Helen during Octoberfest. Traffic, anyone?
Helen is a little town in the northeast Georgia hills that has transformed itself into a tourist mecca.
In early 1969, some Helen businessmen were searching for a way to bolster the village's sagging lumber economy, possibly by finding a way to entice tourists to drop a few bucks in the town as they passed through on their way to the mountains. They consulted with an artist named John Kollock, who had some ideas. By fall of that same year, Helen had reinvented itself as an Alpine village, straight out of Bavaria. And the rest, as they say, is history.
I do not recommend driving through Helen on an Octoberfest weekend, unless you have a lot of time to kill.
You can sleep in the windmill at the Heidi Motel.
The Helen
Windmill is on the
right at the Heidi
Motel, near the north end
of town. Looking for information online,
I found a surprising number of businesses that use windmills to distinguish
themselves, but no information on this one. However, according to the hotel's
web site, you can actually rent a room in the windmill.
The twin Anna Ruby Falls.
Helen is also the gateway to the beautiful Anna Ruby Falls and the very popular Unicoi State Park just a few miles north of town.
At Anna Ruby Falls, water from Curtis Creek cascades 153 feet, while the water from York Creek drops 50 feet. Both creeks begin on Tray Mountain and come together below the falls to form Smith Creek, which flows into Smith Lake in Unicoi State Park and then onward to the Chattahoochee River.
Unicoi State Park features a 100-room lodge and conference center, 30 cottages, 49 camp sites, picnic shelters, and a group shelter on its 1050 acres. There is also the 53-acre lake, with a swimming beach, fishing docks, kayak and canoe rentals, twelve miles of hiking trails, eight miles of mountain bike trails, a zipline, and a restaurant. Definitely something for everyone.
The details:The traffic jam in Helen was photographed with an Olympus E-M5 and a 14-140mm Panasonic Lumix lens. For the Heidi Motel windmill I used a Canon EOS 6D and the EF 28-105mm lens. Anna Ruby Falls was photographed with a Fuji X-H1 and the Fujinon XC 16-50mm lens.This post was adapted from my book Backroads and Byways of Georgia.
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Photography and text copyright 2026 David B.Jenkins.
I post Monday, Wednesday, and Friday unless life gets in the way.










