A map showing all named rivers and streams in Jackson County[/caption]
Caney Fork ranks fifth, with 21 smaller streams flowing into it. Among the best known are Sugar Creek, Johns Creek, Brasstown, Moses Creek and Chastine Creek.
Cullowhee Creek is a distant sixth with 11 tributaries.
Duplicate creek names are not unusual, even on the same river system. “Long Branch” is a popular name: there’s one in Dillsboro, one in Cullowhee, one that flows into Savannah Creek and one that flows into Canada’s Wolf Creek. There’s also a Wolf Creek on Cullowhee Mountain that flows into Cullowhee Creek.
By the time it reaches Dillsboro, the Tuckasegee has already gathered most of its water. Of its almost 200 feeder streams, only 25 more join the river before it flows out of Jackson County.
Jackson’s many streams provide almost unlimited recreational opportunities to its visitors. Many, including the Tuck through Webster and Dillsboro and Scott Creek in Sylva, are part of the county’s famed WNC Fly Fishing Trail®. Whitewater rafting is available on the Tuckasegee, and the lakes offer boating, fishing, swimming and water-skiing. Many hiking and walking trails, such as the ones in Sylva’s Pinnacle Park, follow streams for part of their distance, and several short trails access waterfalls, including Silver Run Falls, Dill Falls and spectacular 411-foot Whitewater Falls.
Whether your water-related vacation goal is fishing, boating, kayaking, rafting, floating, swimming or waterfall-looking, Jackson County’s beautiful streams can take you there.