- 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
A North Carolina 4th of July
June 18th, 2008

If your family is wondering where to go and what to do to celebrate Independence Day this year, consider some of the great events North Carolina has on offer, from the mountains to the piedmont to the coast, and everywhere in between!
For instance, Fort Bragg near Fayetteville is hosting Operation Celebrate Freedom VI on the Main Post Parade Field on base. Wynonna Judd and Dakota Rain, the Golden Knights Parachute Team and other musical guests will entertain the crowd. There will be plenty of food and drinks, and camping is allowed. The fireworks are spectacular every year at this event, almost as great as I remember on the Potomac in DC in my youth! The event is free and open to the public, the contact number is 910-396-9126.
If you’re on the coast near Southport/Oak Island in the Cape Fear area you’ll want to make plans to spend the day and evening in Southport, where there will be a car show on Bay Street in front of the Garrison House and all-day arts and crafts shows at Franklin Square Park and in the Franklin Square Gallery. Concessions, water stations and comfort stations will be along Howe Street, and on the Waterfront Stage there will be all-day stage entertainment even as the Decorated Boat Flotilla sails past the Southport Waterfront. Stay on your blanket for the wonderful fireworks at 9 pm!
Filed under Family Activities, Holidays, Carolina Coast, Blue Ridge, Regional Crafts, Festivals, Family Events, North Carolina | Comment (0)NC’s Great Summer Camps
May 12th, 2008
…for Boys and Girls

Many families who consider North Carolina to be the bet vacation spot in the nation will be thinking right about now, what plans can we make for the kids this summer? A fine answer to this question is to book those kids at one of NC’s great summer camps, to coincide with a full family vacation to any of NC’s wonderful summer festivals and events when the camp period is over!
There are literally hundreds of choices, and camps located in every region of the state offering a regular smorgasbord of activities and skills to learn and adventures to enjoy for kids of all abilities and ages. There are some good web sources listed below this post, where I’ll highlight a few of North Carolina’s best special-purpose camps.

Teen Overnight Surf Camp in Wrightsville Beach. Money Magazine named the southern NC coast as one of the top vacation spots in North America. The week-long overnight camps offer instruction in the art of surfing the Outer Banks’ gentle waves, improving your surfing skills, and exploring different coastal ecosystems while you’re at it! Enrollees stay in air conditioned suites on the campus of UNC-Wilmington and the staff of professional instructors are well qualified to deal with both beginner and intermediate surfers. The $1495/week fee includes lodging on campus, meals, 24-hour adult supervision, shuttle transportation from Wilmington’s airport, equipment, instruction with a 3-1 camper to instructor ratio, daily transportation to the beaches, admission and private tour of the Fort Fisher Aquarium, surfboard factory tour and extras.
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Ski NC: What’s New This Season
December 3rd, 2007

North Carolina gets a lot of tourists, making tourism one of the largest industries in the state. Western NC gets 3 million visitors at the Great Smoky Mountains National Park and even more along the Blue Ridge Parkway. Between NASCAR, the Outer Banks, and other attractions all over the state, tourism supplies ~$15.5 billion and nearly 200,000 jobs to the North Carolina economy, along with about $2.5 billion in tax revenues.
But not all of North Carolina’s tourism happens in the beautiful spring, summer or fall. Our mountainous western region hosts many excellent - even world class - ski resorts who do a brisk business at high elevations all winter long!
Ski North Carolina keeps a constantly updated skiing news and conditions report going, along with links to the area resorts and lots of information and advertisements for condos, chalets and other lodging options at or near all the best slopes.
Filed under Snowboarding, Snow Tubing, Tourism, Ski Resorts, Winter Sports, Blue Ridge, Family Activities, North Carolina | Comment (0)More Bear Stories: Facts and Tall Tales
November 26th, 2007
Continuing with the theme of North Carolina’s Black Bear Population, it’s time for some tales tall and small about bears. Because these magnificent creatures are a considerable presence in much of North Carolina, there’s quite a few such tales. Seems like everyone you meet here has at least one tale to tell, whether in the rugged mountains or on the fertile piedmont, in the countryside, towns, cities and suburbs.

