Kentucky
7 Coolest Towns in Kentucky for a Summer Vacation in 2024
Every year is a great year to visit Kentucky, but 2024 is especially good timing. This year, Kentucky State Parks celebrates its 100th anniversary with a series of events that showcase the incredible (and very cool) beauty of the bluegrass state. It’s also the 25th anniversary of the Kentucky Bourbon Trail, a legendary route covering historic sites, country towns, inviting eateries, and — of course — award-winning distilleries. Even in a quiet year, Kentucky is one of America’s coolest states. The home of blues, BBQ, and Bluegrass is bound to have a little swagger. Whether riding horseback on rustic trails, sipping Kentucky moonshine, or watching steamboats drift down the Ohio River, this is a vacation you’ll remember long after you’ve unpacked your suitcase.
Augusta
Aerial view of Augusta, Kentucky. By Predhead, CC BY-SA 4.0, Wikimedia Commons
Augusta is a charming river town on the banks of the Ohio River. The town was first given its charter in 1797, making it one of the oldest in Kentucky. You can see echoes of Augusta’s long history almost everywhere you look in town, but sites of particular interest include the 1811 jail, Underground Railroad safehouses Payne House and White Hall, and Cemetery Hill, the site of the 1862 Battle of Augusta. Augusta is also home to one of the oldest ferry services on the Ohio River, operating since 1798. You can ride the Jenny Ann daily throughout the summer to catch the river’s cool breezes and gorgeous views. Augusta has plenty of Kentucky charm, but the town claims some Hollywood stardust, too. You can learn about its famous residents at the Rosemary Clooney Museum, the former home of the singer and movie star.
Slade
Mill Creek Lake, part of Daniel Boone National Forest in Slade, Kentucky.
Kentucky is home to over 2,000 natural arches — the most of any state east of the Mississippi River. See the most famous at the Natural Bridge State Park near the tiny town of Slade. The Natural Bridge is a jaw-dropping sandstone arch stretching more than 75 feet long and 65 feet high. Explore the arch from the sky courtesy of the Sky Lift which floats above the forest canopy to give incredible views of the ridge below. There’s another natural wonder near Slade that attracts outdoor adventurers to the town. The Red River Gorge is known for its world-class climbing, biking, and hiking. With zip lines, kayaking tours, and bird-watching, there’s something for everyone in the family at this hidden gem. You can even stay in a treehouse for the ultimate cool vacation. These aren’t your typical backwoods huts either. Choose from the Observatory treehouse, with sweeping views over the gorge and a hammock lounge, or the Tradewinds Treehouse, which boasts a slide to the ground and a hot tub.
Cave City
Dinosaur World in Cave City, Kentucky, USA. Editorial credit: Roig61 / Shutterstock.com
As you can probably guess from the name, the action in Cave City happens underground. This small town is the gateway to Mammoth Cave National Park, the world’s longest-known cave system. There are over 400 miles of underground passageways in the park which you can explore by bike, kayak, hiking, or on a ranger-led tour. Stay after dark for stunning stargazing. On a clear night, you might just see the International Space Station! There’s more to Cave City than caves, however. Take the kids to Dinosaur World for a very cool vacation experience — wandering among life-sized dinosaurs, riding mammoths, and panning for gemstones.
Maysville
Historic buildings in Maysville, Kentucky.
Maysville is a picturesque town in Northern Kentucky known for its history and hospitality. The town has two historic districts, downtown and a 1780s frontier village on the outskirts of town known as Old Washington. The latter traces the history of Kentucky from its rural beginnings in pioneer log cabins to grandiose brick homes and Georgian townhouses. Downtown Maysville is a hub of arts and entertainment with funky boutique shops, galleries, and charming eateries where you can sample the local specialty, goetta — a dish of sausage and steel-cut oats. While in town, be sure to visit the Old Pogue Distillery, one of the stops on the Kentucky Bourbon Trail. The distillery is housed in the 1845 Pogue family home along with a gift shop and bourbon museum. Tours are available by appointment so you’ll need to reserve in advance.
