Have you ever drifted lazily down a river on a warm afternoon, laughing at the cares you left upstream? Or bitten into a juicy heirloom tomato at a rural roadside farmstand? Have you ever toasted the day with friends in a 1930s speakeasy? If so, you’ve likely followed the Buffalo River as it courses through the westernmost part of Middle Tennessee, over a textured landscape of ridges, deep hollows, and tributary creeks.
A State Scenic River, the Buffalo is much more than a scenic waterway. The longest free-flowing river in Tennessee is a living narrative of history, geological diversity, and natural wonders. Here in Perry County, the Buffalo is the cornerstone of outdoor recreation and the thread that weaves together the area’s natural and cultural heritage. Long before today’s paddlers, anglers, and floaters arrived, early settlers were drawn to the river’s clean water, limestone bluffs, fertile valleys, and creeks that still shape life here.
Though adventure begins on the water, it continues into the welc