Winter Times 2012

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YOUR 2012-13 WINTER GUIDE TO

times

NORTH CAROLINA’S HIGH COUNTRY

Hit the Slopes Choose & Cut Entertainment Shopping Dining

Winter in the

MOUNTAINS

FREE www.MountainTimes.com



THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

2012

Sleds-Tubes

Fleece-Softshells

Sweaters-Vests

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Accessories

Mens or Womens

Mens or Womens

Wigwam Sirocco Ski Socks

Gordini “Heat” Ski Gloves

$8.99 pr

$9.99 pr

Limit 4 pr Reg $11.95

Limit 4 pr Reg $20

While supplies Last No Rainchecks Expires 2/15/13

While supplies Last No Rainchecks Expires 2/15/13

Unisex

Scott Duel Ski Goggles

Hot Hands Handwarmer 2 Packs

$19.99 pr

$.60 each

Limit 2 pr Reg $50

Limit 6 pr Reg $.99

While supplies Last No Rainchecks Expires 2/15/13

While supplies Last No Rainchecks Expires 2/15/13

Terramar Mens Microtherm tops or bottoms Womens Authentic tops or bottoms

Arctix Ski Bibs

$14.99 each piece

$29.99

Limit 4 Reg to $25

Mens or Womens

youth sizes $10.99

Reg $50

While supplies Last No Rainchecks Expires 2/15/13

While supplies Last No Rainchecks Expires 2/15/13

FREE FLEECE JACKET WITH PURCHASE OF ANY COAT $124.88 OR MORE $40 VALUE Get free fleece jacket with any reg or sale price coat purchase $99 or more While Supplies Last No Rainchecks Expires 2/15/13

Winter Boots from $29.99

Visit our ski website to see our full selection with 2 day shipping throughout the southeast

BOONE MALL 1180 Blowing Rock Road 828-262-1112 Mon-Sat 10-9 Sun 12:30-5:30

BASICSKIWEAR.com WINTER GEAR AT OFF THE MOUNTAIN PRICES


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THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

2012

TABLE OF CONTENTS Advertising Index..............................................................89 Appalachian Ski Mountain ...............................................22 ASU Performing Arts Series .............................................66 Art Galleries ......................................................................61 Beech Mountain Resort ...................................................30 Black Squirrel Winter........................................................78 The Blowing Rock ............................................................53 Blowing Rock Art & History Museum ..............................64 Blowing Rock Winterfest..................................................71 Blue Ridge Parkway .........................................................38 Brown Mountain Lights ....................................................56 Calendar............................................................................80 Caving ...............................................................................40 Chambers of Commerce ....................................................7 Choose & Cut....................................................................58 Emergency Numbers ..........................................................5 Fishing...............................................................................45 Fitness...............................................................................75

Frescoes ...........................................................................65 General Stores ..................................................................49 Grandfather Mountain ......................................................54 Hawksnest Resort ............................................................25 High Country Host ..............................................................6 Hiking ................................................................................44 Restaurants ......................................................................82 Ski Shops ..........................................................................35 Snow-tubing .....................................................................36 Snowshoeing ....................................................................33 Spas ..................................................................................76 Stargazing .........................................................................52 Sugar Mountain Resort ....................................................28 Sugar Mountain Winterfest ..............................................68 Theater ..............................................................................67 Towns & Communities ........................................................8 Wineries ............................................................................50 Ziplines..............................................................................42

Jacob Swanger, a freshman at Appalachian State University from Apex, catches air on campus during an October snowstorm. PHOTO BY ANNA OAKES


THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

2012

Seasons Greetings

W

hat do snowsports snowsports, black squirrels squirrels, Maya Angelou and ziplines have in common? For starters, they all can be found in this year’s Winter Times, your winter guide to North Carolina’s High Country. If you can find another correlation, please let us know. In the meantime, flip through the following pages, where you’ll find valuable information on practically everything to do during a High Country winter. And since new events are always cropping up, just

like confl icting weather forecasts, conflicting forecasts visit a local newsnews stand and pick up a copy of The Mountain Times, the area’s “what’s happening” newspaper. There you’ll find up-to-date information on all goings-on, including a weekly ski column that covers all things snowsports. Till next time, enjoy, and happy winter! Sincerely, Frank Ruggiero Editor The Mountain Times

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2012 Winter Times Staff Gene Fowler Jr. Publisher Frank Ruggiero Editor Charlie Price Advertising Director Johnny Hayes Layout Editor

#

NUMB ERS O F N O T E

Law Enforcement Watauga County

Police Department (336) 246-9410

Avery County

#

Blowing Rock Hospital (Blowing Rock) (828) 295-3136 Cannon Memorial Hospital (Linville) (828) 737-7000

Watauga County Sheriff’s Office (828) 264-3761

Avery County Sheriff’s Office (828) 733-2071

Boone Police Department (828) 268-6900

Banner Elk Police Department (828) 898-4300

Blowing Rock Police Department (828) 295-5210

Elk Park Police Department (828) 733-9573

FastMed Urgent Care (Boone) (828) 265-7146

Newland Police Department (828) 733-2024

Animal Control

Appalachian Regional Healthcare System Police (828) 262-4168 Appalachian State Police Department (828) 262-2150

Ashe County Ashe County Sheriff’s Office (336) 846-5633 Jefferson Police Department (336) 846-5529 West Jefferson

Ashe Memorial Hospital (Jefferson) (336) 846-7101

Seven Devils Police Department (828) 963-6760

Watauga County Animal Control (828) 262-1672

Sugar Mountain Police Department (828) 898-4349

Watauga Humane Society (828) 264-7865

Beech Mountain Police Department (828) 387-2342

Health Care Watauga Medical Center (Boone) (828) 262-4100

Jennifer Canosa Graphics Manager Andy Gainey Circulation Manager Steve Behr, Sam Calhoun, Jesse Campbell, Jeff Eason, Matt Grimley, Matthew Hundley, Laura Minnich, Kellen Moore, Molly Moore, Anna Oakes, Adam Orr, Heather Samudio, Jamie Shell, Sandy Shook and Kate Smith Writers Mark Mitchell, Deck Moser, Radd Nesbit, Lisa Randolph and Rick Tobin Sales Kelsey Steller, Sarah Becky Hutchins, Meleah Petty Graphics 474 Industrial Park Drive Boone, North Carolina 28607 (828) 264-6397 • mtfrontdesk@mountaintimes.com

www.mountaintimes.com A publication of Mountain Times Publications & Jones Media, Inc., Greeneville, Tenn.

On the front: A group of young skiers makes tracks at Sugar Mountain Resort. PHOTO BY TODD BUSH, COURTESY OF SUGAR MOUNTAIN RESORT


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THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

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The Host with the Most

High Country Host makes vacations easy BY MOLLY MOORE

Last year, more than 20,000 visitors stepped through the doors of the High Country Host’s Visitor Information Center in Boone. The bricks-and-mortar building is just one component of the tourism organization’s outreach efforts, efforts that are valuable to both visitors and locals in a region where tourism generated $445.71 million and 4,660 jobs last year. High Country Host is a membership organization comprised of businesses in Allegheny, Ashe, Avery, Mitchell, Watauga and Wilkes counties. Founded in 1980, the organization is a hub of regional information. “When people come up here, they don’t recognize county lines,” said High Country Host marketing director Candice Cook. Instead of searching for visitor information at a number of separate county and town offices, prospective travelers can visit the Host’s expansive website, request a vacation guide or stop by the visitor center to get information about recreation opportunities in all six High Country counties. International tourists often find out about the High Country region through the Host’s website, which saw more than 600,000 unique visitors last year. But a robust online presence can’t replace a friendly ambassador with a physical map. “A lot of folks just prefer looking someone in the eyeballs as opposed to on the computer,” said J.P. Greene, who greets visitors to center. Most people are looking for directions or news about the week’s festivals or arts events, he said, though questions about children’s activities, suggested hikes and favorite local restaurants are quick to follow. Greene also finds that a number of guests are interested Boone’s famous namesake. Those inquiring minds have come to the right place — Greene is proud to be Daniel Boone’s sixth-great-grandnephew and readily shares his knowledge of his adventurous ancestor with curious visitors. In addition to being a thorough re-

source for tourists, High Country Host’s cooperative model benefits the region’s independent businesses. “Because we’re all working together, we can promote ourselves better,” Cook said. It’s unlikely that a family-run bed-andbreakfast could purchase advertising space in a magazine, such as Southern Living, Cook said, but the Host is able to showcase the region’s recreation value to larger audiences. In January, for example, a tour bus full of bus tour professionals will spend three days exploring the High Country’s diverse offerings. “Every day, I learn something new about this area,” Cook said. Though she grew up in Valle Crucis, working with High Country Host constantly exposes her to creative businesses and cultural events that she was previously unaware of. Her goal? To share those discoveries with the world. Get personal assistance, maps and weather reports at the Visitor Information Center, located at 1700 Blowing Rock Road in Boone. Hours of operations are 9 to a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday and 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Sundays. For more information, call (828) 2641299, or visit High Country Host online at highcountryhost.com.

At the High Country Host Visitor Information Center in Boone, J.P. Greene thoughtfully answers visitors’ questions and helps direct guests toward their destinations. PHOTO BY MOLLY MOORE

A Host of Information Visiting the High Country for the first time this winter? High Country Host offers these don’t-miss tips: Appalachian Ski Mountain is a perfect location for new skiers to gain skills and confidence, and the mountain also offers ice skating Families can enjoy a warm, indoor adventure at Mystery Hill, an amusement science center where even gravity behaves unusually. In addition to premiere skiing at the resort, the town of Beech Mountain offers a free sledding hill. Because Beech

Mountain is the Eastern United States’ highest town, snow conditions are often favorable. Don’t want to carry your sled uphill? Check out Hawksnest’s snow tubing course, where a magic carpet ride takes you and your tube to the top. Snowshoes and cross-country skis are excellent ways to take in the Blue Ridge Parkway’s winter wonderland. When the leaves drop, a whole new landscape is revealed. Need to warm up indoors? Check out the annual Winterfest Chili Cook-Off, or visit a local winery for a cozy retreat. After dinner, take a scenic drive through Chetola’s Festival of Lights or Linville Land Harbor Lights to catch the holiday spirit.


THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

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High Country Chambers of Commerce ASHE COUNTY CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

BANNER ELK CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

BLOWING ROCK CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

Ashe County, home to the Jeffersons (West Jefferson and Jefferson, that is), is just about as far as you can go in the High Country before entering Southwestern Virginia. The county is considered, in many respects, “a step back in time” to the way the Appalachian Mountains used to be. The chamber can direct travelers through the scenic and sparsely populated area of Christmas tree farms and rugged mountain landscapes, while offering a wide selection of brochures and maps.

Located in the heart of town, the Banner Elk Chamber of Commerce promotes the area as a unique place to live in, work and visit. Information on area lodging, dining, shopping and more is available Monday through Saturday, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., and all the time by clicking to www.bannerelk.org.

