Mammoth Cave National Park Things to Do

Woodland Cottages

Woodland Cottages

Woodland Cottages in Mammoth Cave National Park.

placelodgingkentuckycottagecabinovernight
Rotunda - Beneath Your Feet

Rotunda - Beneath Your Feet

The Rotunda is a large circular room. In the center of the room are the leaching vats from the early salt petre operation. To the right are the two Great War Monuments dedicated in 1922 and 1929. It looks as though swirling water created the circular shape ceiling when, it’s where large slabs of limestone have fallen out creating a breakout dome.

placebeneath your feetcavemammoth cavewalking tour
Saltpetre Vats (Booth’s)

Saltpetre Vats (Booth’s)

In addition to the Rotunda, Booth's Amphitheater served as a processing site for saltpetre.

placemammoth cavemammoth cave national parkcavecave tourself-guided tour
Saltpetre Vats (Rotunda)

Saltpetre Vats (Rotunda)

During the War of 1812, Mammoth Cave and some of the surrounding caves were the leading producers of the ingredients needed to make gunpowder for the war effort.

placemammoth cavemammoth cave national parkcavecave tourself-guided tour
Star Chamber - Beneath Your Feet

Star Chamber - Beneath Your Feet

When visiting Mammoth Cave’s Star Chamber, you may feel as though you are above ground gazing at the night sky. Instead, you will be standing 189 feet below this spot. Your eyes will be fooled by light specks on the ceiling where people in the past threw rocks to knock patches of sooted gypsum from the ceiling.

placebeneath your feetcavemammoth cavewalking tour
Sunset Point

Sunset Point

Accessed by a short walk along the 1/2 mile (0.8 km) accessible Heritage Trail, the view from Sunset Point gives hikers vistas of the Green River Valley and surrounding hillsides.

placemammoth cave national parkoverlook
Sunset Terrace

Sunset Terrace

Sunset Terrace Lodging is located adjacent to the Lodge at Mammoth Cave in Mammoth Cave National Park.

placelodgingkentuckyovernight stay
TB Huts

TB Huts

An experimental hospital deep inside Mammoth Cave built in the 1840s.

placemammoth cavemammoth cave national parkcavecave tourself-guided tour
TB Huts - Beneath Your Feet

TB Huts - Beneath Your Feet

In the 1800’s some people believed Mammoth Cave might have healing properties. In 1842 cave owner and physician Dr. John Croghan created a hospital for tuberculosis patients 183 feet beneath your feet. Unfortunately, the cave holds no cure for tuberculosis. In less than a year, the patients left the underground hospital.

placebeneath your feetcavemammoth cavewalking tour
Tailwater Recreation Area

Tailwater Recreation Area

The Tailwater Recreation Area provides an access point to the Nolin River before it flows in to Mammoth Cave National Park.

placeriver accessboatingpicnic area
The Acute Angle

The Acute Angle

The cave makes a sharp turn here as the path leaves the pavement to travel deeper underground.

placemammoth cavemammoth cave national parkcavecave tourself-guided tour
The Bridal Altar - Beneath Your Feet

The Bridal Altar - Beneath Your Feet

In the 1800’s and 1900’s several couples got married 154 feet beneath your feet in Gothic Avenue at the dripstone formation known as “The Bridal Alter”.

placebeneath your feetcavemammoth cavewalking tour
The Church

The Church

Church services once held in the cave led to the name for this cave room.

placemammoth cavemammoth cave national parkcavecave tourself-guided tour
The Giant’s Coffin

The Giant’s Coffin

The Giant's Coffin has been a popular tour stop for over two centuries.

placemammoth cavemammoth cave national parkcavecave tourself-guided tour
The Lodge at Mammoth Cave

The Lodge at Mammoth Cave

The Lodge at Mammoth Cave provides food services, giftshops, ADA accessible rooms, and is the prime check in location for other cabin rentals in Mammoth Cave National Park

placekentuckyhotelada accessiblesouvenirslodging
Turnhole Bend Overlook

Turnhole Bend Overlook

Located on the southern side of the park on Brownsville Road, the 1/2 mile (0.8 km) Turnhole Bend Nature Trail takes hikers past deep sinkholes before leading to the overlook. The overlook consists of two benches and a informational sign, with views of the Green River and the north side of the park.

