in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene. The trails are unsafe due to impassable roads, unstable slopes, innumerable trees down, and the danger of further treefall. We will update this page when we are able to open the trails. Thank you for understanding. 

Hiking Bearwallow Mountain

Bearwallow Mountain offers exceptional scenery in reward for a short hike! At 4,232 feet above sea level, with a grassy meadow at its summit, the mountain features a nearly 360° view that includes Mt. Mitchell and Mt. Pisgah. Its breathtaking vistas also includes a birds-eye view of Hickory Nut Gorge, downtown Hendersonville, and the high country of South Carolina. A historic fire lookout tower occupies the summit, as do grazing cattle who call the mountaintop home. 

The trail to the summit is approximately one mile each way. You can also follow a gravel road back to the parking area for a loop hike. Bearwallow is a great place to go for a short day hike or you can combine it with other trails in the Upper Hickory Nut Gorge, such as the Trombatore Trail or newly extended Wildcat Rock Trail. 

Length: 2 miles round trip

Difficulty: Easy

Great For: Day Hikes, Kids, Views, Sunsets, Picnics, Kites and Frisbees, Photography, Wildflowers, Stargazing

  • Cover -Bearwallow Trail by Clint Calhoun (1)
  • Bearwallow Sunset
  • Trillium on Bearwallow Mountain
  • BearwallowSnowJumping
  • Bearwallow
  • Lyda Family on Bearwallow Mountain

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How to Get to Bearwallow Mountain Trailhead

The trailhead is located on Bearwallow Mountain Road and shares a trailhead with the Trombatore Trail. Here’s a Google map of the location:

GPS Location: N35.4607, W-82.3681

Parking and Finding the Trailhead

The trailhead is at Bearwallow Gap, located at the crest of Bearwallow Mountain Road where the road surface turns from gravel to pavement. Park on the graveled area on the shoulder of the road, next to the steep hillside.

Please respect the adjacent property owner by not blocking the gate, road, or driveway or turning using the driveway to turn around. Space is available for only a few cars at this trailhead, so multiple hikers should consider carpooling. Conserving Carolina is planning improvements at this trailhead in the future.

The trail begins behind a rust-colored metal gate. Walk around it on its right side by squeezing between the gate and a fence. The beginning of the trail is immediately on the right, marked by a kiosk, blazes, and a set of log stairs.

Bearwallow Mountain Trail Map

Bearwallow Mountain Trail Map

See map as PDF

Upper Hickory Nut Gorge Trail System Map

The Bearwallow Mountain Trail connects to the expanded Wildcat Rock Trail and the Trombatore Trail as part of the Upper Hickory Nut Gorge Trail System. Currently, over 16 miles of trails are open for you to explore, with more on the way.

Upper Hickory Nut Gorge Trail Map

See map as PDF. 

What to Look for on Bearwallow Mountain

  • Panoramic views in almost every direction
  • View of Mt. Mitchell, the highest point in the eastern U.S., to the north
  • Amazing sunsets
  • Starry night skies
  • Grassy ridgetop meadow
  • Historic fire tower
  • Grazing cows (this protected land is a working farm)

Trail Ethics

The Bearwallow Mountain trail is on privately owned land, where the landowners have generously granted access for hiking. This is a working farm and you may see cows grazing on the summit. Please show respect for the landowners, your fellow hikers, and the natural environment.

  • Stay on designated trails/areas.
  • Keep pets on leash and under control.
  • Do not disturb plants, animals, livestock, or other natural or cultural resources.
  • No campfires or camping
  • No hunting, trapping, or firearms
  • Hiking only. No bikes, horses, or motorized vehicles.
  • Park in designated areas only. Vehicles outside of this area will be towed at owner’s expense.
  • No commercial activity (unless permitted by Conserving Carolina)
  • No alcohol or illegal substances.
  • Do not litter. Pack in, pack out. This includes dog poop! Bag your pet’s poop and carry it out with you.
  • Hike at your own risk.

Hiking Bearwallow Mountain

Once inside the gate, locate the trail and the trailhead kiosk to the right of the gravel road. The trail switchbacks several times to begin its climb up the slopes of Bearwallow Mountain. Just beyond the half-mile mark, the path levels out, providing a breather as it curves around Bearwallow’s western ridge. Once on the mountain’s northern slopes, keep climbing to reach the scenic summit meadow at 0.7 mi. Good views to the west and south are available as the woodland trail ends at the meadow. If you continue a short ways to the top of the meadow, you will be rewarded with panoramic views to the north, as well.

Views from Bearwallow Mountain Summit

The 4,232-foot Bearwallow Mountain is the highest peak in the Bearwallow Highlands range in Henderson County and the tallest summit of the Hickory Nut Gorge. It straddles the Eastern Continental Divide, which separates the Atlantic watershed from the Gulf of Mexico watershed. From this vantage point, you can see nearly 360 degrees, thanks to the grassy open meadow. These views include some of the highest peaks in the Appalachian Mountains.