Clermont
The historic Jim Beam Bourbon Distillery in Clermont, Kentucky. Editorial credit: Little Vignettes Photo / Shutterstock.com
Clermont, south of Louisville, is the only place in Kentucky where you can spend the day hanging out with forest giants. The Bernheim Arboretum and Forest near town contains three massive human-like structures made from repurposed and natural materials. The striking sculptures, named Mama Loumari, Little Nis, and Little Elina, are within walking distance of each other on a two-mile roundtrip loop through the forest. Enjoy a bird’s eye view of the forest with a canopy tree walk, 75 feet above the forest floor. Visit Bernheim in August for the annual CONNECT festival, a stunning evening show of interactive art exhibits that light up the forest. After a day in the forest, slake your thirst at the Jim Beam American Stillhouse, where seven generations of the Beam family have honed their craft. Not a whiskey drinker? No worries! The Forest Edge Winery is also well worth a visit with regular tasting events of its award-winning vintages.
Rosine
Rosine is a tiny community famous for being the birthplace of ‘the father of bluegrass,’ legendary musician Bill Munroe. Every summer, the Rosine Barn Jamboree plays tribute to this local icon with unforgettable evenings under the stars as the historic barn comes alive every Friday night with jumping bluegrass, country, and gospel music. True fans can also make the pilgrimage to Bill Munroe’s Home Place and Museum, which dives into the history of the bluegrass genre, Rosine, and the musician himself. Nearby is Uncle Pen’s Cabin. Now a small museum, this rustic cabin was once home to Pendleton Vandiver, one of Kentucky’s best fiddle players and Munroe’s uncle and playing partner.
Dawson Springs
Buildings at the Main Street intersection on the northern side of Railroad Avenue in Dawson Springs, Kentucky, USA.
Dawson Springs in Western Kentucky is the state’s first certified Trail Town. This designation is given to communities with an abundance of natural trails and scenic features, perfect for outdoor adventurers. Located in the Pennyrile region, the town is close to Pennyrile State Forest, where you’ll find some of Kentucky’s best equine trails winding over sandstone bluffs and alongside glittering streams. This area also boasts the Tradewater River, one of the largest in the state, and beautiful Lake Beshear, both of which are perfect spots for lazy summer boating or a fun canoe trip. Back in town, learn the history of this scenic area, known as a wellness resort since the early 1900s, at the Dawson Springs Museum and Art Centre, which is housed in the Old Commercial Bank, built in 1907.
Cool Kentucky Communities
The Kentucky Heritage Council celebrates a landmark this year, the 45th anniversary of their Main Street program, an initiative launched to preserve the history and heritage of the state’s vibrant downtowns. Kentucky knows it has something special, and this is a state that’s happy to share, showing off its many natural and historic attractions to visitors. A blend of southern charm and midwestern grit, Kentucky contains plenty of cool small towns to match its cool landscape — places where you can soak up the spirit and style of this unique state.
Kentucky
Kentucky Transfer WR Hardley Gilmore IV Commits to Louisville
LOUISVILLE, Ky. – Montavin Quisenberry isn’t the only former Kentucky wide receiver to switch out blue for red this offseason.
Hardley Gilmore IV announced Thursday that he has committed to the Louisville football program.
He’s the fifth Wildcat to transfer to the Cardinals in this cycle, following Quisenberry, who committed earlier in the day, cornerback D.J. Waller plus defensive ends Jerod Smith II and Jacob Smith.
Gilmore is also the 11th portal pickup for UofL in the last three days, and their 15th transfer commitment overall in this cycle, beginning to offset 23 portal defections that UofL has seen so far. The 14-day transfer window officially opened up this past Friday, and is the only opportunity for players to enter following the removal of the spring window.
