A real recap of our first girls trip to Pigeon Forge, Tennessee, including hotel swaps, budget hacks, a gambling realization at a gem mine, and what we’d change next time.
My mom had never been on a vacation before. Not a real one. Not one where the point was just to relax and have fun with no work attached. So when Mother’s Day rolled around this year, my sister and I decided our gift to her wasn’t going to be flowers or a candle. We pooled our money and made her take a trip with us instead.
We landed on a 4 day, 3 night girls weekend in Pigeon Forge, Tennessee. What followed was equal parts hilarious, chaotic, and exactly the kind of trip that makes you laugh about it for months afterward. Here’s how it actually went, mistakes and all.
The Plan Changed Before We Even Left
Originally we had this whole multi-city itinerary mapped out. Night one in Nashville, night two in Knoxville, and then finally landing in Pigeon Forge for night three. Very ambitious. Very road trip energy.
Then my mom, a little later than would’ve been helpful, mentioned she only wanted to go to Pigeon Forge. No hotel hopping. No multiple cities. Just one place to unpack and stay put.
So we scrapped the original plan and stayed in Pigeon Forge the entire four days. Honestly? It ended up being the right call. Both my mom and my sister were wiped out for most of each day, and trying to also pack and move hotels on top of that would’ve turned a relaxing trip into a stressful one.
Sometimes the change you didn’t plan for is the change you needed.
Two Hotels, Two Totally Different Experiences
We split our stay between two hotels, and the contrast taught me a lot about what actually matters when you’re booking a place to stay.
Night one: Hilton Garden Inn (2481 Teaster Lane, Pigeon Forge)
This hotel was genuinely lovely. Spacious room, very clean, a nice pool, and a gym that I absolutely used and loved. The catch? It ran us $250 for one night and didn’t even include breakfast. That’s a steep price tag for a single night, breakfast or not.
Nights two and three: The Inn on the River (2492 Parkway, Pigeon Forge)
Two nights here totaled roughly $200 a night, a noticeably better deal than the Hilton. The room was smaller, and there was no gym (though they did offer to reimburse me if I wanted to use one nearby, an offer that came a little too late since it had already closed for the day). But breakfast was included, and the patio next to the river and balcony overlooking it became one of our favorite parts of the whole stay at The Inn on the River.
We watched ducks from the balcony more than once. You could even buy duck food and feed them right from the breakfast area patio.
If I’m being honest, the lesson here isn’t “always pick the cheaper hotel.” It’s “figure out what you actually care about before you book.”
We cared about breakfast being included and having a calm spot to decompress.
We didn’t care as much about square footage. Once I knew that, the second hotel was clearly the better fit, even with the smaller room and missing gym. Luckily, I did a lot of walking outside of the hotel anyway.
Day 1: Arrival, Taco Salads, and a Tabata Class in a Hotel Gym
We rolled into Pigeon Forge and got to the hotel around 4 PM. My mom and sister were ready to just chill, so I took that as my cue to make a super early bird dinner happen without anyone leaving the room.
I made taco salads for all three of us using groceries I’d bought specifically for the trip. I’d seen similar salads going for almost $40 for three servings out at restaurants nearby. Mine cost less than half that and tasted just as good, if not better.
After dinner, my sister passed out almost instantly. My mom and I went down to the pool to relax for a bit, and then I snuck off to the hotel gym for a Tabata class I’d found online and recorded a podcast episode while I was at it.
Then, it was back to the room for movies with my mom until we both crashed.
Day 2: The Hotel Switch, a Wine and Cider Crawl, and Our First Ripley’s Stop
I started the morning with a stretch class, then knocked out email follow-ups with my clients before breakfast. My mom and sister had breakfast bars. I made oatmeal I’d brought from home, stirred in some craisins, and ate it on the balcony looking out at the Smoky Mountains.
Not a bad way to start a day.
We checked out and drove to Gatlinburg to wander around. This is where I made the decision that’s going to need its own article: I bought a 4-pack Ripley’s combo pass for each of us, with the plan being we’d hit a couple of mini golf attractions, the Believe It or Not Museum, and the Aquarium to make full use of those passes.
That plan did not survive contact with reality, but more on that in a separate post about the Ripley’s attractions themselves.
Math wise it made sense to me considering it was about $30 for a ticket to the museum and another $43 for the aquarium, and the cost of the 4-ticket package was about $65 per person.
Parking ran us $20 for the day. We wandered into a wine shop for some samples, then a cider shop for more samples, and eventually made our way to the Ripley’s Believe It or Not Museum, where we spent a couple of hours.
By the time we left, we were starving.
I’d brought ingredients to make chicken wraps in the car, but my mom and sister wanted to wait until we got to the hotel.
We stopped at a Publix to buy some tea, which somehow turned into my mom and sister deciding to grab Publix subs instead.
I stuck to my chicken wrap plan to stay on budget. My mom’s eyes turned out to be bigger than her stomach, though, because she couldn’t finish her sandwich and handed half of it over to me. Free lunch upgrade, not complaining.
