
Honeycomb Cove Wilderness II
Honeycomb Cove Wilderness II
Limited Edition Aerial Photograph by Zedekiah
25" tall x 48" wide
Satin Steel Plate - ready to hang
Call for other sizes and media options
"Honeycomb Cove is part of Guntersville Lake on the Tennessee River in Northern Alabama. The small island in the foreground is Goat Island and the small inlet in the bottom of this image is Pumpkin Hollow. The point just to the left of Goat Island is known as Fort Deposit Point, this was the location of a supply fort built by General Andrew Jackson during the Creek Wars in the early 19th Century.
In older times when animal power dominated transportation, there was no safe or secure way to cross from the east over this long mountain range full of endless ridges and valleys. Early colonial settlers considered these mountainous ridges the far Wild West and rarely ventured beyond them.
Waterways such as the long and winding Tennessee River were the superhighways of the day, taking tribesmen and traders down from the Smokey Mountains to the lower deltas.
Eventually, American pioneers such as Daniel Boone and Davy Crockett ventured through the mountainous passes, settling on the remote Cumberland Plateau near where Tennessee, Alabama and Georgia meet along the Tennessee River, west of Nickajack Lake which would be located about 30 miles to the left of this image.
These lands are full of limestone caves and caverns, historical Native American sites and old pioneer homesteads and cabins. On the border of Tennessee and Alabama in the Cumberland Plateau lies the Paint Rock Valley. Flanked by steep mountains and threaded by a meandering river, this place is so remote the residents of some of the outlying communities lived in a state of isolation that is hard to envision, electricity did not reach the valley until 1949." - Zedekiah