People who choose to live in the countryside are bound to encounter bears, and most are no worse for the experience. Yet as the countryside becomes ever more populated, the number of bear encounters in more urban settings rises as well. The last installment provided some good links to information about the habits and habitats of NC’s considerable bear population, good to keep in mind whether you’re living in North Carolina or just visiting.
Bears are smart critters. They can become expert at cracking “bearproof” latches on coolers, cars and trucks door handles, garbage bins and dumpster lids to avail themselves of food. They readily learn to beg, pretty much like dogs do. They can put up some impressively aggressive bluffing in order to gain access to golf carts, campsites and your dog’s food. They’ve been known to walk right into cabins, garages, pubs, restaurants and even resort hotels, making themselves right at home.
Filed under Wildlife, Bears, NC Trails, Carolina History, Blue Ridge, Education, North Carolina | Comment (0)Bear Stories: NC’s Black Bears
November 19th, 2007

Black bears inhabit the North Carolina highlands, rather famously. Even though by census the state has fewer bears [11,000] than Pennsylvania [15,000] or Minnesota [30,000], frequent encounters with campers in the parks and forests are reported, and people who live in the mountains are often familiar with the bears for whom their trash, fruit trees and berry thickets have been claimed as territory.
The Washington Post reported on November 14th that researchers at the Smithsonian Institute in D.C. have used motion-sensitive cameras to photograph wildlife along a segment of the Appalachian Trail in Maryland, Virginia and West Virginia. The 1,900 pictures showed wild horses, domestic dogs, deer and bear cubs wandering the trail at night when no one was watching. This project didn’t include the North Carolina sections of the trail, but the researchers were surprised by the number of bears recorded nonetheless. I’d suspect that if they had put cameras along North Carolina sections, there would have been a lot more bear sightings.
Filed under Wildlife, Bears, Hiking, NC Living, Education, Blue Ridge | Comment (1)North Carolina’s Traditional Music Trail
November 13th, 2007

In the mountain hollows and valleys, along piedmont country roads the traditional music lover can find a variety of music styles performed just about any weekend by old-timers and new-timers along the Music Trail. From ever-popular bluegrass banjo-pickin’ and grinnin’ to fierce fiddling the devil himself can’t catch, from gospel singing to the good ol’ belly-up blues, traditional music in North Carolina still being traditional just about everywhere you look.
There are many outdoor festivals all summer and through the fall, but the music doesn’t stop when the weather gets cold. The Blue Ridge Music Trails website offers a searchable database of events from the southern mountain counties of North Carolina all the way up the blue ridge through Virginia identified by folklife fieldworkers in the region.
The styles of music and dance came to the region along with the settlers moving west to the mountains and beyond via the great Valley Road. It began with the Germans, followed by English, Scotch-Irish, French, Irish, and Welsh settlers and African American slaves. The fiddles came from Europe in the late 18th century, the banjos came from west Africa. The eclectic mix of people spawned a multicultural breed of musicians not shy of borrowing tunes and styles, and by the Civil War the musicians were learning from the rest of the south and sometimes from northern musicians too.
Filed under Carolina History, NC Trails, Family Activities, Blue Ridge, Music, North Carolina | Comment (0)The Simple Joy of Hiking
October 2nd, 2007

This first week of October is shaping up to be absolutely glorious in my Blue Ridge neck of the woods. Mid to high 70s in crisp, absurdly clear air during the day, low 50s to high 40s at night. Only a few leaves are turning - the sourwoods and sumacs are red-red and the beeches are already turning yellow, the high ridge line is showing signs of color too.
In the Black Mountain/Montreat/ Ridgecrest area there are a number of well-maintained trails into the high country and Mount Mitchell, at 6,684 feet the tallest mountain east of the Mississippi. These include the Old Toll Road cinder trail to Camp Alice that rises at a mellow 7% grade along the old Mount Mitchell Railway bed from just above Black Mountain, the more challenging Ridgecrest Trail that begins near the Baptist Convention Center at Ridgecrest in the Swannanoa Gap, and the Old Graphite Trail that begins at Mill Creek in the tiny settlement of Graphite at the base of the continental divide 5 miles from Old Fort.
All of these trails are convenient to the Inn on Mill Creek “Nature Lover’s Bed and Breakfast” about halfway up the mountain between Graphite and Ridgecrest. There is no better word to describe this place than “incredible.” When you wake up on a morning like this - in a place like this - the first thing that enters your mind is “yet another beautiful day!” Sometimes you’ve just got to lace up the hiking boots and head for the forest.
Filed under Family Activities, Blue Ridge, North Carolina | Comments (15)