- 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
Top 25 Reasons to Visit NC
March 11th, 2008
There are literally hundreds of great places to go and things to do in beautiful North Carolina, but for this series I’m just going to highlight 25 of the best reasons to visit. Starting in the lush mountains of the west and meandering through the state toward the storied Outer Banks, this quick tour of our state offers something for everyone!
Part 1: Reasons 1 - 5
1. Great Smoky Mountains National Park

The most visited of America’s National Parks, the Great Smoky Mountains hosts more than 9 million people a year on its Blue Ridge Parkway and in its forests, creeks, coves and hollows along 900 miles of trails. Straddling the Tennessee-North Carolina boarder, the park is home to one of the most diverse ecosystems on the planet. The Great Smoky Mountains National Park is now an International Biosphere Reserve and World Heritage site.
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Hauntings: The Brown Mountain Lights
October 22nd, 2007

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.
Filed under Haunted Trails, Ghost Stories, Native Legends, Carolina History, Family Activities, Autumn Leaves, Parkway Drives, North Carolina | Comments (5)