placemammoth cave national parkoverlook
Water Clock

Water Clock

The slow dripping of water in this vertical cave shaft resembles the sound of a ticking clock.

placemammoth cavemammoth cave national parkcavecave tourself-guided tour
Watson Trace - Beneath Your Feet

Watson Trace - Beneath Your Feet

Researchers working 161 feet beneath your feet in 1998 felt a breeze coming from between some rocks – a hint that a void lay beyond. Moving rocks, they crawled into a passage shown on no map. Their lights found burnt touches, untouched since the last visitors left them – over 2000 years earlier. This section of the cave is not open to the public.

placebeneath your feetcavemammoth cavewalking tour
Good Spring Baptist Church & Cemetery

Good Spring Baptist Church & Cemetery

Good Spring Baptist Church had the largest membership of any church in the Green River Association from 1896 to 1900.

placechurchhistorybaptistprotestant
Giant's Coffin - Beneath Your Feet

Giant's Coffin - Beneath Your Feet

In the early 1800s cave visitors called the huge, rectangular boulder 175 feet beneath your feet the “steamboat”; by the 1840s, guides and visitors decided the boulder looked more like a Giant’s coffin, the name is still used on the Historic Tour route today.

placebeneath your feetcavemammoth cavewalking tour
Audubon Avenue

Audubon Avenue

Named for James Audubon, this passage houses several artifacts on display.

placemammoth cavemammoth cave national parkcavecave tourself-guided tour
Audubon and Little Bat Avenue - Beneath Your Feet

Audubon and Little Bat Avenue - Beneath Your Feet

On the Historic Tour route 149 feet beneath your feet is the intersection of Audubon and Little Bat Avenues. In the mid-1800’s cave owner Dr. John Croghan named Audubon Avenue after his friend, the famous ornithologist and Artist John James Audubon. In 1838 a visitor reported seeing “tens of thousands” of bats in Little Bat Avenue.

placebeneath your feetcavemammoth cavewalking tour
Booth's Amphitheatre - Beneath Your Feet

Booth's Amphitheatre - Beneath Your Feet

Booth’s Amphitheatre, named after the 19th century Shakespearean actor Edwin Booth (brother of the infamous John Wilkes Booth). This is a large canyon passage there is a set of stairs that go up into Gothic Avenue, an upper oval shaped passageway; located near the stairs are also a second set of salt petre leaching vats.

placebeneath your feetcavemammoth cavewalking tour
Booth’s Amphitheatre

Booth’s Amphitheatre

Actor Edwin Booth once gave a recital of Hamlet's soliloquy from the natural stage formed by the rock outcropping.

placemammoth cavemammoth cave national parkcavecave tourself-guided tour
Broadway

Broadway

Broadway also known as main cave continues for miles undergrounds.

placemammoth cavemammoth cave national parkcave tourcaveself-guided tour
Dennison Ferry

Dennison Ferry

Dennison Ferry Day Use area is in Mammoth Cave National Park, it is about a 20 minute drive north east from the Visitor Center. This area provides anglers with concrete steps to carry a small boat down to the water. There are picnic tables, park benches and fire rings for visitors to enjoy a beautiful day in the park. Camping is not permitted in this area. Bank fishing would be difficult with the steep incline to the river. There is not an active ferry at this location.

placeferryriver accessboating
Doyel Valley Overlook

Doyel Valley Overlook

The Doyel Valley Overlook is the only scenic overlook accessible by vehicle within Mammoth Cave National Park. The overlook consists of two information panels, a picnic table. and access to the Mammoth Cave Hike and Bike trail. Access is along Mammoth Cave Parkway, 2.2 miles (3.5 km) south of the visitor center.