Blowing Rock is considered one of the crown jewels of the Blue Ridge. Its chamber of commerce knows this tight-knit community as no one else, and its representatives are always willing to share this knowledge with visitors. Aside from general information, lists of camping and fishing sites, and brochures, the Blowing Rock Chamber of Commerce also has a generous stock of menus from the town’s many eateries.

1 N. Jefferson Ave., Suite C P.O. Box 31 West Jefferson, N.C. 28694 (336) 846-9550 ashechamber@skybest.com www.ashechamber.com

100 W. Main St. Banner Elk, N.C. 28604 (828) 898-8395 bechamber@skybest.com www.bannerelk.org

132 Park Ave. Blowing Rock, N.C. 28605 (800) 295-7851 info@blowingrock.com www.blowingrockncchamber.com

BEECH MOUNTAIN CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

AVERY COUNTY CHAMBER OF COMMERCE The Avery County Chamber of Commerce Visitor Center is conveniently located in the Shoppes at Tynecastle at the intersection of N.C. 105 and 184. The center offers information on lodging, dining, attractions, shopping and other businesses in Avery County. The friendly, knowledgeable staff is on duty Monday through Saturday, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. 4501 Tynecastle Highway, No. 2 Banner Elk, N.C. 28604 (828) 898-5605 chamber@averycounty.com www.averycounty.com

Whether you’re looking for a North Carolina mountain vacation full of adventure, or just a few days to relax and breathe the fresh mountain air, Beech Mountain – at an elevation of 5,506 – will give your soul something to smile about. The area offers plenty of activities and attractions for the whole family to enjoy, but also plenty of peace and quiet for a relaxing and rejuvenating time. The Beech Mountain Chamber of Commerce is here to help. 403-A Beech Mountain Parkway, Beech Mountain, N.C. 28604 Phone: (828) 387-9283 or (800) 468-5506 chamber@beechmtn.com www.beechmountainchamber.com

Stay Warm, Win Prizes With a new photo contest, Winter Times and High Country Host are teaming up to keep your winters warm and summers fun. The rules are simple, and anyone can enter. Just “like” High Country Host on Facebook (www. facebook.com/thehighcountryhost) and post the best photo of you and yours staying warm during a High Country winter, December through March, and you’re eligible to win a High Country summer vacation package. Plus, your photo will appear in next year’s Winter Times. For more information, contact High Country Host marketing director Candice Cook at (828) 264-1299 or email candice@highcountryhost.com. Till then, stay warm! A bundled-up Claire Houck, of Fleetwood, winterizes her playhouse for the colder months. PHOTO COURTESY OF DEVON HOUCK

BOONE AREA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE The Boone Area Chamber of Commerce is one of the High Country’s most active, with both a dedicated membership and an overall commitment to the betterment of the area as both a vacation destination and business hub. Now at a new location in downtown Boone on King Street, the chamber is an ideal place to stop for information on area activities, brochures and maps of the community. 870 W. King St., Suite A, Boone, N.C. 28607 (828) 264-2225 info@boonechamber.com www.boonechamber.com


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THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

Our Towns T

hroughout the High Country, the flavor of the winter season is accented and celebrated by the municipalities that make the area the wonderful and unique treasure it is. The towns that make up this area are diverse and quaint, offering visitors a wide variety of options for the winter aficionado, including dining, lodging, shopping, entertainment, outdoor activities and more.

Watauga County Boone

No matter which activity draws you to the High Country, it’s likely that you’ll end up in Boone at some point during your visit. Boone is the hub of Watauga County, the gathering place for people of all walks of life, whether resident or visitor, student or retiree, socialite or seeker of peace and quiet.

2012

Pageantry of winter season captured in High Country towns

The town is home to Appalachian State University, one of the 16 colleges and universities that makes up the University of North Carolina system and draws about 17,000 students. Interest in the school boomed after the Mountaineers’ football team won three consecutive NCAA Division I national championships in 2005, 2006 and 2007. The university’s presence helps create a young and friendly vibe throughout the town. Just make sure not to cross anyone by mispronouncing the name: It’s “App-uh-latch-un.” Adjacent to the university is King Street and the surrounding area, one of the town’s best shopping destinations. One-of-a-kind stores and eclectic boutiques dot the landscape, interspersed with legal offices and delicious restaurants. Departing from downtown, big-box stores and other shopping areas ensure that residents and visitors lack nothing in the way of modern conveniences. CONTINUED ON PAGE 11

Students take a snow day and build a snowman on the Appalachian State campus in Boone. PHOTO BY ANNA OAKES

The Cabin Store

The Largest In-Stock Showroom of Rustic Furnishings, Décor, and Gifts in The High Country!

866.610.5647 TheCarolinaCabinStore.com • 1101 S. Jefferson Ave. West Jefferson, NC 336.246.5647 • 2422 Highway 321 South, Boone, NC 828.266.1401

The Most Unique Shopping Experience In The High Country!


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THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

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THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

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THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

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Our Towns

Valle Crucis

Just off N.C. 105 south of Boone, Valle Crucis offers simplicity and serenity in a pastoral riverside community. The valley contains the site of the only known Native American village in the immediate area. The first European settler of Watauga County, Samuel Hicks, also built a fort in the area during the American Revolution. Today, the community offers several historic inns, farms and churches that provide service and comfort to all who enter. The Episcopal church has played a role throughout the community’s history. An Episcopal bishop entered the community in 1842 and provided its name, which is Latin for the “Vale of the Cross.” The Valle Crucis Conference Center, on the National Register of Historic Places, stays busy with retreats for numerous groups, and Crab Orchard Falls is a short hike from the conference center. The original Mast General Store provides a central gathering space in the community, as it has since 1883. Residents appreciate the store for its post office, morning news and coffee, while visitors can also find gifts, apparel and souvenirs. Just down the road is the Mast Store Annex, which opened about 25 years later. Behind the annex is a gravel road to the Valle Crucis Park, a recreational area with walking paths, riverfront, picnic areas and sports fields.

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But Boone has an eye on its past, too. Named for the pioneer and explorer Daniel Boone, the town dates back to about 1800, when Jordan Councill opened a store on what is now King Street. In 1820, he opened a post office, and other homes and stores began to spring up nearby. When Watauga County was created in 1849, Boone was picked as the county seat. It remained a typical small town until the university began to grow in the 1960s. A relic of Boone’s storied past, the historic Jones House Community Center, is located right on King Street. The house was built in 1908 and was given to the town in the early 1980s. Today, the home is a go-to source for art and community functions. Boone is a town where old and new mix, and visitors are made to feel like part of the family.

Blowing Rock

Blowing Rock manages to cram a ton of beauty and fun into just three square miles. The town’s name comes from an immense cliff overlooking Johns River Gorge, where the winds whip in such a way that light objects thrown over the rock float back to their owners. Anyone wishing to experience the phenomenon firsthand can visit The Blowing Rock attraction, which is open certain dates in winter, weather permitting, to showcase the town’s namesake and the Native American legend that surrounds it. For another dose of history, visit the renovated and restored Green Park Inn, a site on the National Register of Historic Places that has been a hotel since 1882. After closing due to age and the recession in May 2009, the building was purchased a year later by Irace Realty Associates and immediately underwent a complete overhaul. While clinging to the small-town charm and Southern graciousness of its past, Blowing Rock also includes nearly 20 hotels and inns and more than 100 shops. Find a place to park early in the morning, bundle up and spend the rest of the day on foot, exploring the shops and

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Todd

Downtown Blowing Rock decks its halls, or at least sidewalks, for the holidays. PHOTO BY FRANK RUGGIERO

parks of downtown. Clothing, antiques, home furnishings, mementos and delicious treats will fill your shopping bags and your stomach as you examine the town’s treasures. Make sure to visit Tanger Shoppes on the Parkway on U.S. 321 to find name-brand items at outlet prices. If they’re not buried in piles of snow, the benches in Memorial Park at the center of Main Street make the perfect spot to settle down with coffee or hot chocolate and watch the world go by. The less-traveled Broyhill Park down Laurel Lane paints the perfect winter scene, complete with snow-topped gazebo and

ice-covered pond. The trails surrounding Moses Cone Memorial Park and Bass Lake provide another excellent winter wonderland, as well as a recreation opportunity for those trying out crosscountry skiing or snowshoeing. If you visit during the holidays, take a cruise down the length of Main Street and past Chetola Resort to take in the displays of lights, wreaths and beauty of the season. The picturesque town of Blowing Rock is the perfect place to have an active winter vacation – or to relax and do nothing at all.

Todd is a town so nice it’s claimed by both Watauga and Ashe counties. The community’s main drag, Railroad Grade Road, is popular with bicyclists and walking tours as it winds along with the New River, one of the few in the world that flows north. The Todd General Store is an oldfashioned mercantile that dates back to 1914 and was built in anticipation of the Norfolk and Western “Virginia Creeper” railroad. Todd was the last stop of the route and got much of its supplies from the train. Today, the store offers dinner, bluegrass, book signings and demonstrations. The Todd Mercantile features the work of local artists and crafters, as well as mountain honey and other local goods. The “Todd Mahal Bakery” serves fresh

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THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

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Our Towns CONTINUED FROM PAGE 11

delights to satisfy the sweet tooth, and the mercantile also hosts monthly square and contra dances, with traditional mountain music by local performers. The river itself provides plenty to do, from canoeing and kayaking in the summer to excellent fishing in the winter. Several companies, including RiverGirl Fishing Company and Wahoo’s Adventures, have outposts near Todd to provide gear and instruction for anyone interested in hitting the river.

Seven Devils

From elevations of some 5,200 feet, the town of Seven Devils straddles both Watauga and Avery counties. From many areas in the town, one has views of Grandfather Mountain, as well as Beech Mountain, Sugar Mountain, Rich Mountain and Mount Rogers in Virginia. Seven Devils is just a few minutes from Boone, Blowing Rock, Banner Elk and Valle Crucis and can be found off N.C. 105.

A snow-covered Valle Crucis offers some of the most picturesque views in the High Country. FILE PHOTO

Seven Devils began life in the 1960s as the Seven Devils Resort, and in 1979, the resort became incorporated as the town. How did it get its name? According to the Seven Devils website,“The L.A. Reynolds Industrial District of Winston-Salem, N.C., formed the resort in 1965 and the founders were met with the challenge

of naming the resort. At this time there was a rumor about an old man on the mountain who had seven sons ‘as mean as the devil.’ People were heard commenting that in the winter the mountain was ‘as cold as the devils’ or ‘as windy as the devil.’” “The founders wanted a catchy, unique

name that would bring attention to the mountain. They noticed the repeated appearance of the number seven, including the seven predominant rocky peaks surrounding Valley Creek, as well as the many coincidental references to ‘devils.’ ‘Seven Devils’ seemed to suggest a frivolous, mischievous resort where people could ‘experience the temptation of Seven Devils,’” according to the website. In the 1960s, the town grew with a golf course, ski slope, lake, riding ground and camping area. After the resort venture experience financial trouble, the town was incorporated. While the golf course and ski slope have been closed for a number of years, Hawksnest has become one of the town’s centerpieces. Among the attractions at Hawksnest (www.hawksnest-resort.com), a private entity, is snow tubing in the winter and ziplines at other times. Hawksnest is recognized as the largest snow tubing park on the East Coast, and the company boasts the longest zipline tour, as well, featuring 10 cables, two of which are known in the zipline industry as super or mega zips. For more information and events at Seven Devils, visit www.townofsevendevils.org.