  • To the west, you can see the Great Balsams and their highest peak, Mt. Pisgah, and further to the Great Smoky Mountains.
  • To the south, you can see Hendersonville, Tryon Peak, and into South Carolina.
  • To the east, you can enjoy a birds-eye view of the Hickory Nut Gorge, toward Lake Lure.
  • To the north, you can see the Black Mountains and their highest peak Mt. Mitchell, the highest peak in the eastern U.S. at 6,683 feet.
Bearwallow Mountain at sunset.
Bearwallow Mountain at sunset

Hiking Back

To return to the trailhead, you can either hike back the way you came, or follow a gravel road from the summit near the fire tower, downhill for a loop hike.

If you’re going up for a sunset, full moon hike, or stargazing, remember to bring a light.

Connecting to Other Trails 

You can also extend your hike with a walk on the Trombatore Trail, which starts at the same trailhead as Bearwallow. Or, you can keep walking past the summit of Bearwallow Mountain on the newly extended Wildcat Rock Trail 

Shuttle Hike of Bearwallow and Wildcat Rock Trail 

The newly opened connector trail allows the option of a shuttle hike between the Bearwallow Mountain trailhead and the Wildcat Rock trailhead on Gerton Highway. This hike, which is steep in sections, is six miles total. Bearwallow is the higher-elevation access point, and a shuttle hike beginning at Bearwallow Mountain would be mostly downhill after the first one-mile climb. For a strenuous mostly uphill hike, start from the Wildcat Rock trailhead and climb to Bearwallow. 

Conservation Easements at Work

Bearwallow Mountain Summit could easily be a subdivision of luxurious mountain homes. With views like that, they would sell for millions! But the Lyda family, which owns the mountaintop, didn’t want to see this beautiful land developed. Instead, they chose to protect it forever by granting a conservation easement to Conserving Carolina.

While most conservation easements on privately owned land do not allow public access, the Lydas chose to grant access for hikers so that all of us can enjoy the view. They continue to farm this land, grazing cows on the mountaintop.

As the easement holder, Conserving Carolina is responsible for working with the Lydas and all future landowners to ensure that the terms of the conservation easement are upheldmaking sure that the promise of land conservation for future generations is kept.

The Lyda family owns Bearwallow Mountain, which is a working farm protected by conservation easements.

Conserving Carolina has been working with Lyda family to expand the protected land on Bearwallow since 2009, when we acquired a conservation easement on 81 acres at the summit. In 2013, we protected an additional 85 acres along its high-elevation ridgeline, followed by 5 more acres in 2015. In 2017, we protected over 300 additional acres between Bearwallow and Little Bearwallow Mountain, resulting in a total of 476 acres protected forever!

So, what’s a conservation easement? It’s a voluntary legal agreement between a landowner and a land trust that permanently limits certain uses of the land—such as housing development, commercial logging, and excavation—in order to protect its conservation values, such as water quality, productive farmland, scenic views, wildlife habitat, and more. An easement allows landowners to continue to own and use their land. That’s why you’ll see cattle grazing on top of Bearwallow Mountainbecause this grassy meadow is still part of a working farm.

A Bigger Vision: the Upper Hickory Nut Gorge Loop Trail

In 2011, Conserving Carolina constructed a new sustainable public hiking trail to the summit of Bearwallow Mountain with the help of the Carolina Mountain Club, REI Asheville, and community volunteers. Extreme Terrain’s Clean Trail Initiative has provided funding to help improve the trail.

This trail was the first segment in the Upper Hickory Nut Gorge Trail, a 20-mile hiking loop that will eventually link Bearwallow Mountain to lands Conserving Carolina has protected at Florence Nature Preserve, Little Bearwallow Mountain & Wildcat Rock. It will also connect to lands protected by our partners, the Southern Appalachian Highlands Conservancy at Blue Ridge Pastures and Hickory Nut Gap.

Additional segments of the Upper Hickory Nut Gorge Trail are currently under construction. About 12 miles of the loop is currently completed, including Bearwallow Mountain Trail, Wildcat Rock Trail, Trombatore Trail, and Florence Nature Preserve trails. This loop will be part of the 100-mile Hickory Nut Gorge State Trail

Share Your Experience

We’d love to know about your experience on Bearwallow Mountain! Please share your photos on Facebook, Instagram, or Twitter. Tag us and use the hashtag #conservingcarolina. Here’s how to find us on social:

Keep Exploring

Looking for another sweet hike? Or maybe biking, fishing, paddling, picnicking, or rock climbing…. There are so many opportunities to get outdoors, whatever you love to do in nature.

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