Despite Kentucky’s instability at quarterback this past season, Gilmore put together a productive 2025 campaign. Playing in all 12 games while starting five, the 6-foot-1, 165-pound receiver caught 28 passes for 313 yards and a touchdown. His reception and yardage total was second on the team to Kendrick Law.
The Belle Glade, Fla. native got immediate playing time as a true freshman in 2024. Appearing in seven games, Gilmore was able to haul in six passes for 153 yards, including a 52-yard touchdown vs. Murray State.
While Gilmore has shown high end potential on the field, he comes with some off-the-field baggage from last offseason. Last January after opting to transfer to Nebraska following his true freshman season, he was charged with misdemeanor assault for allegedly punching someone in the face at a storage facility in Lexington. Then this past April, he was dismissed from the Huskers for unknown reasons, and wound up returning to Kentucky.
“Nothing outside the program, nothing criminal or anything like that,” Huskers head coach Matt Rhule said at the time regarding Gilmore’s dismissal. “Just won’t be with us anymore.”
Gilmore and Quisenberry are the first of likely multiple transfer pieces that Louisville will add to their wide receiver room. Between graduation and the portal, the Cardinals are losing six receivers – including Chris Bell & Caullin Lacy.
In their third season under head coach Jeff Brohm, Louisville went 9-4 overall, including a 4-4 mark in ACC play and a 27-22 win over Toledo in the Boca Raton Bowl. The Cardinals have won at least nine games in all three seasons under Brohm, doing so for the first time since 2012-14.
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(Photo of Hardley Gilmore IV: Jordan Prather – Imagn Images)
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Kentucky
Spotted lanternfly confirmed in 8 new Kentucky counties. About invasive insect
Spotted lanternflies congregate on grapevines
This undated video provided by the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture shows adult spotted lanternflies on grapevines in Berks County.
PROVIDED BY PENNSYLVANIA DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, PROVIDED BY PENNSYLVANIA DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Entomologists have confirmed spotted lanternflies in eight more counties in Kentucky during 2025, according to a recent announcement.
These include Fayette, Franklin, Harrison, Pendleton, Robertson, Scott, Trimble and Woodford. The invasive insect was first found in the commonwealth in October 2023, in Gallatin County, and spread to counties including Boone, Campbell, Carroll, Grant, Henry, Kenton and Owen in 2024.
Here’s what to know.
What is a spotted lanternfly?
In short, the spotted lanternfly is a moth-like bug that’s not supposed to be in the U.S. The bugs tend to be red with black and/or white spots on their wings, according to the Department of Agriculture.
They’re native to China and first showed up in the U.S. in 2014. They’ve mostly been found in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic, the USDA reports, but they’ve also been found in Indiana, Ohio and West Virginia.
One of the things that makes them so risky as an invasive species is that the eggs are thought to travel well, on everything from packages being shipped to moving boxes on U-Hauls.
Why are spotted lanternflies dangerous?
Spotted lanternflies can pose a major threat to the things such as orchards, vineyards and logging facilities. How? They tend to swarm and devour what they land on quickly, causing serious damage.
Their “waste product” — known as “honeydew” — can also attract molds and other bugs that further damage plants.
They pose a threat, according to the USDA, to everything from almonds, apples and hops to maple, oak and pine trees and more.
Is the spotted lanternfly in Kentucky?
Yes. The Kentucky Office of the State Entomologist said in a post to Facebook that the spotted lanternfly was confirmed in eight new commonwealth counties during 2025.
The species has been located in 16 counties total — Boone, Campbell, Carroll, Fayette, Franklin, Gallatin, Grant, Harrison, Henry, Kenton, Owen, Pendleton, Robertson, Scott, Trimble and Woodford.
What to do about spotted lanternflies
The biggest thing you can do, according to the USDA, to help control the spread of the spotted lanternfly is to keep an eye out for them.
It is recommended that you inspect trees, plants and other surfaces on your property for bugs. It’s best to do that around dusk, the USDA says, because that’s when bugs tend to congregate, making them easier to spot.
