Cedar Sink Trail
Hiking Trail
Easy
1.57 mi
216 ft
A short 1.5-mile hike to a sinkhole about 10 minutes from the visitor center.
Hike along massive rock bluff and cavernous overhangs on one of Mammoth Cave's staple hikes, the Cedar Sink Trail. This "lush walk through the woods" offers intimate views of Kentucky's karst landscape defined by underground rivers, caves, and sinks. As you hike, you can see "water coming from holes in the ground and then disappearing back into massive walls," a unique and fascinating phenomenon that is quite common throughout the park. [[Source]( The trailhead for Cedar Sink is about 10 minutes from the park's main visitor center, so plan accordingly if you are passing time between cave tours or ranger-led programs. Both beginning at the visitor center, [Heritage Trail]( or [Dixon Cave]( are two family-friendly to consider if you are already at the visitor center. The trail is well-maintained and should take most between 1-2 hours to complete. Stairs negotiate the steeper sections, while narrow walkways lined with railings follow the cliff's edge. Sources: Written by Brendon Voelker
Hike along massive rock bluff and cavernous overhangs on one of Mammoth Cave's staple hikes, the Cedar Sink Trail. This "lush walk through the woods" offers intimate views of Kentucky's karst landscape defined by underground rivers, caves, and sinks. As you hike, you can see "water coming from holes in the ground and then disappearing back into massive walls," a unique and fascinating phenomenon that is quite common throughout the park. [[Source]( The trailhead for Cedar Sink is about 10 minutes from the park's main visitor center, so plan accordingly if you are passing time between cave tours or ranger-led programs. Both beginning at the visitor center, [Heritage Trail]( or [Dixon Cave]( are two family-friendly to consider if you are already at the visitor center. The trail is well-maintained and should take most between 1-2 hours to complete. Stairs negotiate the steeper sections, while narrow walkways lined with railings follow the cliff's edge. Sources: Written by Brendon Voelker