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What do YOU want to learn this summer?

Now is the time to start planning for summer youth sports camps and academic enrichment programs. ASU also offers many learning opportunities for adults, such as Craft Enrichment and Renewable Energy workshops.

Football Baseball Forensics Music Anthropology Track & Field

Animal Studies Math Russian Volleyball Soccer Wrestling

Basketball Robotics Anatomy & Physiology Engineering & more!

ALSO: SPRING PROGRAMS AVAILABLE

camps.appstate.edu • 828-262-3045


THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

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Our Towns CONTINUED FROM PAGE 12

Avery County Banner Elk

The mountain valley town of Banner Elk has grown from a tiny hamlet to a town offering year-round amenities and memorable vacations for the entire family. Banner Elk is home to Lees-McRae College, a small, private, four-year coeducational liberal arts college affiliated with Presbyterian Church U.S.A. with more than 900 students from more than 20 states and countries. Snow-covered old stone buildings across campus make for a photographer’s delight. The town hosts numerous shops and restaurants, and stays abuzz with activities and events. Visitors can picnic or walk in the town park, enjoy exquisite shopping or simply relax by the mill pond and stay in one of the inns after a relaxing dinner in a fine restaurant. Banner Elk is in the heart of the High Country’s many attractions and just a short drive will take you to numerous natural settings where you can relax and ponder nature’s beauty. Banner Elk also offers many cultural happenings, with an excellent summer theater program by Lees-McRae and art festivals by some of the area’s many galleries and artisans. Visitors are encouraged to return to Banner Elk each autumn for its annual Woolly Worm Festival, attracting close to 20,000 people each year. Cutting between the peaks of Sugar Mountain, Beech Mountain and Grandfather Mountain, the topography of the town provides natural definition and gentle undulation through the town’s boundaries. For more information or a calendar of events, call Banner Elk Chamber of Commerce at (828) 898-5605, or visit www. bannerelk.org.

Beech Mountain

Regarded as the highest elevated town in the Eastern United States, Beech Mountain is a haven for winter sports’ enthusiasts. The slopes on Beech Mountain Resort open in November and offer both

Beech Mountain Resort’s annual Winterfest is packed with winter activities, including the ever-popular Cardboard Box Derby. FILE PHOTO

beginner and advanced skiers a pristine location to enjoy a winter’s day. Snowboarders can utilize the freestyle terrain park, with manmade terrain, including half-pipes, grind rails and a host of jumps with landing areas. Sledders can enjoy the hilly terrain, while skaters can go to Beech Mountain Resort’s Alpine Village and enjoy the 7,000-square-foot ice skating rink. The rink is located in the middle of Beech Tree Village, making it a unique experience. For those wishing to spend an extended stay on the mountain, there are more than 5,000 beds available on top of the mountain for rental, ranging from picturesque cabins to chalets and condominiums. For those not on the slopes or seeking a change of pace, there are numerous shops and restaurants to visit, in addition to an active nightlife with music and atmosphere. Or visitors can curl up by a fireplace and enjoy a good book. For more information and a full calendar of winter events, call Beech Mountain Chamber of Commerce at (828) 387-9283, or click to www.beechmtnchamber.com.

The sledding hill in Beech Mountain is a popular destination for wintertime fun. PHOTO SUBMITTED

Crossnore

Crossnore is a town steeped in educational history. The town is home to Crossnore Academy, founded by Drs. Eustace and Mary Martin Sloop. The Sloops traveled the steep dirt trails in isolated mountain valleys to bring

medicine to the people and convince farmers to let their children come to school. Because of poverty and distance, the Sloop school in Crossnore eventually took in boarders and built dormitories to accommodate them.

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THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

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2

4

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BLOWING ROCK CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

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WINTER ’12-’13 CALENDAR Nov

23

Christmas in the Park & Lighting of the Town (828)295-5222

23-24

Horse & Carriage Rides, Visits with Santa, Cookie Decorating (828)295-5535

Thru Jan

Chetola’s Festival of Lights (828)295-5500

Nov

27 Nov

24 Nov

24 Nov

24 Dec

1 Jan

24-27 April

10-14

Bolick Pottery Kiln Opening (828)295-5099 Blowing Rock Christmas Parade, 2pm (828)295-5535 Mountain Home Music: A Celtic Christmas (828)964-3392 Mountain Home Music: An Appalachian Christmas (828)964-3392 Winterfest (828)295-7851 Blue Ridge Wine & Food Festival (828)295-7851


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11:308 113

BREAKFAST AM - AM LUNCH AM - PM VILLAGE SHOPPES ON MAIN STREET BLOWING ROCK

828.295.0015

3 6

7

1 2

4

5


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Drs. Eustace and Mary Sloop are the founders of today’s Crossnore School in Crossnore. PHOTO SUBMITTED

The popular Sugar Fest returns to Sugar Mountain annually.

Our Towns

area: Linville Golf Course, Grandfather Golf and Country Club and Linville Ridge; all open late spring to early fall. Eseeola Lodge is also a popular destination for golf and lodging during the summer months. A number of local tourist areas within a short drive share the Linville name, including the Linville River and majestic Linville Falls, Linville Caverns on U.S. 221 and Linville Gorge wilderness area. During the winter months, Linville is only a short drive to nearby ski slopes at Sugar Mountain and Beech Mountain, popular skiing and snow-tubing destinations. Perhaps the most popular tourist attraction housed in Linville is Grandfather Mountain. One of the newest among North Carolina’s state parks, Grandfather Mountain offers hiking trails, picturesque views during all four seasons, animal habitats and attractions and the famous Mile-High Swinging Bridge.

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It gained a national reputation for effectiveness in changing lives and in breaking the cycle of poverty, moonshine and child marriages of mountain families. Mrs. Sloop eventually put these tales to paper in her autobiography “Miracle in the Hills,” which has since been used as the basis for a drama of the same name that takes place each summer in present-day Crossnore. The Sloops built a school, hospital, dental clinic and eventually, a boarding school to give children the basis for an improved life. They brought to Avery County the first electricity, telephone, paved road and boarding school. Through the Sloops’ advocacy, public schools flourished in Avery County. Today, Crossnore Academy carries on the work of the original school and has reclaimed the educational foundation beneath its commitment to give hurting children a chance for a better life. The school’s teachers enable it to meet not only the special needs of Crossnore residents, but also the needs of area students that live at home and whose educational needs are best met at Crossnore.

Elk Park

The town of Elk Park borders the

state of Tennessee and offers a unique visiting experience. From the old-time feel of Brinkley’s Hardware Store to the additional Lower Street antique shops and classic barbershop, Elk Park takes visitors back to a simpler time. The town’s original thoroughfare, Lower Street, and many businesses originated when Elk Park hosted a train depot for the old East Tennessee and Western North Carolina Railroad. Elk Park thrived due to the industry and remained vibrant after the trains stopped running through town. Elk Park is home to several Choose and Cut Christmas tree farms and hosts an annual Christmas home decoration contest for its residents. For more information, call Elk Park Town Hall at (828) 733-9573.

Linville

The community of Linville is located just south of the intersection of U.S. 221 and N.C. 105 in Avery County. The community was founded in 1883, designed by Samuel T. Kelsey of Kansas and named for William and John Linville, who were killed by Cherokees in 1766. East Tennessee and Western North Carolina Railroad (ET&WNC) passed through the community from 1916 through 1940, when a major flood washed away the tracks. The old rail route later became N.C. 105 in 1956. Linville has three country clubs in the

FILE PHOTO

Newland

With the highest county seat east of the Mississippi River at 3,589 feet, the town of Newland was incorporated in 1913 as the county seat of the newly formed Avery County. Its original name was “Old Fields of Toe” because it is located in a broad flat valley and is at the headwaters of the Toe River. Newland was a mustering place for Civil War troops. Toe is short for “Es-

tatoe,” an Indian chief’s daughter who drowned herself in the river in despair because she could not marry a brave from another tribe. The town of around 700 residents, Newland succeeded over three other areas for the honor of county seat. The recently renovated courthouse, originally constructed in 1913, overlooks a classic town square, bordered by shops and churches and complete with a memorial to Avery County veterans. Adjacent to the courthouse building is the original jail, which has been converted into the Avery County Historical Museum. Exhibits in the museum include the original jail cells, numerous artifacts and information about the history of Avery County. Newland hosts an annual Christmas parade through downtown, with decorations adorning the town reflecting the area’s rich Christmas tree industry. With a number of restaurants and boutiques downtown, Newland is a prime destination for dining and shopping, or just to stop in on a visit to nearby Roan Mountain or Grandfather Mountain.

Sugar Mountain

The Village of Sugar Mountain is in ideal destination for the individual or family looking to enjoy outdoor winter sports, in addition to activities yearround.

CONTINUED ON PAGE 17


THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

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Our Towns

Methodist Church is located in Creston, and was listed as a National Historic Building in 2005. The chapel was built about 1902. The interior of the chapel is finished, in part, with American Chestnut wood, harvested before the blight reached the northwestern mountains of North Carolina.

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 16

The village of Sugar Mountain is home to Sugar Mountain Resort, one of the South’s premier winter destination playgrounds. Since 1969, Sugar Mountain Resort has specialized in outdoor recreational fun. Mainly known for its winter fun, Sugar also offers summertime fun. Sugar Mountain is renowned for its resort and slopes, with challenging trails for the advanced skier and beginner slopes for those perhaps snapping ski bindings on for the very first time. There is 100-percent snowmaking on 115 acres at Sugar Mountain Resort, with a 1,200-foot vertical rise, 20 trails from beginner to expert, a terrain park, eight lifts, ski and snowboard schools for all ages and abilities and ski, snowboard, skate and helmet rentals. Among additional snow-related outdoor activities offered at Sugar are snowshoeing, tubing and ice skating. A highlight of the winter season at Sugar Mountain is SugarFest, an annual weekend of winter fun held Dec. 7 to 9. For more information, call the village of Sugar Mountain at (828) 898-9292,

PAGE 17

Fleetwood

The Ashe County Cheese Plant is a popular destination in downtown West Jefferson. Two words: squeaky cheese. PHOTO BY LINDSEY HAMBY

or click to www.seesugar.com.