Signs that a plant may be infected include the plant oozing, becoming moldy or developing a fermented odor, according to the USDA. You may also see a “buildup of sticky fluid” beneath the infected plant.
The agency also recommends you keep an eye out for egg masses on everything from plants to boxes that hold things such as holiday decorations and often sit unattended for much of the year. If you spot an egg mass, you should scrape it “into a plastic zippered bag filled with hand sanitizer, then zip the bag shut and dispose of it,” according to the USDA.
In Kentucky, you should report sightings to your Department of Forestry regional office or reach the UK at 859-257-7597 or forestry.extension@uky.edu. UK experts also ask that anyone who finds one send a picture with the location to reportapest@uky.edu.
Contributing: Mary Ramsey, The Courier Journal. Reach Marina Johnson at Marina.Johnson@courier-journal.com.
Kentucky
Kentucky vs Missouri score today, UK basketball game updates
Kentucky basketball’s Mark Pope on what team learned after Bellarmine win
Kentucky basketball coach Mark Pope highlights what the Wildcats learned from their 99-85 win over Bellarmine at Rupp Arena.
LEXINGTON — Every time Jaland Lowe steps on the court, be it a practice or a game, is like rolling the dice. Or, as he described it during a news conference Tuesday morning, “it’s a risk” whenever he suits up for Kentucky basketball because of his ongoing shoulder injury.
He originally injured the shoulder during the Blue-White game on Oct. 17. He’s reinjured it twice more since then.
Expected to be the Wildcats’ starting point guard this season, Lowe has yet to appear in the lineup since the regular season tipped off. Each of his seven outings this season has been in a reserve role.
Stream Kentucky vs. Missouri
With the injury hanging over his head like a guillotine that could end his 2025-26 campaign at any moment, Lowe has had to learn to play a new way.
“I don’t know if y’all will notice on TV as much or in person,” he said. “But sometimes when you’re on the court, you can realize I’m not doing some things that I would love to do in the moment, just as a competitor and as a fighter. I can’t do some of those things. I have to pull back sometimes just to not put myself at a huge risk.”
Lowe acknowledged having to rein in his aggressive tendencies is “frustrating” to no end.
“But if I wanna play, I gotta do what I gotta do,” Lowe said.
Lowe and the rest of his teammates aim to help Kentucky bounce back from last week’s loss at Alabama. UK has that opportunity tonight, hosting Missouri at Rupp Arena in the Wildcats’ SEC home opener.
UK (9-5, 0-1 SEC) and Missouri (11-3, 1-0) are unranked in the two major polls (USA TODAY Sports Men’s Basketball Coaches and AP Top 25).
Courier Journal sports reporter Ryan Black and columnist C.L. Brown are at Rupp Arena and will have live updates throughout the game — here and on X, formerly known as Twitter — and complete coverage after. You can follow them on X at @RyanABlack and @clbrownhoops.
Follow along with live updates from today’s game between the Wildcats and Tigers below:
- TV channel: ESPN2
- Livestream: Fubo (free trial)
The game between the Wildcats and Tigers will air nationally on ESPN2.
Authenticated subscribers can access ESPN2 via TV-connected devices or by going to WatchESPN.com or the WatchESPN app.
Those without cable can access ESPN2 via streaming services, with Fubo offering a free trial.
Stream Kentucky vs. Missouri on ESPN2
Betting odds: Kentucky is a 12 ½-point favorite (-112) on DraftKings, which set the over/under at 149 ½ points (-115/-105).
Tom Leach (play-by-play) and Jack Givens (analyst) will have the UK radio network call on 840 AM in Louisville and both 630 AM and 98.1 FM in Lexington.
You can also listen online via UKAthletics.com.
- Oct. 17: Blue-White game (Click here to read takeaways from the intrasquad scrimmage.)