placemammoth cave national parkoverlook
Fat Man's Misery - Beneath Your Feet

Fat Man's Misery - Beneath Your Feet

Fat Man’s Misery is a winding keyhole shaped passageway, the lower part of the passageway is about as wide as your hips or a little wider, above your hips the passage widens to about 5 ½ feet or more, at the very end, the floor comes up 2 feet for a 20 foot stoop walk. This is one of the most asked about and popular passages in the cave.

placebeneath your feetcavemammoth cavewalking tour
Floyd Collins Homestead

Floyd Collins Homestead

The Floyd Collins Homestead is the location of several important aspects of the Mammoth Cave story. It is the location of the entrance to Crystal Cave, a popular show cave run by the Collins Family in the early 20th century, but also served as the early headquarters of the Cave Research Foundation, who led the efforts in exploring Mammoth Cave and eventually found the connection that made Mammoth Cave the longest cave in the world.

placecave explorationcave research foundationshow cavesfloyd collins
Frequently Asked Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

Frequently asked questions during the self-guided Extended Historic Tour of Mammoth Cave.

placemammoth cavemammoth cave national parkcavecave tourself-guided tour
Green River Bluffs Overlook

Green River Bluffs Overlook

Accessed along the 1.3 mile (2.1 km) Green River Bluffs Trail, the overlook provides views looking northeast along the Green River Valley. The site is also home to a long term air quality monitoring webcam.

placemammoth cave national parkoverlook
Green River Ferry

Green River Ferry

Green River Ferry is an active ferry that is used to shuttle cars, hikers and bikers from one side of the river to the other. Located less than a 10min drive from the visitor center, there's also picnic tables and hiking trails. Fishing is permitted on the riverbank away from the ferry. This site is also usable by all trailed boats. When launching a trailed boat be sure not to disrupt the operation of the ferry, boats should be launched on the downstream side of the ferry.

placeferryriver accessboatingaccessible trailinterpretive trail
Historic Cottages

Historic Cottages

Historic Cottages at Mammoth Cave National Park.

placelodgingcottagekentuckyovernighthotel
Historic Entrance of Mammoth Cave

Historic Entrance of Mammoth Cave

The Historic Entrance to Mammoth Cave has welcomed thousands of visitors to the cave for over two hundred years.

placemammoth cavemammoth cave national parkcavecave tourself-guided tour
Houchin Ferry

Houchin Ferry

Houchin Ferry is a lovely area with a heavy canopy of trees, it has 12 campsites with a view of the Green River. Located about a 25 minute drive west from the visitor center, this is an ideal area for primitive camping or just to spend a day fishing and picnicking on the Green River. During the summer months this area is also used for canoe launching and removing. There is no longer an active ferry at this location.

placeferryriver accessboatingcampgroundpicnic area
Houchin’s Narrows

Houchin’s Narrows

Entering Houchin's Narrows to the cave leave the light of the surface behind and step further into the darkness.

placemammoth cavemammoth cave national parkcavecave tourself-guided tour
Joppa Missionary Baptist Church & Cemetery

Joppa Missionary Baptist Church & Cemetery

The Joppa Missionary Baptist Church offers a glimpse into the early life of the settlers and their social history in the Mammoth Cave/Joppa Ridge/Elko area before becoming a part of the national park. The church is open for you to take a walk back in time and marvel at the workmanship of the early settlers. Located right behind the church is the Joppa Missionary Baptist Cemetery where you can visit some of the historic settlers of the days gone by.

placechurchbaptistcemetery
Little Bat Avenue

Little Bat Avenue

Little Bat Avenue was once home to thousands of bats.

placemammoth cavemammoth cave national parkcavecave tourself-guided tour
Lookout Mountain

Lookout Mountain

Lookout Mountain may have been a entrance to Mammoth Cave thousands of years ago.

placemammoth cavemammoth cave national parkcavecave tourself-guided tour
Lookout Mountain - Beneath Your Feet

Lookout Mountain - Beneath Your Feet

Seventy feet beneath your feet is Lookout Mountain in Rafinesque Hall. The view of the cave from Lookout Mountain is a pile of rocks, known as breakdown. The pile of rocks demonstrates a place where a large trunk cave passage had collapsed. The passage once continued across this area, but when the valley cut downward, erosion cut into the cave itself and sealed it off.

