decorative font style
    Travel >> Holiday Travel >  >> Hotel & Food

Cottontail Cottage: Charming Mountain Cabin Retreat in Northeast Georgia

Cottontail Cottage: Charming Mountain Cabin Retreat in Northeast Georgia Northeast Georgia Mountains Rabun Gap

Choose between two cabins - Clayton and Rabun Gap - close to Dillard. Family-owned and -operated for more than 10 years with hundreds of glowing testimonials and repeat customers. Truly a "piece of heaven" in the Northeast Georgia mountains.

Cottontail in the Valley, Rabun Gap, near Dillard is private and secluded, easily accessible on paved roads. It has three bedrooms, two baths, and is beautifully furnished and fully equipped. It features a rocking chair porch with an incredible view overlooking the picturesque Wolffork Valley and surrounded by the Blue Ridge Mountains.

Cottontail in the Woods on Germany Mountain in Clayton is less than 4 miles from downtown but a million miles from noise and the daily grind. Private and secluded, easily accessible, no steep roads. Two or three bedrooms with the optional "Outbuilding King Suite" 2.5 bathrooms. Huge deck and screened rocking chair porch. Beautifully furnished and completely equipped with all the comforts of home.


Hotel & Food
  • Okefenokee Cottage: Charming Coastal Retreat in Folkston

    Coastal Georgia Folkston The Okefenokee Cottage is a furnished vacation rental that serves as the perfect central base for exploring train watching, the Okefenokee Swamp and coastal Georgia and northeast Florida. Come and stay for a day or a few months - there are plenty of destinations within an hour radius of your home away from home!

  • Discover Tranquil Beauty at The Lavender Cottage & Garden

    Lavender in the garden. Northeast Georgia Mountains Sautee Nacoochee The Lavender Cottage & Garden is located in the beautiful Sautee Nacoochee Valley in the Northeast Georgia Mountains.  Just minutes away from the Folk Pottery Museum of Northeas

  • Love on the Summit: A Mountain Marriage

    Ewa sank in the wet afternoon snow, through an ice trapdoor hiding a crevasse below, and stabbed her calf with a freshly sharpened crampon as I kept tension on the rope. Tears fell from her face as she struggled to get out of the hole. These few weeks had been long, with many firsts: first expedition, first time above 5,000m, and the first time we had both summited an unclimbed mountain. She clawed her way back to the surface and I saw the tears glisten on her cheek. I took a second to unde