The Shop With the Bears, the Southern Girl Shirts, and My Christmas Detour
Our hotel room wasn’t ready yet, so we killed an hour at a nearby novelty shop. This place had a live bear viewing area we skipped (more on why gambling-adjacent attractions like that gave me pause in the Ripley’s article), but the shopping itself was a trip.
My mom and sister gravitated toward Southern Girl shirts and novelty gifts, while I made a beeline for the top floor, which was, somewhat randomly, full of Christmas decorations. I love Christmas enough that I genuinely could’ve spent the whole hour up there alone.
By about 4:30 we finally checked into The Inn on the River. My mom and sister wanted to rest. I did not.
So I took myself on a solo adventure to the Christmas Place shop, grabbed treats at Mrs. Claus’ Sweet Shop, and wandered around the grounds of The Inn at Christmas Place.
That hotel is now officially on my bucket list of places to stay, and I’ve got a whole separate post coming about why.
When I got back, my mom and sister still weren’t hungry from lunch, so dinner that night was whatever I’d brought with me plus the free popcorn and cookies the hotel had out.
Staying on budget meant skipping eating out whenever I could, and that night was a perfect example of making it work.
Like I said…the one downside of this hotel was that it had no gym or space to work out in the room. The Inn did offer to comp a nearby gym, but by the time I found that out, it had already closed.
Lesson learned for next time: ask about gym access and hours the second you check in, not hours later.
We finished the night by watching movies again before crashing for bed.
Day 3: Mermaids, Sharks, and a Hard Pass on Gem Mining
The Inn on the River’s included breakfast turned out to be one of its best features. We ate a pretty decent meal, and I even got a partial stretch session in beforehand, though the lack of space meant I couldn’t do my full routine.
After breakfast we headed to the patio to feed the ducks, then piled in the car for the Ripley’s Aquarium…to spend another $15 on parking…
The aquarium delivered. We saw a huge range of fish species, caught a mermaid show, watched a penguin parade, and got an unexpected shark photobomb in one of our pictures. Lots of laughing, lots to look at. Genuinely one of the highlights of the trip.
Lunch plans fell apart fast when the sticker shock at our first restaurant choice sent us running. Instead, we grabbed a few more wine samples around town and figured we’d regroup back at the hotel.
On the way, we ended up back at the bear and Christmas shop because my sister wanted one of those Southern Girl shirts after all.
I’d been eyeing a gem mining activity, but the price for what you actually get felt off, and the more I thought about it, the more it bothered me.
You pay for a bucket that’s already been filled by the company, for the chance of finding something worth the cost. No guarantee. That’s not really a souvenir purchase. That’s gambling with extra steps. I skipped it.
Back at the hotel, my mom and I watched the ducks from the balcony, then we all got dressed for dinner. We landed on Texas Roadhouse, the one place everyone could agree on, and used a 10% off coupon one of the hotels had given us.
Then it was back to the room for, you guessed it, more movies before bed.
Day 4: Dollywood Cinnamon Bread Without the Park Ticket
We went straight from waking up to breakfast, checked out, and headed to the Dollywood resorts. I’d been craving that famous Dollywood cinnamon bread and found out you can buy a loaf at the resort gift shops without ever buying a park ticket.
We grabbed a loaf, and it did not disappoint. I brought the leftovers home and turned them into French toast the next day, which might have been even better than the bread itself.
We spent a couple hours wandering the two Dollywood resorts and their gift shops before hitting the road back to Richmond, Kentucky.
We skipped lunch entirely. I snacked from my bag in the car, and once we got home, I made a quick dinner for my husband and me and called it a trip.
What I’d Do Differently Next Time
A few honest takeaways…the kind I wish someone had told me before we left:
Decide on a single home base before you book anything. Our multi-city plan looked great on paper, but neither my mom nor my sister had the energy for it once we were actually there. If you’re traveling with people who aren’t used to hotel and city-hopping, build in more stillness than you think you need.
Bring your own food, but read the room. My chicken wraps and taco salads saved real money, but not everyone in your group is going to want to eat the same way you do. That’s fine. Let people make their own calls without making it a thing.
Ask about hotel amenities the moment you check in, not later because you could miss out on something. I missed a free gym session simply because I didn’t ask the right question at the right time.
Skip the gambling-disguised-as-novelty activities. Gem mining buckets, claw machines stuffed with cheap prizes, anything where you’re paying for a chance rather than a guaranteed outcome. Save that money for something with an actual return.
One unexpected attraction can be worth the whole detour. I didn’t plan for the Christmas Place or the Inn at Christmas Place to be highlights of this trip, but they ended up being some of my favorite parts. Leave room in your itinerary for the thing you didn’t know you wanted to see.
And the Ripley’s passes? We bought a 12-pass package expecting to hit four attractions between the three of us. We only made it to two. The good news: those passes are valid for a full year. We’ve got 6 left, and since my mom and sister won’t be making it back before they expire, my husband and I are planning a return trip to use them on 3 more Ripley’s attractions. We’ll likely stay at the Red Roof this time since it’s dog-friendly and doesn’t charge a fortune for bringing our pups along.
More on that trip, and a full breakdown of which Ripley’s attractions are actually worth your pass, coming soon.