placebeneath your feetcavemammoth cavewalking tour
Lover's Leap - Beneath Your Feet

Lover's Leap - Beneath Your Feet

Lover’s Leap is one of the cave’s oldest named landmarks – the name goes back to 1827. The route leading you to this section of the cave is lined with historic signatures, monuments and artifacts from early cave visitors. Overlooking the large canyon passageway, there is a slender pointed slab of rock jutting outward, this was named Lover’s Leap.

placebeneath your feetcavemammoth cavewalking tour
Mammoth Cave Baptist Church & Cemetery

Mammoth Cave Baptist Church & Cemetery

Explore a local community history and visit the Mammoth Cave Baptist Church. It offers a wonderful glimpse into the early life of the settlers and their social history in the Mammoth Cave/Flint Ridge area before becoming a part of the national park. The church is nestled in a densely wooded area of the park and is open for you to take a walk back in time and marvel at the workmanship of the early settlers.

placechurchhistorybaptistreligionsettlers
Mammoth Cave Historic Entrance

Mammoth Cave Historic Entrance

The Historic Entrance is the largest natural opening into the Mammoth Cave system and the site that has been used as the main entrance into the cave by Native Americans, saltpeter miners, cave explorers and travelers from all over the world.

placemammoth cavecave
Mammoth Cave Historic Train

Mammoth Cave Historic Train

On November 8, 1886 the first 8.7-mile excursion by train was made from Glasgow Junction (Park City) to the Mammoth Caves. For 45 years, the colorful rail cars made their way through rough terrain bringing thousands of visitors to the Mammoth Cave. Imagine the anticipation of the visitors as they took their first train ride through the dense woods to reach their destination.

placerailroadhistoryhistoricculturetraintransportation
Mammoth Cave National Park

Mammoth Cave National Park

Mammoth Cave National Park protects the world's longest cave and an incredible history of the people who have explored the cave and thrived on surrounding lands.

placecavesmammoth caveafrican americankentucky
Mammoth Cave Park Store

Mammoth Cave Park Store

The park store is operated by America’s National Parks™, an official non-profit partner of the National Park Service dedicated to supporting the educational mission of Mammoth Cave National Park.

placemammoth cavenonprofitspark partner
Methodist Church - Beneath Your Feet

Methodist Church - Beneath Your Feet

This is a large canyon room; the ceiling is 50 feet high. Facing the church, you are looking at a breakdown of large rocks. To the left is a prominent ledge 15 feet high called the pulpit. Along the ledge of the pulpit, the walls are blackened with the soot of lanterns used by the preacher to light up the pulpit.

placebeneath your feetcavemammoth cavewalking tour
Old Guide's Cemetery

Old Guide's Cemetery

The Old Guide’s Cemetery is a small, but significant, cemetery located within Mammoth Cave National Park. Buried here is Stephen Bishop, a famous 19th Century African-American cave guide. The Old Guide’s Cemetery also contains the burials of three tuberculosis patients who died during the Mammoth Cave Tuberculosis cave treatment experiment of 1842. It is located off of the beautiful Heritage Trail, a half mile long accessible trail through the woods.

placeafrican-american historycemeteriestuberculosis
Pensacola Avenue - Beneath Your Feet

Pensacola Avenue - Beneath Your Feet

Pensacola Avenue, a once -toured passage off the main trail, lies 253 feet beneath you on the Historic Tour route. A 1940’s tourist guidebook says: “The dry and sandy floor elicited the naming of this avenue after that pleasant city in Florida.”

placebeneath your feetcavemammoth cavewalking tour
Rafinesque Hall

Rafinesque Hall

Entering Rafinesque Hall you leave the paved trail behind and travel on packed dirt trails lined with rocks.

placemammoth cavemammoth cave national parkcavecave tourself-guided tour
River Hall - Beneath Your Feet

River Hall - Beneath Your Feet

River Hall lies 283 feet beneath your feet on the Historic Tour route. Usually dry, this passage fills with water when Mammoth Cave’s River Styx floods into it. Most of the cave stays dry during floods; River Hall is the only toured section of the cave in the floodplain.