Ashe County Creston

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of Tennessee. The curvy winding roads can offer travelers some of the most beautiful scenic byways in the area. The Riverview Community Center is located off of N.C. 88 West in Creston and is home to festivals and other events all year long. Worth’s Chapel at Creston United

Located just off of U.S. 221 between West Jefferson and Deep Gap, Fleetwood is home of great community gatherings at the Fleetwood Community Center and the local volunteer fire department. On your way to and from the busy towns of Boone and West Jefferson, stop by to look at local crafts, antiques and civic pride in Fleetwood.

Glendale Springs

Home of the breath-taking and aweaspiring fresco painting by Ben Long at Holy Trinity Episcopalian Church, Glendale Springs has become revered for its budding arts scene. With the addition of the Florence Thomas Art School, the community has

CONTINUED ON PAGE 19


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THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

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THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

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Our Towns CONTINUED FROM PAGE 17

become a must for anyone visiting Ashe County this summer. Proximity to the Blue Ridge Parkway is an added bonus as summer sets in and fall colors begin to explode.

Grassy Creek

Just south of the North Carolina-Virginia border, Grassy Creek is a tightly knit community that is dotted with smiling faces and countless rows of Fraser fir Christmas trees. Check out the sights around the nationally renowned New River where you will also find the River House Country Inn and Restaurant for exquisite dinners.

Jefferson

A rich history, dating from 1799, lies in the picturesque town of Jefferson. Jefferson was founded prior to its counterpart, West Jefferson, and stood at the base of Mount Jefferson. The town was first known as Jeffersonton but then became Jefferson, and was one of the first towns in the nation to bear the name of U.S. founding father Thomas Jefferson. The town is the county seat of Ashe and is home to the new courthouse, as well as the historic 1904 Courthouse. The Museum of Ashe County History is located in Jefferson and can be found in the 1904 Courthouse. The museum, through items collected and on display, offers a look at who the citizens of the county are, where they came from, how they got to the town, what did they do on the way and where do they go next? Ashe County Park and Foster Tyson Park are also located in Jefferson. Ashe County Park has a disc golf course and hosts an annual polar plunge. Foster Tyson Park has a lighted walking trail and is usually lit up for the holidays with Christmas lights.

Lansing

Whether you’re looking for a town reminiscent of the past or a town that offers whispers of tomorrow, the small, friendly town of Lansing beckons to travelers from near and far to visit and relax while browsing its shops, trying

Mt. Jefferson looms over the communities of Jefferson and West Jefferson in Ashe County. FILE PHOTO

some home cooking and tasting some locally made wine. The town, in the northwestern section of Ashe County, is 20 minutes from Jefferson and West Jefferson, and is only 45 minutes from Boone. Travelers can arrive in the town in less than an hour from Abingdon, Va., or Mountain City, Tenn. The town has one red light, and several businesses line the street. Homecooked meals can be found at Country House Restaurant, while pizza, sandwiches and salad, along with specialty teas and fresh roasted coffee, are available at Pie on the Mountain. The first post office in the town was established in 1882 and served a rural community, made up of a village and outlying farms until the railroad made its appearance.The economy and population begin to take off by 1914 as the Norfolk and Western Railroad, better known as the Virginia Creeper, came to town. A big commodity for area residents was iron ore mined from the mountains. The railroad served as an avenue to transport the ore to markets in Richmond, Va., and Pittsburgh, Pa. During its history, Lansing had a cheese plant, clothing store, coffin shop, doctor’s office, bank and a restaurant, according to the town’s website. The cheese plant allowed area farmers to bring their goods to sale instead of having to travel into West Jefferson. The town was chartered and incorporated in

1928. Lansing faced two devastating fires in the 1930s and ’40s and faced Hurricane Hugo later that century. Despite these setbacks, the town continued to flourish and expand. The Works Progress Administration built the Lansing High School in 1941, using local granite stone. The school still stands today and is home to New River Winery. The scenic Virginia Creeper biking trail is available to visitors as is the town’s park. For more information about Lansing, visit www.explorelansingnc.com or call Lansing Town Hall at (336) 384-3938.

Laurel Springs

Another border community, Laurel Springs prides itself with small town charm and beauty that entices motorists from the Blue Ridge Parkway for a quick bite to eat before continue their adventure on the scenic byway. Although it is located at the top mountain and touches Wilkes, Alleghany and Ashe counties, Laurel Springs is never more than a 30-minute drive from the listed county seats. Also, be sure to stop by the Thistle Meadow Winery for individualized tours of a family owned wine business.

West Jefferson

With a thriving arts district and

PAGE 19

Christmas trees galore, West Jefferson makes its mark on the High Country as a destination for locals, as well as visitors. The town was built around the Virginia-Carolina Railroad depot during the early 1900s. According to the town’s history, the first ownership of the valley now known as West Jefferson began in 1779 when N.C. Gov. Richard Caswell granted 320 acres to Col. Ben Cleveland, who battled the British at King’s Mountain. More than a century later, the West Jefferson Land Company surveyed the new town and fixed its limits as a square one-half mile north, south, east and west of the Virginia-Carolina Depot. The town was chartered in 1915. The town’s initial growth came through the railroad, but early development was also spurred by the opening of the First National Bank of West Jefferson in 1915. The bank’s branch office, built in 1962, is now home to West Jefferson Town Hall. The town continues to thrive today and has a little something for everyone. Those visiting the town can browse one of the many art galleries, gift shops and retail stores. West Jefferson is home to many varieties of artwork, from paintings and photographs to sculptures and quilted items. More information about the area’s art district can be found at the Ashe Arts Center, located at 303 School Ave., just off of East Main Street. The center is home to the Ashe County Arts Council, which sponsors a variety of community programming and exhibits throughout the year. A popular spot in the town is the Ashe County Cheese Plant and Ashe County Cheese Store, where visitors can purchase a variety of cheeses, from cheddar to pepperjack and the celebrated cheese curds. Old-fashioned snacks and candies and locally made wines can also be purchased at the store. The cheese plant, open yearround, is located at 106 E. Main St. in West Jefferson. Just outside West Jefferson, in the Beaver Creek community, St. Mary’s Episcopal Church can be found. The church is the location for a fresco of Jesus on the cross by renowned artist Ben Long. A painting of Madonna with child also hangs on the sanctuary wall. Local eateries and cafes offer all sorts of tasty treats, coffee, spirits and more, from one end of the town to the other.


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THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

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Coming off its celebration of 50 years in business in the High Country, Appalachian Ski Mountain plans to make the next half-century even greater than the first. With plans to open from Nov. 16 through March 24, 2013 (weather permitting), Appalachian Ski Mountain boasts the longest night session in North Carolina, beginning at 5 p.m., as well as an expanded Midnight Blast schedule that includes Thanksgiving weekend and Christmas week. Appalachian Ski Mountain has invested more than $2 million in snowmaking automation, guns, pumping capacity and increased water storage capacity to make the ski experience a top-notch attraction for visitors near and far. Appalachian has a lift capacity of more than 9,200 patrons per hour, accommodating even the largest of crowds on the slopes. Appalachian Ski Mountain offers eight-hour flex rates (up to eight consecutive hours beginning between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.) of $37 for adults on weekdays and $56 on Saturdays, Sundays and holidays, with lower rates based on age and student status.

CONTINUED ON PAGE 23


2012

App Ski CONTINUED FROM PAGE 22

“We’re the only slope in the region to offer a flex rate to skiers and snowboarders, and the sessions begin when they buy their ticket,” Appalachian Ski Mountain general manager Brad Moretz explained. Additional pass options include the Super Session (9 a.m. to 10 p.m. or midnight), with rates ranging from $40 to $46 on weekdays and $65 for students and adults ($46 for junior and senior skiers) on holidays. The ever-popular Midnight Blast session (5 p.m. until midnight) takes place Friday and Saturday nights during the months of January and February with rates ranging from $22 to $30. Additionally, Appalachian offers its 5-by-7 Pass, good for any non-holiday weekday (5) and any night (7), with prices beginning at $350. Half-night ski session passes are available from 8:30 p.m. to midnight on Friday and Saturday evenings at rates ranging from $16 to $20. Multi-day passes are also available, as well as fourhour early return options and special military discounts. Holiday rates apply at Appalachian Ski

THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

Mountain Thursday and Friday, Nov. 22 and 23, Dec. 19 to Jan. 1, 2013, and Feb. 16 to 18, 2013. Other rate conditions may apply, so it is recommended to contact Appalachian Ski Mountain at (828) 2957828 or visit www.appskimtn.com with questions or for more information. Besides the variety of skiing options Appalachian Ski Mountain offers, snow enthusiasts can take advantage of App Terrain Park, home to three separate parks: Appaljack, Appal Jam and AppalTop, which offer more than 60 features to snowboarding and skiing thrill seekers. “Besides the terrain parks, we also have the region’s only park pass program, which we feel provides the safest possible environment in the park,” Moretz said. “It provides an education and safety class that people take before using our upperlevel parks.” App Terrain Park offers a season jam packed with park events for skiers and snowboarders of all ages and abilities. ATP’s classic event series will be back for 2012-13, with several improvements, including the return of Appalachian’s signature three-event Shred for the Cup Series, Ladies Park Night sessions, Red Bull ThingamaJIB and a trio of Fresh Friday events. Fresh Friday events require no additional event fee, only a valid

ski ticket. Appalachian Ski Mountain is also the first resort south of Snowshoe, W. Va., to be named an official Burton Learn to Ride Center. “Appalachian Ski Mountain offers new riders the type of top-quality experience and excellence in instruction that Burton looks for in its Learn to Ride Centers,” said Jeff Boliba, Burton Snowboards’ global resort director. Burton’s innovative Learn to Ride Program is specifically designed to accelerate learning by utilizing beginner specific equipment. The goal of LTR program is to give beginner snowboarders the best initial snowboarding experience possible, so they return to the mountain and continue to snowboard. By using proven instruction methods and equipment created specifically for beginners, LTR helps riders enjoy their first day on a snowboard. Appalachian Ski Mountain also boasts a 6,000-foot panoramic ice arena, with skates available for rent onsite, opening Thanksgiving Day. The mountain also features one of the premiere ski schools in the region in French-Swiss Ski College. “One of the things we are known for is that we are the place to learn how to ski,” Moretz added. “We have a premier ski school with French-Swiss Ski College.”

PAGE 23

French-Swiss Ski College also sponsors a new Snowboard Club for 2013. Throw in the full range of products offered for purchase on the mountain by Alpine Ski Shop and 12 slopes with five lifts begging to be tested by beginner and expert alike, and Appalachian Ski Mountain is the ultimate destination for the serious skiing and snowboarding aficionado. “Appalachian Ski Mountain is a great family atmosphere and a great value,” Moretz said. “I think we’re known for having a lot of snow and good snow conditions, and we strive to offer people a really good product when they visit.” Appalachian Ski Mountain is located at 940 Ski Mountain Road in Blowing Rock. For more information, call (828) 2957828 or visit www.appskimtn.com.