- Oct. 24: exhibition vs. Purdue (Rupp Arena) ∣ SCORE: Kentucky 78, Purdue 65
- Oct. 30: exhibition vs. Georgetown University (Rupp Arena) ∣ SCORE: Georgetown 84, Kentucky 70
- Nov. 4: Nicholls (Rupp Arena) ∣ SCORE: Kentucky 77, Nicholls 51
- Nov. 7: Valparaiso (Rupp Arena) | SCORE: Kentucky 107, Valparaiso 59
- Nov. 11: at Louisville (KFC Yum! Center) | SCORE: Louisville 96, Kentucky 88
- Nov. 14: Eastern Illinois (Rupp Arena) | SCORE: Kentucky 99, Eastern Illinois 53
- Nov. 18: vs. Michigan State (Champions Classic; Madison Square Garden, New York) | SCORE: Michigan State 83, Kentucky 66
- Nov. 21: Loyola University Maryland (Rupp Arena) | SCORE: Kentucky 88, Loyola Maryland 46
- Nov. 26: Tennessee Tech (Rupp Arena) | SCORE: Kentucky 104, Tennessee Tech 54
- Dec. 2: North Carolina (Rupp Arena; ACC/SEC Challenge) | SCORE: North Carolina 67, Kentucky 64
- Dec. 5: vs. Gonzaga (Bridgestone Arena; Nashville) | SCORE: Gonzaga 94, Kentucky 59
- Dec. 9: North Carolina Central (Rupp Arena) | SCORE: Kentucky 103, North Carolina Central 67
- Dec. 13: Indiana (Rupp Arena) | SCORE: Kentucky 72, Indiana 60
- Dec. 20: vs. St. John’s (CBS Sports Classic; State Farm Arena, Atlanta) | SCORE: Kentucky 78, St. John’s 66
- Dec. 23: Bellarmine (Rupp Arena) | SCORE: Kentucky 99, Bellarmine 85
- Jan. 3: at Alabama | SCORE: Alabama 89, Kentucky 74
- Jan. 7: Missouri (Rupp Arena), 7 p.m.
- Jan. 10: Mississippi State (Rupp Arena), 8:30 p.m.
- Jan. 14: at LSU, 7 p.m.
- Jan. 17: at Tennessee, noon
- Jan. 21: Texas (Rupp Arena), 7 p.m.
- Jan. 24: Ole Miss (Rupp Arena), noon
- Jan. 27: at Vanderbilt, 9 p.m.
- Jan. 31: at Arkansas, 6:30 p.m.
- Feb. 4: Oklahoma (Rupp Arena), 9 p.m.
- Feb. 7: Tennessee (Rupp Arena), 8:30 p.m.
- Feb. 14: at Florida, 3 p.m.
- Feb. 17: Georgia (Rupp Arena), 9 p.m.
- Feb. 21: at Auburn, 8:30 p.m.
- Feb. 24: at South Carolina, 7 p.m.
- Feb. 28: Vanderbilt (Rupp Arena), 2 p.m.
- March 3: at Texas A&M, 7 p.m.
- March 7: Florida (Rupp Arena), 4 p.m.
Record: 9-5 (0-1 SEC)
- Denzel Aberdeen (guard, senior)
- Collin Chandler (guard, sophomore)
- Mouhamed Dioubate (forward, junior)
- Brandon Garrison (forward, junior)
- Braydon Hawthorne (forward, freshman)
- Walker Horn (guard, senior)
- Andrija Jelavić (forward, sophomore)
- Jasper Johnson (guard, freshman)
- Jaland Lowe (guard, junior)
- Malachi Moreno (center, freshman)
- Trent Noah (forward, sophomore)
- Otega Oweh (guard, senior)
- Reece Potter (forward, junior)
- Jayden Quaintance (forward, sophomore)
- Zach Tow (forward, senior)
- Kam Williams (guard, sophomore)
Click here to view the Tigers’ complete schedule.
Want to learn the Tigers’ roster?
Click here for player bios and more.
Reach Kentucky men’s basketball and football reporter Ryan Black at rblack@gannett.com and follow him on X at @RyanABlack.
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