Description
Elevation: 2227 ft.
Hungry Mother State Park is a 2900-acre park, encompassing a variety of habitats, including a 108-acre lake as its centerpiece. The park offers approximately 18 miles of trails, camping, picnic areas, and a host of other services and rentals.
Several trails traverse the park’s property and provide scenic views of a lake banked by steep mountain shoreline, mixed deciduous hardwood forest, rhododendron and laurel thickets, hemlock ravines, and grasslands. Wildlife viewing opportunities abound. Several species of wood warblers nest within the park. In the canopy of oak, hickory, and pine trees, listen for the serenades of northern parula, and black-throated blue, black-and-white, and yellow-throated warblers. Neotropical migrants are plentiful in the spring and the fall. The lake attracts a large number of waterfowl and shorebirds, such as common loon, during migration as well.
Other wildlife abounds within this extensive area. Amphibian and reptile enthusiasts will enjoy opportunities to find worm, eastern milk, rough green, and black rat snakes. Gray treefrog, pickerel frog, and bullfrog are among several of the anuran species known to take residence in the park. Salamander diversity can be pretty exciting with twelve species of salamanders recorded within the park, including mountain dusky, spotted, black-bellied, northern slimy, and green salamanders.
The intriguing name of this park comes from early American folklore. Legend says that Indians raided several settlements along the New River, south of what is now the park. Molly Marley and her small child were among survivors taken to the raiders’ camp. Molly and her child eventually escaped, wandering through the wilderness eating berries. Molly finally collapsed at the foot of a mountain and her young child wandered along the creek until she found help. The only words the child could utter were “Hungry Mother.” The search party returned to the base of the mountain only to find Molly Marley dead. That mountain is now called Molly’s Knob and the creek that the young child wandered along is named Hungry Mother Creek. When the park was developed in the 1930s, the creek was dammed to form Hungry Mother Lake.
Wildlife Sightings
Birds Recently Seen at Hungry Mother State Park:
- Red-bellied Woodpecker
- Pileated Woodpecker
- Blue Jay
- American Crow
- Carolina Chickadee
- Tufted Titmouse
- Greater Scaup
- Common Merganser
168 species have been reported at this site to date.
Recent Checklists:
| Date | # of Species | Submitted By |
|---|---|---|
| 3 Feb 2026 | 6 | Robert Riggs |
| 3 Feb 2026 | 6 | Elaine Sharpe |
| 29 Jan 2026 | 3 | Rick Spencer |
| 29 Jan 2026 | 3 | Cathy Spencer |
| 8 Jan 2026 | 13 | Laura Aron |
Amenities & Accessibility Considerations
Site Amenities
- On-site Parking
- Restrooms
- Kayak/Canoe Launch
Other Site Amenities: Bike Trails, Camping/Lodging, Hiking Trails, Interpretive Program/Events, Visitor/Nature Center
Maps & Directions
Physical Address: 2854 Park Blvd., Marion, VA, 24354
Coordinates: 36.882561, -81.533867
From I-81 in Marion, take Exit #47 to US 11 South. Continue south 1.1 miles to SR 16. Turn right and follow SR 16 for 3.8 miles to the park entrance on the left.
Site Information
Managed By:
Access Requirements:
Contact Information:
- Visit Website
Sites, or portions of sites, can be closed periodically for management activities. Please always check the site’s website for additional information prior to visiting.
