- Big Tom: Legend and Reality
- Wreck Diving: Battle of the Atlantic
- Gas Prices Dent NC Tourism
- A North Carolina 4th of July
- Bele Chere’s 30th Year and Cape Fear Blues
- On Memorial Day: NC’s Rich Military History
- NC’s Great Summer Camps
- Spring LEAF Festival May 9-11
- When Your Frisbee Dog Gets Old…
- Good Even, M’Lords and Ladies!
- Adventure
- Agriculture
- Architecture
- Art
- Autumn Leaves
- Bears
- Biking
- Blue Ridge
- Blue Ridge Parkway
- Carolina Coast
- Carolina History
- Civil War
- Development
- Education
- Family Activities
- Family Events
- Festivals
- Football
- Furniture Making
- Gardens
- Ghost Stories
- Green Living
- Haunted Trails
- Hiking
- Holidays
- Lakes
- Lighthouses
- Log Homes
- Military
- Museums
- Music
- NASCAR
- Native Legends
- Nature
- NC Land
- NC Living
- NC Trails
- Night Life
- North Carolina
- Outer Banks
- Parkway Drives
- Regional Crafts
- Resorts
- Restaurants
- Ski Resorts
- Snow Tubing
- Snowboarding
- Sports
- Summer Camps
- Timber Frame
- Tourism
- Vacation Homes
- Wildlife
- Wineries
- Winter Sports
Spring LEAF Festival May 9-11
April 30th, 2008
Biannual Black Mountain Tradition

It’s not too late to get your tickets for the 2008 spring Lake Eden Arts Festival, at beautiful Lake Eden in Black Mountain. Word has it that vehicle camping permits are all sold out, but there are still tent permits available as well as weekend and day tickets for those who don’t mind staying at one of the many great hotels and motels in the Black Mountain and Asheville environs.
LEAF holds its festivals every spring and fall (this year the autumn festival will be October 17-19) to showcase the LEAF in Schools and Streets arts mentoring projects for youth, its LEAF International music collaborations from Panama, Guatemala, Rwanda, Bequia and Mexico, and dozens of great, culturally significant musical groups, individuals and artists from everywhere.
This year there will be more than 40 Healing Arts Workshops during the day, featuring Yoga and Tai Chi, Folk Art, Juried Handicrafts, a national $1,000 Poetry SLAM, a children’s village with clowns, jugglers, puppeteers, games, stories and art projects. There are joyful parades, jam sessions, circus arts and zipline fun out over the lake.
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Top 25 Reasons to Visit NC - 4
March 13th, 2008
Part 4: Reasons 16 - 25
16. Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill Cultural Feast

The cultural and educational offerings in the State Capital area will appeal to even the most sophisticated of visitors. Excellent history and natural science museums, the North Carolina Symphony, the North Carolina Museum of Art, Duke Gardens at Duke University and more great outings can keep interested visitors busy for weeks!
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Top 25 Reasons to Visit NC - 3
March 12th, 2008
Part 3: Reasons 11 - 15
Moving toward the east, there are more great reasons to consider North Carolina’s abundant offerings for family fun when planning getaways and vacations.

From the very top of Clingman’s Dome near the Tennessee border to the sand dunes at Jockey’s Ridge State Park on the strand of the Outer Banks, North Carolina’s 925-mile long Mountains-to-Sea Trail offers an adventurous way to explore the state’s natural treasures and human wonders. This is an adventure a visitor can embrace in small chunks or in an extended all at once while experiencing the best of NC’s towns and cities, rural agritourism initiatives and natural preserves.
Homegrown and Handmade
January 29th, 2008
NC’s Arts and Agriculture Trails