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2012

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THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

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Low Rider or Flying High The choice is yours at Hawksnest Resort BY JAMIE SHELL

Most people contend that it is unpleasant to be taken for a ride. Hawksnest Resort begs to differ. No other place in the High Country offers the unique action adventure activities of snow tubing and ziplining quite like Hawksnest Resort. With plans to open in mid-November, weather permitting, Hawksnest, located at 2058 Skyland Drive in Seven Devils, offers the largest snow-tubing facility on the East Coast, with 20 lanes varying in distances from 400 to 1,000 feet. Conveyor lifts make it convenient for tubers to catch a ride back to the top of the mountain for another downhill run. Snow tubing is available seven days a week, at a cost of $25 for one session and $32 for two sessions (non-holiday) Monday through Thursday, $25 per session on Friday and $30 per session on Saturdays, Sundays and holidays. A discount of $3 for military personnel is also offered by Hawksnest. Snow-tubing sessions last one hour and 45 minutes, with sessions at twohour intervals from 10 a.m. through 4 p.m. Monday through Thursday; 10 a.m. through 6 p.m. on Friday and Saturday and holidays; and 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sunday. Holiday rates apply from Dec. 23 to Jan. 4, 2013, as well as Sunday, Jan. 20, 2013, and Sunday, Feb. 17, 2013. Children must be at least three years of age to snow tube, and purchasing tickets online in advance is recommended to avoid long lines. In addition to the wide range of tubing possibilities, Hawksnest offers the largest ziplining facility on the East Coast, with 19 cables, including “super-” or “mega-zips” to accommodate multiple tours for individuals and groups. Hawksnest offers a 1.5-mile, 10-cable Hawk Tour, at a cost of $70, as well as the Eagle Tour, a nine-cable zipline tour that encompasses more than 2.5 miles, at a cost of $85. Hawksnest additionally offers a Snowbird Tour, implementing the first four cables of the Hawk Tour, at a cost of $45.

The instructions for snow-tubing at Hawksnest Resort are simple: Have fun. FILE PHOTO

Eagle Tour is a more extreme tour with greater speeds and heights than the Hawk Tour. Children must be at least 10 years of age to take the Eagle Tour and at least five years of age to take the Hawk Tour. Tours start at 10 a.m. daily at twohour intervals through the 4 p.m. tour. Reservations are required, and participants need to arrive 30 minutes before a scheduled tour start. Tours take approximately 1.5 to two hours to complete, with no single-person tours. Visitors participating in the zipline tours are asked to wear closed-toes shoes, long shorts or long pants, rain gear (in wet weather), long hair tied back and no dangling jewelry. Hawksnest ziplining tours are available year round. Ziplining tours are available weather permitting. “We have so many snow tubing areas and choices, which are all a little dif-

ferent,” said Lenny Cottom, general manager with Hawksnest. “We have areas for kids and options that other local resorts can’t offer.” Hawksnest Resort is located at 2058 Skyland Drive in Seven Devils. For more information, or for group reservations, call (828) 963-6561, or visit www.hawksnesttubing.com or www. hawksnestzipline.com.

Hawknest offers safe and fun ziplining and snow tubing activities for young and old alike. PHOTO COURTESY OF HAWKSNEST RESORT


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2012

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PAGE 28

THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

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Atop Sugar’s rime-ice covered peaks, skiers and snowboarders can enjoy postcard-quality vistas and top-notch grooming and snowmaking. PHOTOS COURTESY OF SUGAR MOUNTAIN RESORT

Sugar Mountain Resort Sweetening the snowsport experience season after season

BY SAM CALHOUN

Those critical of Southern skiing took a blow in October when Sugar Mountain Resort, the South’s largest ski resort, opened with a six- to 30-inch base on Halloween day – the earliest opening ever for a High Country ski slope, and a start of the season that came weeks before slopes opened to skiers out West. Although helped along by Mother Nature and her gift of nine to 12 inches of fresh snow care of Hurricane Sandy, the

early opening was made possible by Sugar Mountain Resort president Gunther Jochl and his veteran team of snowsport professionals, known for their attention to detail when it comes to snowmaking, grooming and customer service. “We strive to provide the best ski, snowboard and tubing experiences that we possibly can,” Gunther Jochl said. “We are constantly updating and improving our infrastructure and product.” Locals and visitors craving the complete

winter experience need to look no further than Sugar Mountain Resort, perched high above Avery County near Banner Elk, which, every winter, offers skiing, snowboarding, snow tubing, ice skating, snowshoeing, dining, unique events and races and a dedication to deliver the longest season possible. Sugar features the longest vertical drop in the High Country at 1,200 feet; 20 total slopes, with 15 lit for night skiing; 11 lifts; 115 skiable acres; 700-foot long tubing

lanes; a 10,000-square-foot refrigerated ice skating rink; trails for snowshoeing; the latest in rental equipment for every snowsport; and postcard-quality vistas from its rime-ice covered peaks. Topping out at 5,300 feet above sea level, 36 degrees latitude and 81 degrees longitude, Sugar Mountain Resort’s chances of receiving natural snow are good. Seasonal snowfall can reach as high as 130 inches. “Our team is dedicated and works hard CONTINUED ON PAGE 29


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2012

Sugar Mountain CONTINUED FROM PAGE 28

to prepare and execute the best season possible, no matter what the forecast predicts,” said Kim Jochl, Sugar’s marketing director. Sugar Mountain is known for its snowmaking and grooming, and, this season, skiers and boarders can expect an even better product because of a $250,000 investment. Eight fully automated, hitech, SMI and Techno Alpine snow machines are new to the current snowmaking system. Many of the new guns are placed on the Flying Mile, Sugar’s longest slope at 1.5 miles. “Snow matters!” Gunther Jochl said. “As weather varies throughout the season, upgrades every year, including the addition of snowmaking machines, allow for higher energy efficiency and provide better and more consistent slope conditions. The quality of our product is critical.” With 40-percent novice, 40-percent intermediate and 20-percent expert, Sugar has terrain for all abilities. Beginners should appreciate that Sugar has, in addition to its Ski School Play Yard and Magic Carpet training areas, one of the ski industry’s longest and most gentle slopes, Easy Street. The green slope is serviced by its own chairlift and is protected from the advanced and intermediate slope traffic providing an un-intimidating learning environment for beginning skiers and snowboard-

PAGE 29

ers or those wishing to take it easy, warm up and work on drills. For those who just want to cruise the open slopes, try Big Red; experts can challenge Tom Terrific, Boulder Dash and Whoopdedoo. Sugar’s lift network – a mix of double chairlifts, a triple chairlift, surface lifts and a handle tow – can transport almost 9,000 people up the mountain per hour, assuring an expedited return trip for every customer. Sugar’s base lodge has everything a snowsports patron needs under one roof: ticket sales, equipment rentals, cafeterias, The Last Run Lounge, the sports shop, group sales, locker rooms and, of course, the Candy Shop. When the weather makes driving difficult but the snow conditions great, Sugar is one of the easiest ski areas to reach in the Southeast, having its base lodge and parking on the same level as the main highway. So, whether it’s ice skating under the stars, taking direction from Olympic skiers, hanging out with Sugar Bear and Santa on the slopes, racing in a league, matching skills in NASTAR, snow tubing down a roller-coaster lane or snowshoeing through the mountain’s extensive backcountry, Sugar strives to sweeten the experience of winter sports aficionados and beginners alike seasonafter-season. Sugar Mountain Resort is located at 1009 Sugar Mountain Drive in Sugar Mountain. For more information, call (828) 898-4521 or visit Kim Jochl, Sugar’s marketing director, carves fresh tracks down www.skisugar.com. Boulder Dash, one of Sugar’s many expert slopes.

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Winter Group Exhibition November 23-March 15 Holiday Open House November 25 & 26, 10-5

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PAINTINGS • CLAY • GLASS • WOOD • FIBER ART • JEWELRY

Highest Quality Food and Treats Gourmet Bakery Items Coats, Sweaters, Boots, Raingear Holistic Nutritionals Largest Selection of Beds Outdoor Gear and Travel Goods SHOP LOCAL Specializing in Food and Wellness Advice


PAGE 30

THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

2012

Beech Mountain Resort Celebrating 45 years of cultivating the big dream of Southern skiing

Beech Mountain Resort, which is celebrating its 45th consecutive season in operation, features 95 skiable acres with a vertical rise of more than 800 feet and a lift capacity of 9,300 skiers per hour. FILE PHOTOS

BY SAM CALHOUN

Many of you enjoy going to the beach every summer, but we, here in the High Country, head to our own Beech every winter – eastern North America’s highest ski resort, Beech Mountain Resort. Since 1967, our Beech’s 95 skiable acres and adjoining alpine-inspired infrastructure, Beech Tree Village, have represented all that is whimsical about the big dream of Southern skiing. That big dream continues today, with a resort that constantly refines its product and improves its customer service – and Beech’s staff is eager to show off its continued renaissance with the snowsport faithful. “We tried to focus on our snowmaking efforts more this year,” said Talia Freeman, Beech Mountain Resort marketing director. “Last year was good for us, as we were able to see how the snow lays on the mountain with light amounts of natural snow, so, for this season, we were able to reposition about 11 snow guns across the terrain, in addition to adding six new Pole Cats. Now, we’ll have much better coverage on the mountain.” Beech Mountain Resort recently integrated six additional SMI Super Pole Cats snow guns, bringing its total to 30 automated guns. The current system has 164 different snow guns, the largest CONTINUED ON PAGE 31

Beech Mountain Resort Freestyle Terrain welcomes Ric Wilkinson as the new director of operations for the 2012-13 season. PHOTO COURTESY BEECH MOUNTAIN RESORT


2012

THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

Beech Mountain Resort

A to Z Auto Detailing 828.897.1966

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 30

has 164 different snow guns, the largest in resort history. Additionally, 11 tower guns have been moved to front slope operation. With the capability to produce more snow than ever before, Beech Mountain Resort purchased a new snow cat. The PistenBully 400 Park Pro Series will help ensure consistent conditions, while producing additional freestyle terrain. More natural snowfall is predicted for the 2012-13 season, but Beech Mountain Resort is ready for all weather patterns. This season, Beech’s freestyle terrain is under the guidance of new leadership. Ric Wilkinson, who brings more than 10 years of experience in terrain park improvement and innovation, is Beech’s new director of operations for the 201213 season. Wilkinson will direct his main attention toward Powder Bowl and Meadows, Beech’s two terrain parks. “I plan on bringing a new level of freestyle terrain to Beech Mountain,” Wilkinson said. “Through an innovative approach, I plan on implementing a consistent and progressive park. I am dedicated to the riders and am looking forward to showing what Beech has to offer.” New fan guns were added to Powder Bowl during the off-season, giving the advanced terrain a dedicated snowmaking system. Beech Mountain Resort, which is celebrating its 45th consecutive season in operation, features 95 skiable acres with a vertical rise of more than 800 feet and a lift capacity of 9,300 skiers per hour. The resort offers two terrain parks, ice skating, four restaurants, three sport shops, a large rental facility and wireless Internet connection. Skiers and snowboarders enjoy 16 total trails serviced by seven lifts. At the heart of the resort lies Beech Tree Village, with restaurants, such as View Haus Cafeteria, Beech Tree Bar and Grill, Munchies and Beech Mountain Bakery; and retail shops, including Ski Beech Sports, Roots Rideshop and Beech Moun-

