A Guided Tour of New Bern

February 27th, 2008

The first Colonial capital of North Carolina, historic New Bern maintains a regular time capsule of building styles in well-maintained houses and buildings. This is a narrated video tour of the coastal port city where the Trent and Neuse Rivers meet and flow into the southern arm of Pamlico Sound.

While in the coastal region, you may want to investigate some of the coastal legends that have accumulated over the centuries, from the storied Lost Colony through ghosts, pirates and even ghost ships, to a Dismal Swamp said to be home to a tragic Lady of the Lake.

To begin planning your trip to the beautiful and storied North Carolina coast, check out some of the offered information and links at CoastalGuide: New Bern.

NC Ghost Light Caught On Film

February 13th, 2008

Yet another entry in the storehouse of North Carolina’s famous ghosts, goblins and odd phenomena offerings, the Pactolus Ghost on video! Caution to the faint-hearted (and those who avoid such things on general principles please turn the sound OFF), this video contains strong language and some really scary stuff…

Coverage of some of our other famous ghosts can be found in the following posts:

Hauntings: The Brown Mountain Lights

Hauntings: Crystal Coast’s Most Famous Ghost

Enjoy!

Hauntings: The Brown Mountain Lights

October 22nd, 2007
BMsign

In the late autumn of the year the forest’s umbrella of summer green turns ten shades of red and as many hues of yellow - with some impossible combinations in between. As they fall to blanket the ground and reveal bare, spiny branches, the view opens up to reconnect the mountain earth with the sky. Right around Halloween and into November a mysterious phenomenon draws hundreds of watchers hoping to see some ghosts.

Mentioned in Cherokee legends originating as long as 800 years ago, the mysterious Brown Mountain Lights have dazzled watchers by zipping and dancing through Linville Gorge and along the Brown Mountain ridge near Morganton in Burke County, North Carolina.

They’ve been described as glowing balls of fire, bursting skyrockets, or pale, white ‘bubbles’. They”ve been seen to drift, fade and brighten, whirl like pinwheels, then dart away playfully. A short hike from a parking area along a gravel Forest Service is Wisemans View in the Pisgah National Forest.

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