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Visit Pigeon Forge, TN Meet John Muir, Teddy Roosevelt at
Pigeon Forge’s Wilderness Wildlife Week
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Historical reenactments are part
of 400 programs during eight-day special event
Visit Pigeon Forge, TN
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Pigeon Forge, TN – January 2015 / Newsmaker Alert / Conservationist John Muir and President Teddy Roosevelt – or at least solid representations of those notable figures – are part of the 25th presentation of Wilderness Wildlife Week, Pigeon Forge’s annual salute to Great Smoky Mountains National Park and numerous outdoor recreation topics. Wilderness Wildlife Week is Jan. 24-31, 2015.

Muir and Roosevelt in the forms of actors Lee Stetson and Alan Sutterfield will present “The Tramp and the Roughrider: An Evening at Glacier Point” on Jan. 24 (Saturday) and “The Tramp and the Roughrider: The Last Night Camping at Bridalveil Meadow” on Jan. 25 (Sunday). Stetson was Muir in the critically acclaimed Ken Burns series “National Parks – America’s Best Idea.”

Their presentations reenact a history-making 1903 camping trip in California’s Yosemite wilderness when the two discussed the fate of our most wild places and swapped stories about their own adventures.

“Next year marks the centennial of the National Park Service, so this program has special significance,” said Butch Helton, manager of special events for the Pigeon Forge Department of Tourism, which presents Wilderness Wildlife Week.

“The Tramp and the Roughrider” presentations are part of 400 Wilderness Wildlife Week programs spread over eight days that include Stetson as Muir in two solo appearances on Jan. 26 (Monday).
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Meet John Muir, Teddy Roosevelt at Pigeon Forge's Wilderness Wildlife Week
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The week also offers 66 hikes and excursions in Great Smoky Mountains National Park and the surrounding region.

Last year’s Wilderness Wildlife Week had attendees from 41 states. Hawaii wasn’t represented, but Alaska was, event organizers noted. Total program attendance was 27,800, and almost 550 hikers logged 2,588 miles.

Each year offers photography workshops, wildlife lectures, mountain music mini-concerts, crafts classes and special sessions for children.

More than 200 experts – nature photographers, biologists, raptor rehabilitators, social historians, musicians and just plain folks who grew up in the Smokies||donate their time to lead the programs.

Returning for the second year is the Southern Trout Fly Fishing Fair, a day of programs about mountain trout, fly-fishing and fly-tying put on by Southern Trout, an online magazine. The Southern Trout Fly Fishing Fair is Jan. 31.

The Pigeon Forge Department of Tourism organizes the week, and admission is free. Most of the events are indoors at the LeConte Center at Pigeon Forge, a city-owned special events facility.

Wilderness Wildlife Week, named 10 times as a Southeast Tourism Society Top 20 Event, is a part of Pigeon Forge Winterfest, which started in November and goes through February.

Pigeon Forge completes Winterfest with Saddle Up, a celebration of cowboy poetry, western music and chuck wagon cooking, Feb. 18-22.

Information about all aspects of visiting Pigeon Forge is at www.MyPigeonForge.com or by calling 800-251-9100.
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Media Contact:
Tom Adkinson, APR
for Pigeon Forge Department of Tourism
615-341-8796

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Placement Dates: 01/15/15 – 03/15/15
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