PAGE 31

Avery County Chamber of Commerce 828.898.5605 www.averycounty.com BB&T 888.BBT-ONLINE www.BBandT.com Amy Brown, CPA 828.898.7607 Flora Ottimer Fine Childrens Apparel & Toys 828.898.5112 Skiers and snowboarders enjoy 16 total trails serviced by seven lifts.

tain Gifts and Clothing Rentals. An outdoor, 7,000-square-foot ice-skating rink anchors the center of the village, complete with an outdoor fire pit. Adult rates for the 2012-13 season are $25 for a half-day and $35 for a full-day or twilight session Monday through Friday (junior and senior lift tickets are $5 cheaper), with night sessions offered at $25 Sunday through Thursday. For weekends and holidays, adult rates are $48 ($35 for juniors/seniors) for a halfday and $63 ($43 for juniors/seniors) for full-day or twilight session. Night sessions for Friday and Saturday nights and holidays cost $30 for adults and $25 for juniors and seniors. Beech Mountain Resort is located at 1007 Beech Mountain Parkway in Beech Mountain. For more information, visit www.beechmountainresort.com or call (828) 387-2011.

Nick’s Restaurant & Pub Open 7 Days a Week 828.898.9613 Northern Parker Creative Interiors & Accessories 828.263.8734 and 828.898.9636 Rite Aid Pharmacy 828.898.8971 Rustic Rooster Country Living With Elegance Furnishings, Gifts & Accessories 828.898.5161 Shooz & Shiraz A Shoe & Wine Salon at The Dande Lion The Dande Lion Ladies Apparel, Shoes & Accessories 866.222.2050 and 828.898.3566 Valle de Bravo Mexican Grill Open 7 Days a Week 828.898.4949

SHOPPING • DINING • BUSINESS At the Corner of Hwy 105 & 184 Tynecastle Hwy • Banner Elk For leasing information call 828.898.6246


THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

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2012

VILLAGE OF SUGAR MOUNTAIN Dennis Lacey Broker

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with current weeks lift ticket


2012

THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

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Snowshoeing offers a more tranquil — though still exhilirating — alternative to skiing and snowboarding. PHOTO COURTESY OF KIM JOCHL

Snowshoeing gains traction in the High Country BY MATTHEW HUNDLEY

Two High Country peaks, Sugar Mountain Resort and the town of Beech Mountain, are leading the charge in a new approach in winter sports –snowshoeing. While snowshoes represent some of mankind’s oldest winter weather gear, a revolution in outdoor sports in recent years has changed snowshoes from survival tool to recreational outlet. Snowshoes allow hikers a new way to view their favorite trails, give winter sports enthusiasts a more relaxing winter weather experience and provide a family-friendly outdoor event during a time of year when it can be difficult to get the whole family outside and active. Sugar Mountain Resort provides ample opportunity for beginners or experts to take to the snowy trails by offering multiple tours each week throughout the winter season.

At Sugar Mountain Resort, one-hour snowshoe sessions will take place at 3 p.m. each Monday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday, with an additional session at 9 a.m. on Saturdays. A snowshoe rental is included in the price of each session. Snowshoe sessions can be tailored to fit the needs and age of a group. Adult tours are for snowshoers age 12 or older. Tours for children are designed for kids ages 8 to 11. Groups are welcome anytime. Sugar Mountain Resort recommends that anyone interested in participating in a snowshoeing session sign up at least 15 minutes in advance at the ski/snowboard school. For more information on Sugar Mountain Resort’s snowshoeing programs, call (800) SUGARMT or (828) 898-4521, or visit www.skisugar. com/skischool. Sugar Mountain Resort is located at 1009 Sugar Mountain Drive in Sugar Mountain.

Throughout the winter months, the town of Beech Mountain will offer snowshoe rentals to be used on seven different trails around the mountain, including the famous Emerald Outback trail. The snowshoes will be available through the town’s Buckeye Recreation Center. All trails available for snowshoeing will also be available for cross-country skiing throughout the winter. In addition to providing snowshoe rentals, the town of Beech Mountain will also provide free, guided snowshoeing tours at different points throughout the winter. Currently, free tours are scheduled for Saturdays, Dec. 29; Jan. 12, 2013; Jan. 26, 2013; and Feb. 9, 2013. In addition to the free, guided tours, anyone can schedule a private guided tour through Buckeye Recreation Center for a fee. For more information on the town of Beech Mountain’s snowshoeing pro-

gram, call Buckeye Recreation Center at (828) 387-3003. For the second year, Beech Mountain will host the N.C. Snowshoe Championship. The event, scheduled for Saturday, Jan. 12, 2013, is an open race designed to select a N.C. competitor for the national competition later in 2013. The race will begin at 9 a.m. Registration, which will be available at www.beechrecreation.org, will cost $10. In the event that the weather is not conducive to snowshoeing, the race will become a trail run. As more information on the race becomes available, it will be posted at www.beechrecreation.org. As the popularity of snowshoeing increases, High Country equipment shops will likely introduce snowshoes and other related equipment to their shelves. To check with local ski shops, check the article on page 35 of this year’s Winter Times.


THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

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2012

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Scheduled 2012-13 Season: November 16 - March 24 Blowing Rock, NC • www.appskimtn.com • 828.295.7828 • www.appterrainpark.com


2012

THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

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High Country Ski Shops and Winter Gear Discover the best spots to get geared up for the slopes this winter

MOUNTAIN GIRL GALLERY

BY MATTHEW HUNDLEY

As popular as winter sports have become, snow-lovers know that how much fun they have depends largely on whether or not they have gear to keep moving down the slope quickly and safely while staying warm, dry and competitive. Fortunately, the High Country’s many ski shops and outdoor adventure suppliers rise to the occasion each winter to meet every conceivable need for skiers, snowboarders, snowshoers and all those who just love to be outdoors during the coldest months of the year. Those cold months can make for some harsh conditions, and the cutting edge of performance and safety equipment changes year to year. To keep the whole family warm and safe and to make sure you have the gear to keep up with the crowds, it is important to know where to go to get outfitted for the 2012-13 winter season. From winterwear basics, like coats and gloves, to the high-performance equipment for competition skiing and snowboarding, the shops listed below can outfit thrill-seekers in whatever they need to keep their adventures exciting, fun and safe. No matter where you are headed, from Boone to Blowing Rock to Banner Elk, the shops listed here are easy to find in the High Country’s most sought-after locales for winter sports. For those customers not looking to make an investment in new gear this year, many of these retailers can also provide high-end equipment rentals, making them essential stops on any adventure-seeker’s way to the slopes, trails or tubing lanes. Of course, you do not have to be on your way to a wintry adventure to take advantage of everything these shops offer. After all, the clothing, coats, gloves, hats and other items sold at these shops do not just function well on the slopes, they also look good for walking on the streets of Banner Elk and Boone. Whatever the need may be, the shops listed below have the solution when it comes to winterwear and gear. To find the shop nearest to you, check the address listed with location. Not sure what you are looking for? Click to each shop’s website to learn more about what they offer. Have a specific need or question? Give the

4516 Tynecastle Highway, Banner Elk (828) 898-9581 www.mountaingirlgallery.com

Beech Mountain ALPINE SKI CENTER C-3 Beech Towers, Beech Mountain Parkway, Beech Mountain (828) 387-9291 www.alpineskicenter.com

Boone 1ST TRACKS 1380 N.C. 105, Boone (828) 264-7368 www.1sttracks.com

FARMER’S SKI (BOONE) 140 S. Depot St., Boone (828) 264-4565 Facebook and Google+

FOOTSLOGGERS 139 S. Depot St., Boone (828) 262-5111 www.footsloggers.com

MAST GENERAL STORE 630 West King Street, Boone (828) 626-0000 www.mastgeneralstore.com

RECESS SKATE 1158 Highway 105, Boone (828) 355-9013 www.recessrideshop.com The High Country boasts many shops specializing in all things snowsports. FILE PHOTO

folks at any of these shops a call using the phone numbers listed below.

Banner Elk ALPINE SKI CENTER 3150 Tynecastle Highway, Sugar Mountain (828) 898-9701 www.alpineskicenter.com

EDGE OF THE WORLD 394 Shawneehaw Avenue, Banner Elk (828) 898-9550 www.edgeoworld.com

EXTREME SNOWBOARD AND SKIS 3071 Tynecastle Highway, Banner Elk (828) 898-3665 extreme1@skybest.com

SAGESPORT (BOONE MALL) 1180 Blowing Rock Road #5, Boone (828) 262-1112 www.sagesport.com

Blowing Rock FOOTSLOGGERS 921 Main Street, Blowing Rock (828) 295-4453 www.footsloggers.com


THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

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Tubular Snowsports

2012

Snow tubing in the High Country

BY KELLEN MOORE

Snow tubing is a lot like sledding — but on steroids. High on the fun scale and great for family outings, snow tubing is a can’tmiss activity for everyone visiting the High Country during winter. Best of all, unlike ice skating or skiing, snow tubing requires virtually no skill. The key thing to a successful snowtubing experience is dressing for the part. Multiple layers, along with hats, gloves and thick socks, will keep you cozy, while a waterproof top layer will keep the snow from getting in. Crazy as it may be, sunglasses and sunscreen are a good idea for any snow-based activity, as the bright white snow reflects the sun. The time is now to make plans at one of the High Country’s snow tubing venues. Please note that rates and times may be subject to change, so check with the resorts as you’re making your plans. CONTINUED ON PAGE 37

Guests enjoy a thrilling experience at the snow tubing park at Sugar Mountain Resort. PHOTOS BY TODD BUSH, COURTESY OF BUSHPHOTO.COM


2012

Snow Tubing CONTINUED FROM PAGE 36

HAWKSNEST Located atop the town of Seven Devils, Hawksnest lays claim to being one of the largest local snow tubing parks. The 20-lane tubing park offers lanes ranging from 400 feet to 1,000 feet long. Two conveyer lifts take riders back to the top for another run. Even when Mother Nature doesn’t provide, the resort makes its own snow and provides lighting on all lanes. Children must be at least 3 years old to snow tube at Hawksnest, and anyone younger than 18 must have a parent or guardian fill out a liability form. Each session lasts approximately one hour and 45 minutes. For the 2012-13 season, a single snowtubing session costs $25 Monday through Thursday, or $32 for two sessions. The sessions begin at 10 a.m., noon, 2 p.m. and

THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

4 p.m. The rates remain the same on Friday, but an additional session is also offered at 6 p.m. On Saturdays and near holidays, snow tubing is $30 and is offered at 10 a.m., noon, 2 p.m., 4 p.m. and 6 p.m. Holidays are considered to be Dec. 23 to Jan. 4, Jan. 20 and Feb. 17. On Sunday, sessions are $30 and start at 10 a.m., noon and 2 p.m. For more information, visit hawksnestresort.com or call (828) 963-6561.