There is much more to North Carolina’s agritourism movement than just what was reported in Green Dreams, Green Schemes. There is also an alliance between the North Carolina Arts Council and the NC Cooperative Extension service called HomegrownHandmade that has mapped out “Art Roads” and “Farm Trails” in the foothills, piedmont and coastal regions that allow visitors to travel along back roads, sample fresh goat cheese and scuppernong wines, visit artists’ studios and sidewalk cafes in charming little towns. Each trail is unique, so check the links below of some HomegrownHandmade trails (their titles sort of describe the gist of what’s to see and do), and then explore at the pace you like best!
Filed under NC Trails, Wineries, Agriculture, Carolina History, Family Activities, Art, Regional Crafts, Education, North Carolina | Comment (0)January NC Concerts & Events
January 7th, 2008
Cultural life in North Carolina is rich and very diverse, with something for everyone living in the state, visiting, or just passing through. Below is an overview of upcoming concert events - for the musically inclined - at our many excellent venues throughout the state.
Proudly presented first is the January schedule of events for our wonderful, world-class North Carolina symphony, based in Raleigh.
Filed under Night Life, Resorts, Art, Music, Festivals, North Carolina | Comment (0)Going Really, Really Green
December 10th, 2007
The Ultimate in Vine-Covered Cottages

When my daughter was earning her theater technical degree at UNCA, she designed a set for a rather bizarre theatrical production of “Hansel and Gretel at Auschwitz” or something like that, which I never saw and didn’t really want to see. She brought home the ugliest of creepy metal trees made out of welded rebar and promptly installed it out by the footed bathtub from her production of “Hair,” which we now use as the final hole for the top nine disc golf course.
Now, we live in a lovely chestnut cabin on some seriously ‘graded’ acreage next to the Pisgah National Forest. So it’s not hard to imagine that I’ve no particular use for an ugly rebar tree. Yet that was six years ago, and today that ugly metal tree is one of my favorite lawn sculptures. The English ivy she planted around the base has grown up to cover the trunk in variegated dark and light green lushness. Wild pink roses and Japanese honeysuckle now compete for sunlight over the entire top and branches, trailing almost to the ground in places and spectacular in bloom.
So I’m not all that adverse to ideas about how to combine modern, recycled materials and technology with real natural greenery and flowers to make interesting homescapes. The eastern wall of this cabin is half rock, and when we moved in it was covered in ivy. Made for a really pretty picture, but we had to pull it all down when we discovered it was rotting the siding, providing shelter for a variety of stinging pests, and crumbling the rocks.
Filed under Green Living, Nature, Log Homes, Gardens, Art | Comment (0)A Family-Oriented Gold Mine of Knowledge
September 25th, 2007
Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill Area

Visitors to North Carolina’s capital city of Raleigh, or to the Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill triangle have a number of excellent museums to explore. Whether your family’s interests tend toward great works of art, natural science, wildlife and ecology or history, the area has institutions that offer just what you want to see or know.
The North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences in Raleigh is free to the public and offers a unique view of the world through the lens of North Carolina’s diverse geography, geology, plants and animals. Beginning on October 27and running through March 2, 2008, the museum will be hosting an innovative dinosaur exhibit featuring a 60-food model of an apatosaurus, a full-sized T. Rex skeleton as well as a robotic version that boasts of being the most accurate three-dimensional representation of a dinosaur in motion ever created.
Filed under Education, Family Activities, Gardens, Regional Crafts, Art, Museums, North Carolina | Comment (1)25th Lake Eden Arts Festival
August 31st, 2007
Black Mountain

The autumn Lake Eden Arts Festival at Camp Rockmont in Black Mountain is scheduled for October 19, 20 and 21 at the very height of fall leaf-looker season in the mountains. Marking its 25th festival, the lineup this year is spectacular.
LEAF has become a regular WNC institution with two festivals a year, spring and fall. There are numerous artists displaying their work, plenty of fun activities for children and adults, lots of live music day and night, and many gifted performers. The LEAF sponsors offer programs internationally and in inner cities here in the U.S. that match children with instruments and residency mentors, bringing some of the best from Guatamala, Rwanda, Panama and elsewhere to show off their talents during the festivals.

The setting is beautiful Lake Eden surrounded by mountains, and families can purchase day-tickets, weekend tickets and the “weekend-plus” passes that cover 3.5 days and 3 nights of overnight camping at any of several fine lakeside camping areas.
Filed under Art, Music, Family Events, Autumn Leaves, Festivals | Comments (2)