Image credit: The Center for Land Use Interpretation; Howe Caverns
Secret Caverns — Central Bridge, New York
Image credit: R.S. Moreland
Located right next door to Howe Caverns, Secret Caverns was discovered by two cows (no joke) almost 100 years ago. In addition to being home to a spectacular 100-foot underground waterfall, the caverns are also famous for their entrance, a lodge hand-painted by a team of local artists featuring inventive bat art.
Penn’s Cave – Centre Hall, Pennsylvania
Image credit: Itinerant Wanderer
“America’s Only All Water Cavern” offers a one-hour tour by motorboat on an underground stream.
Luray Caverns — Luray, Virginia
Image credit: The Center for Land Use Interpretation
CLUI’s comprehensive database tells us that this tourist cave has a “stalacpipe organ, an instrument with padded hammers that strike individual stalactites, generating an unusual and wondrous sound.”
Mystic Caverns – Harrison, Arkansas
Image credit: The Center for Land Use Interpretation; Mystic Caverns
A part of the nearby Dogpatch resort (a theme park in the style of the Li’l Abner comic strip), Mystic Caverns and the adjacent Crystal Dome Cavern are pretty typical of the 40 or so southern “show caves” listed by the National Caves Association as open to the public, complete with a gift shop chock full of foraged gemstones, pipe handrails, and a Christian aura.
Inner Space Cavern — Georgetown, Texas
Image credit: Al Braden;
Just outside of Austin and accessed by vintage cable car, this 80,000-year-old cavern was discovered by a Texas Highway Department drilling team 50 years ago during construction of a large freeway overpass. Today, “stalactites and stalagmites surround you from every angle and formations such as the ‘Flowing Stone of Time’ and the ‘Lake of the Moon’ bring to life the pages of every history book you’ve ever read about the early days of Mother Earth.”
Bridal Cave — Camdenton, Missouri
Image credit: Bridal Cave and Thunder Mountain Park
Rated as one of the most scenic caves in America, this magnificent natural wonderland makes for an unconventional underground wedding ceremony. Local folklore tells that a legendary Osage Indian wedding ceremony was held in the cave in the early 1800s. Since then, over 2100 couples from around the world have exchanged vows in the stalactite-adorned Bridal Chapel.
Meramec Caverns — 55 miles southwest of St Louis, Missouri
Image credit: The Center for Land Use Interpretation
As CLUI’s Land Use Database explains, “this highly developed cave has an underground ballroom, and an underground theater with a patriotic son-et-lumière show, in which an American flag is projected onto a curtain of stalagtites.” Apparently, the underground gift shop is not to be missed.
Fantastic Caverns — Springfield, Missouri
Image credit: The Center for Land Use Interpretation
America’s only Ride-Through Cave, Fantastic Caverns’ website tells us that “because the beauty of the caverns is vulnerable, the Cave is toured in Jeep-drawn trams. Since you ride all of the way through, you experience the magnitude, the stillness, and the splendor of Fantastic Caverns while preserving its natural features.”
Carlsbad Caverns — 27 miles south of Carlsbad, New Mexico
Image credit: CLUI
Part of a major cave system, Carlsbad Caverns is most known for its bat amphitheater, where at certain times of the year, hundreds of thousands of bats rush out of the cave at once. The amphitheater is built directly under this aperture, so tourists can witness this phenomenon. Not to miss: the old-school View-Masters for sale and an underground lunchroom.