JONAS RIDGE SNOW TUBING Nestled in the tiny community of Jonas Ridge, the Jonas Ridge Snow Tubing site is family owned and operated and offers six snow tube lanes. The slopes range from mild and manageable for the youngsters to very steep and fast for the thrill-seekers. After a successful ride, take the “magic carpet” conveyer to the top and race downhill again. The Jonas Ridge Snow Tubing park is equipped with snow-making equip-

ment and lighting for nighttime rides. Afterward, warm up by the crackling fire in the lodge or watch other tubers from the observation deck. All children 6 or younger must be accompanied by an adult at all times. For the 2012-13 season, snow tubing rates are $20 per person, Monday through Thursday, and $25 per person Friday and Saturday. Holiday rates are also $25 per person and apply Dec. 15 to Jan. 2. Group rates are also available for $20 per person and must be booked in advance. Each snow tubing session lasts two hours, and the park’s hours are listed online. Jonas Ridge does not accept credit or debit cards, so come prepared. For more information, visit jonasridgesnowtube.com or call (828) 733-4155.

SUGAR MOUNTAIN RESORT At Sugar Mountain Resort, those looking for a change of pace from skiing and

PAGE 37

snowboarding can take a whirl on the 700-foot-long tubing lanes. In addition to several 10- to 12-foot wide tubing chutes, the park offers a lift system, snowmaking equipment, lighting for night tubing and regularly groomed lanes. At Sugar Mountain, tubing sessions are one hour and 45 minutes long and start at 10 a.m., noon, 2 p.m., 4 p.m., 6 p.m. and 8 p.m. Ticket prices are $25 per ride on weekdays and $30 per rider on weekends and during the holiday season. Upon approval, children 4 and younger may qualify for a complimentary tubing ticket when accompanied by a ticketed adult. Children must be at least 3 years old to ride, and those who are 6 and younger must share a tube with an adult. A limited number of tickets are offered for each session and go on sale approximately one hour before each session. Tickets are sold at the tubing park and not at the regular ticket windows. For more information, visit skisugar. com/tubing or call (828) 898-4521.


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2012

Winter’s Journey: The Blue Ridge Parkway BY KELLEN MOORE

The Moses H. Cone Manor off the Blue Ridge Parkway offers a spectacular winter view of icy Bass Lake and snow-covered pines. PHOTOS BY KELLEN MOORE

Your Great Escape...

For some a weekend W 800-564-8496 www.logsamerica.com New Location: 2999 Hwy 221 N Jefferson, NC 28640

HATEVER your reason, our talented team of professionals can help create your perfect log home getaway with our superior quality products, flexible designs and affordable luxury.

Logs America has been building log home dreams in the High Country since 1994. Our log and timber products are exclusively supplied by Log Homes of America. A local, family owned company manufacturing quality log and timber components supported with integrity for more than 22 years. Come visit our new log showroom Monday – Friday 9-5 and Saturday 10-2 or by appointment.

Traveling the Blue Ridge Parkway is an adventure in every season. The 469-mile scenic highway, sometimes referred to as “America’s Favorite Drive,” is a unique way to enjoy a mountain winter. Winding up western North Carolina and into Virginia, the Blue Ridge Parkway includes a lengthy section passing through the High Country counties of Avery, Watauga and Ashe. Although most Parkway facilities close in winter, the road remains open as long as snow and ice do not create dangerous driving conditions. The result is a quieter stretch of highway than motorists would see during the spring blooms, summer greening or autumn foliage. As winter arrives, the deciduous trees have lost their leaves, and the crisp winter air often means a better chance at long-range views. Don’t leave home without a camera — the Parkway offers some of the most stunning sunrises and sunsets known to man. Completed in 1983, the Linn Cove Viaduct celebrates its 25th birthday this year as one of the Parkway’s most iconic sections. The bridge is an engineering marvel that winds around the mountain’s edge in a way that creates less impact on the delicate ecosystem. The bridge, located at milepost 304, was the last portion of the Blue Ridge Parkway to be completed. Visitors

CONTINUED ON PAGE 39


2012

THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

PAGE 39

Moses H. Cone Flat Top Manor in winter.

Blue Ridge Parkway CONTINUED FROM PAGE 38

can take a short walking path from the Linn Cove Visitor Center to see beneath the bridge, or use the path to access the longer Tanawha Trail. Blue Ridge Parkway superintendent Phil Francis spoke about the viaduct’s history at a celebration in September. “In 1968, officials of the Blue Ridge Parkway decided on the current route,” Francis said. “It is one of the greatest stretches of roadway in the National Park Service, and we are so lucky to have it.” Another of the Parkway’s true “gems” is the Museum of North Carolina Minerals in Spruce Pine. The museum, located at milepost 331, is one of the few visitor sites open year-round. It features interactive exhibits about the minerals and gems located in the region.

Much of the world’s high-quality quartz is mined near Spruce Pine, and the mountains also have gifted the world with an array of buried treasure, including feldspar and mica. The minerals and gems located in the Blue Ridge Mountains have made their way into an array of consumer products, including electronics, glass, drywall, auto paint and cosmetics. The museum is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., seven days a week, but hours are subject to change. The museum can be reached at (828) 765-2761. As with any winter driving, it’s smart when traveling the Parkway to pack emergency supplies, such as water and snacks, an extra jacket or blanket just in case. When the highway does become impassable due to inclement weather, it becomes a mecca for cross-country skiing, snowshoeing or bundled-up hiking. For more information about the Blue Ridge Parkway, call (828) 298-0398 or Cross-country skiiers brave the cold just off the Parkway in Blowing Rock. 1-800-PARK-WATCH.


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THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

2012

Caving

An Adventure for All Seasons BY ANNA OAKES anna@mountaintimes.com

On those winter days you think it may be too chilly, rainy or snowy for an outdoor activity, think again. Caving, also known as spelunking, is a year-round activity facilitated by a number of High Country outfitters. Sheltered from the elements, caves retain a comfortable temperature around 55 degrees throughout the year. Explore caves and caverns formed millions and millions of years ago as water hollowed out limestone rock underneath the Southern Appalachian Mountains. Below are a number of local outfitters who can safely guide you and your friends or family through the subterranean. Call for rates.

RIVER AND EARTH ADVENTURES 1655 N.C. 105, Boone • 11116 Main St., Blowing Rock 1-866-411-RAFT • www.raftcavehike.com River and Earth Adventures will take you to a noncommercial cave and equip you with gloves, helmets and high-powered headlamps to explore the underworld as Mother Nature created it. According to its website, River and Earth Adventures is the only outfitter in the country that has geologists on staff, meaning visitors will be thoroughly entertained and educated by knowledgeable guides who share the historical and geological significance of the caves and their roles in the ecosystem. Cave trips run seven days a week year-round. Group discounts are available. Trips are provided to three different caves that vary in time, distance and experience, with trips taking between two and four hours. Be prepared to walk over different ground surfaces, such as mud, gravel and shallow water.

ROCK DIMENSIONS 131-B S. Depot St., Boone 888-595-6009 • www.rockdimensions.com

Climb, crawl and explore natural caves through High Country area outfitters this winter. PHOTOS COURTESY OF ROCK DIMENSIONS

With trips available to Worley’s Cave in Tennessee and Robert’s Cave in Virginia, Boone-based Rock Dimensions provides cave trips that are suitable for beginners and groups. The caves feature main passages that are tall enough to walk through, with some narrow corridors and shallow ceilings. Smaller passages branching off from main corridors offer the opportunity for crawling through tight spaces for those who desire additional exploration. Cave guides will discuss cave formations and cave life,

CONTINUED ON PAGE 41


2012

THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

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Yamaha of Wilkesboro 4641 Hwy 421 North Wilkesboro, NC 28697 336 - 973 - 3325 www.421powersports.com

Caving Adventure

*Finance offer subject to credit approval, applies to purchases of new Yamaha Motorcycles, ATVs, Scooters made on a Yamaha Installment Financing loan account from 10/1/12 - 12/26/12. Minimum contract length is 24 months and maximum length is 36 months. Minimum amount financed is $5,000. Fixed APR of 3.99% or 12.99% will be assigned based on credit approval criteria. Monthly payments per $1,000 financed based on 26 month term are $29.52 at 3.99% and $33.69 at 12.99%. Offer good only in the U.S., excluding the state of Hawaii. Dress properly for your ride witha helmet, eye protection, long-sleeved shirt, long pants, gloves and boots. Do not drink and ride. It is illegal and dangerous. Yamaha and the Motorcycle Safety Foundation encourage you to ride safely and respect the environment. For further information regarding the MSF course, please call 1-800-446-9227. ATVs with engine sizes over 90cc are recommendedfor use only by riders age 16 years and older. Yamaha recommends that all ATV riders take an approved training course. For safety nad training information, see your dealer or call the ATV Safety Institute at 1-800-887-2887. ATVs can be hazardous to operate. For your safey- always avoid paved surfaces. Never ride on public roads. Always wear a helmet, eye protection and protective clothing; never carry passengers; never engage in stunt riding; riding and alcohol/drugs don’t mix; avoid excessive speed; and be particularly careful on difficult terrain. Professional riders depicted on closed courses. ©2011 Yamaha Motor Corp. U.S.A. All rights reserved. • yamaha-motor.com 10/12

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 40

as well as “leave no trace” etiquette to protect the fragile cave environment. Rock Dimensions provides helmets, gloves, candles, kneepads, headlamps and trash bags for dirty clothes. Between three and four hours are spent inside the cave.

WAHOO’S ADVENTURES 3385 U.S. 321, Boone 800-444-RAFT • www.wahoosadventures.com Book a trip through Wahoo’s Adventures in Boone and explore a privately owned cave near Johnson City in eastern Tennessee — the largest in the state. Expert guides will lead your expedition through narrow passages and tight corridors.

LINVILLE CAVERNS 19929 U.S. 221, Marion 800-419-0540 • www.linvillecaverns.com If you’re looking for a more relaxed stroll through underground caverns — and a tour that accommodates wheelchairs — check out Linville Caverns, located off of U.S. 221 about an hour south of Boone. The commercial cavern offers 30-minute tours on Saturdays and Sundays throughout December, January and February. Rain jackets are recommended.