placebeneath your feetcavemammoth cavewalking tour
Rotunda

Rotunda

The Rotunda is one of the largest rooms in the cave and lead to name "Mammoth Cave".

placemammoth cavemammoth cave national parkcavecave tourself-guided tour
Become a Mammoth Cave Junior Ranger

Become a Mammoth Cave Junior Ranger

Do you want to explore, learn about, and protect Mammoth Cave? If so, become a Mammoth Cave Junior Ranger! The Junior Ranger activity book is appropriate for all ages and is a great way to get more in-depth knowledge about the world’s longest cave and to learn about the natural wonders of the park.

junior ranger program
Explore Wildflowers at Cedar Sink

Explore Wildflowers at Cedar Sink

Stunning rock faces, cave springs, and geological panoramas, you will experience a wide array of seasonal wildflowers and biodiversity.

front-country hiking
Viewing Park Wildlife

Viewing Park Wildlife

Mammoth Cave is home to a wide variety of plant and animal life ranging from rare exotic cave species to more common woodland creatures. While viewing wildlife can be a highlight of any park visit, it is important to remember that animals in the park are wild. Precautions must be taken to keep not only you, but the wildlife safe.

wildlife watching
Attend a Ranger-led Program

Attend a Ranger-led Program

Attending a ranger-led program in the park is a great way to discover new things and learn more about the Mammoth Cave National Park.

guided tours
Houchin Ferry to Brownsville

Houchin Ferry to Brownsville

This short trip travels along the Green River from Houchin Ferry inside Mammoth Cave National Park to the former site of Lock and Dam #6 or the Brownsville boat ramp.

paddling
Nolin River Dam to Houchin Ferry

Nolin River Dam to Houchin Ferry

This trip starts at the Tailwater Recreation Area below the Nolin River Dam north of the park.

paddling
Green River Ferry to Houchin Ferry

Green River Ferry to Houchin Ferry

This longer section of the Green River is less traveled then the popular Dennison Ferry to Green River Ferry trip.

paddling
Dennison Ferry to Green River Ferry

Dennison Ferry to Green River Ferry

This popular river trip takes paddlers from the Dennison Ferry Day Use Area to the Green River Ferry.

paddling
River Safety and Regulations

River Safety and Regulations

Safety is your responsibility. Follow these tips for a safe and enjoyable river trip.

paddling
Planning Your River Trip

Planning Your River Trip

Over 30 miles of the Green and Nolin Rivers trace through the Mammoth Cave National Park and offer a wealth of recreational opportunities.

paddling
Explore the park on Horseback

Explore the park on Horseback

Mammoth Cave National Park is an exceptional destination for anyone who loves to see the world from the back of a horse.

horseback riding
See the Stars

See the Stars

Since prehistoric times, humans have looked up at the night sky and pondered the wonders of the universe. People have used the stars and planets to navigate, keep track of time, and to connect with other cultures. Regardless of your reason, Mammoth Cave National Park provides an ideal place for stargazing.

stargazing
Ride the Big Hollow Trail

Ride the Big Hollow Trail

Explore the north side of the park on your mountain bike on the only mountain bike trail in the park.

biking
Mammoth Cave Railroad Bike and Hike Trail

Mammoth Cave Railroad Bike and Hike Trail

Originally opened in 1886 the Mammoth Cave Railroad brought early tourists to Mammoth Cave and other neighboring caves in the area. Today, a portion of the path of the former Mammoth Cave Railroad has been converted into a 9-mile hike and bike trail.

biking
Road Biking

Road Biking

For visitors wishing to travel to Mammoth Cave National Park on two wheels instead of four, the park roadways offer miles of scenic and forested landscape to enjoy on the ride.

biking
Cave Tours

Cave Tours

Join a ranger as you discover the complex history and intricate geology of the worlds longest cave system.

guided tours
Take a Ridge-top Walk to Sunset Point

Take a Ridge-top Walk to Sunset Point

Visitors to Mammoth Cave National Park Marvel over the Green River Valley while visiting the popular overlook, Sunset Point.

front-country hiking