We did the Bourbon Trail after the rally in Goshen, and loved it, and loved Kentucky! We stayed at Taylorsville State Park, because looking at a map of the trail it seemed to be centrally located, and we prefer staying at state or federal campground. We really enjoyed ourselves while there, not only the distilleries, but at least that area of the state in general. The previous post with the link is what we used while we were down there. I couldn't tell you what routes we used while we were down there, we let the GPS take us, and didn't regret it! The only bad thing was that we didn't really make any time from one location to the next, as it took us on some pretty windy roads, that in my opinion were paved goat trails! BUT we didn't mind as we were in no real hurry, and the scenery was to die for!!! Some of the roads were basically one curve after the other, and one lane with no shoulders...just a strip of grass before you were in the ditch. Just went slow and enjoyed the route less travelled.
The Bourbon Trail itself is 10 distilleries, and if you get a "passport" and get it stamped at each distillery, you get a free "T" shirt. You can mail it to them & they'll return the passport with your T shirt, or they have places where you can go & get it before you leave the area. Each distillery charges for a tour (I think the most was $20.00) which takes about an hour, and includes samples, and it's their best stuff. They will give you 3 sometimes 4 samples & I don't think that the total amount amounts to over a shot. At Jim Beam (Knob Hill), if you want, you can bottle your own bottle of Knob Hill's single barrel bourbon for $50.00, and for an extra $10.00 you can get it laser engraved with what you want & the date. Plus you can put your thumb print in the wax seal. We didn't take a tour of all 10 distilleries, because to be honest they were all basically the same, except for their bourbon. It took us about 3 days to hit all of them.
We would like to go back to Kentucky sometime in the future, and hit some more distilleries, but concentrate more on museums & history stuff. If you decide to stay at Taylorsville Lake State Park, I'd recommend getting reservations. We didn't and wanted to stay a day or two longer, but couldn't unless we moved sites, which we decided not to do.
Enjoy, we sure did!!!