$WEEP$TAKE$ LOCATED AT 9218-1 HWY 105 SOUTH BANNER ELK, NC 28604 (NEXT TO FOSCOE FIRE DEPT.)

OPEN 12 PM TO 12 AM Closed Wednesdays (828) 963-1616

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(828) 297-1958 Purchase $20 Internet Time, Receive $5 with this ad.


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Soaring Above the Slopes Wintertime Ziplining in the High Country BY MOLLY MOORE

Gliding through the air at Hawksnest, guests are granted a new perspective on their surroundings, and every breath of wind feels different. PHOTOS BY MOLLY MOORE

When it comes to winter recreation in the High Country, options like snow tubing and skiing are classics. But more and more outdoor enthusiasts are discovering that gliding along a zipline above the frosty slopes is just as rewarding. At a zipline course, guests don a climbing harness, which a guide fastens to a secure cable strung across a valley or along a mountainside. Gravity does the rest, as the guest zooms along the cable to a landing platform. Depending on the course, riders have varying degrees of control over how quickly they descend — and whether they want to twirl around and absorb the panorama or make an aerodynamic blast toward the finish line. Hawksnest owner Lenny Cottom added the first ziplines to his family’s Seven Devils resort four years ago and has since expanded to more than four miles of cables. “These mountains lend themselves to ziplining,” he said, gesturing toward the resort’s 150 acres and 19 ziplines. The Blue Ridge’s mountains and valleys are in close proximity to each other, which facilitates interesting zipline courses, he said. Some cable rides feature long-ranging views, while others follow creeks amidst the trees. Local wildlife is accustomed to the hum of the

{ Fall colors give way to a blanket of white, then come the blooms of spring. But the wonder of Grandfather Mountain knows no season. Or equal.

GRANDFATHER® MOUNTAIN

WONDERS NEVER CEASE

w w w . g r a n d f a t h e r. c o m

cables, so visitors frequently see deer and turkeys. Last year, a lucky crew of guests saw a black bear ambling by. “Ziplining walks a fine line between extreme sports and comfortable family activity that gives visitors a chance to see the Appalachian environment from a different perspective and seek a little thrill in the mountains,” said Jack Sharp, one of the owners of Sky Valley Zip Tours in Blowing Rock. Many folks who have a fear of heights still enjoy ziplining, Cottom said. Because the cables are tightly strung between platforms, visitors don’t experience the stomach-dropping sensation associated with rollercoasters. Instead, the ride is smooth and swift. Veteran Hawksnest zipline guide Tom Bookstaver suggested that visitors wear sturdy shoes and dress appropriately — in summer, shorts should reach midthigh, and, in winter, visitors should bring comfortable gloves. Reservations are recommended, and weekdays provide a more intimate experience. Bookstaver once guided a 92-year-old on a zip tour with her grandchildren, and his top tip is for families to share the adventure together. Sky Valley’s Jack Sharp agreed. “This is for all ages,” he said. “Grandma and grandpa, don’t just drop your grandkids off. This is something

CONTINUED ON PAGE 43

A mile above sea level,

you enter a different world.

}


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Dawn Hopkins, of Bellhaven, N.C., experiences her first zipline tour at Hawksnest with her son, Ryan (not pictured). ‘It was awesome,’ she said. ‘I was expecting to be more nervous. We will definitely be back.’

Zipline CONTINUED FROM PAGE 42

they’re going to want to experience with y’all and not just tell you about.” Across the High Country, peak zipline season is in summer and fall, but at Hawksnest, cable riding is a four-season activity. A shorter, one-hour course is perfect for this season and means that a cup of hot chocolate is never too far away. “In the wintertime, you’re actually ziplining over the snowtubers,” Cottom said. “A lot of families come up for the snow tubing, see the ziplining, and try both.” On a Friday afternoon in late fall, Mike Price of Kannapolis, N.C., and five companions ventured out to Hawksnest’s lengthier Eagle Course. It was Price’s first

time. “We’ll do it again,” he said. “It was exhilarating.” Crystal Patterson, also of Kannapolis, said she would enjoy a winter tour. “It would be fun to do it when it’s actually snowing,” she said.

High Country Ziplines

www.hawksnestzipline.com

PLUMTREE ZIPLINE CANOPY TOURS 4716 South U.S. 19 East Plumtree, N.C. 28664 (828) 765-9696 www.toeriverlodge.com

THE BEANSTALK JOURNEY ZIPLINES

SCREAMING ZIPLINES

700 Sanford Drive Morganton, N.C. 28655 (828) 430-3440 www.thebeanstalkjourney.com

9250 U.S. 421 North, Zionville, N.C. 28698 (828) 898-5404 www.screamingziplines.com

HAWKSNEST

SKY VALLEY ZIP TOURS

2058 Skyland Drive Seven Devils, N.C. 28604 (828) 963-6561

634 Sky Ranch Road Blowing Rock, N.C. 28605 (855) 475-9947


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THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

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Hiking through Winter BY JESSE CAMPBELL

While the splendor and dazzling color of the fall season has left the now depleted canopies of our mountaintops and ridgelines, that does not mean the High Country is short of premier hiking destinations across the region. From the Blue Ridge Parkway to several municipal trail ways, the northwest corner of the state is full of trails and pathways begging exploration. Mt. Jefferson in Ashe County is just one trail system that offers a labyrinth of meandering well-maintained trails that circumvent the mountain’s peak. The Blue Ridge Mountains can also be seen from this system of trails that sits 1,600 feet in the clear skies of western North Carolina. Adverse weather conditions, which can offer a stark comparison from what is going on in the nearby valley, can affect the park’s hours of operation, so it is paramount to call ahead of time to see if the park is indeed open. The mountain is easily accessible from the town of Jefferson, just off of U.S. 221. Follow the brown colored park signs to the park’s entrance. The Blue Ridge Parkway, which runs in the southern section of Ashe County, harnesses the natural beauty of the Appalachian Mountains with miles upon miles of fall scenery, and a trail system with varying levels of difficulty at numerous overlooks and entrances. From the Cascades to the Mountains to Sea trail, the

Hikers break out their cold-weather gear, including some cross country skies in one case, on a Roan Mountain trail. FILE PHOTO

Blue Ridge Parkway offers off road excursions to quench the adventurous thirst of any hiker. As the Parkway is often closed in the event of wintry

weather, please call the park service ahead of time to plan the best time to take a day excursion. Like many trails in the region, constant supervision is not always available, so it is important to exercise caution wherever you may choose to explore. There are also many trailheads that can be on the parkway to the south of Ashe in Watauga County. According to mountaintravelguide.com, Boone Fork Trail offers more experienced hikers a moderate to strenuous excursion of 4.9 miles and is located at mile most 296.5 of the Blue Ridge Parkway. Green Knob Trail is another more vigorous trek and is located at mile post 295.9 Located a short distance from this trail is Bass Lake Carriage, Horse and Hiking Trail, near Parkway milepost 294. This trail is rated “easy” for more leisurely minded hikers. Standing at more than 5,580 feet, Snake Mountain in Watauga County offers magnificent views of other prominent mountaintops, while giving hiking enthusiasts a blood pumping, sweat breaking expedition through some of the area’s more challenging venues. Motorists can reach the mountain from Rich Mountain Gap Road, which can be accessed from U.S. 421. If coming from Boone, take N.C. 194 toward Todd before turning left onto Meat Camp Road. After Meat Camp Church, fork left onto Rich Mountain Gap Road.


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Winter offers anglers fish and fun BY ADAM ORR

Northwestern North Carolina is home to miles of rivers and streams and three species of elusive trout – and bright winter days are great opportunities to catch them, according to Foscoe Fishing Company guide Tyler Almond. “You have to slow things down in the winter and be a little more patient,” said Almond. “But fewer people are on the water means less pressure on fish – and good opportunities to catch some great trout.” The colder the water, the slower the fish’s metabolism, according to Almond. “They like to sort of hang out,” Almond said. “They don’t move as much, and they’re not as aggressive, so you do have to spend more time trying to put the fly right in front of their face. But they do still feed pretty well.” Winter also means fewer food options, so sometimes they become a little braver than throughout the rest of the year. Almond recommends subsurface nymph fishing in larger, deeper pools, which is where trout tend to congregate during the colder months. Despite colder temperatures, Almond said the tailwaters of the South Holston offer winter anglers a chance at fish freestone streams can’t offer fisherman at this

Catch and Release Tips •

Use barbless hooks and, if you use a net, choose one made of rubber that is less harmful to fish scales, eyes, and gills.

Before handling fish, wet your hands to protect their mucous coating, which protects them from waterborne bacteria.

If at all possible, leave the fish in the water but, if you have to remove the fish from the stream, be quick and gentle, and don’t squeeze the fish.

When releasing a fish, hold it under the belly and point the fish facing the current. Be patient and give the fish the time it needs to recover and swim away on its own.

time of year. Tailwater fisheries – created by outflow from large dams – are cold and silt-free, which are ideal conditions for trout.

But there is one other special feature of tailwater rivers – they’re warmer in the winter than other fisheries and trout are usually more active than on freestone streams, according to Almond. “Since they’re created by discharging water from the same depth, tailwaters are basically the same temperature all year round,” he said. “And that usually means more aggressive, active trout even in the dead of winter.” Almond said there is usually some kind of insect hatch on these tailwater streams, as well, which can make a day on the water productive. Smaller, slower-moving streams also have a tendency for ice buildup on their shores, which can make fishing difficult, so Almond recommends larger bodies of water, including the Watauga River, the New River, the Linville River, the Toe River and the larger sections of the Elk River and the lower sections of Wilson Creek. Alleghany, Ashe, Avery and Watauga counties all offer anglers miles of state-hatchery supported waters to try their luck, though anglers should be respectful as many streams open for public trout fishing are located on private lands.

CONTINUED ON PAGE 48


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MAGIC HOME ENTERTAINMENT 419 East Main St. Jefferson NC 336-846-5703 5045 Boone Trail Millers Creek NC 336-667-6016


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2012

High Country Fishing CONTINUED FROM PAGE 45

For the wintertime angler, fishing in the High Country is wide open. PHOTOS BY KELLEN MOORE

Outfitters at a Glance Local fishing shops and outfitters offer area newcomers a chance to find out the best fishing spots, and what the fish are hitting.

RIVERGIRL FISHING CO. 4041 Railroad Grade Road Todd, N.C. 28684 (336) 877-3099 www.rivergirlfishing.com

APPALACHIAN ANGLER

GRANDFATHER TROUT FARM

174 Old Shull’s Mill Road Boone, N.C. 28607 (828) 963-5050 www.appangler.com

10767 N.C. 105 Banner Elk, N.C. 28604 (828) 963-5098 www.grandfathertroutfarm.com

ELK CREEK OUTFITTERS

RICK’S SMALLMOUTH ADVENTURES

1560 N.C. 105 Boone, N.C. 28607 (828) 264-6497 www.ecoflyfishing.com

1757 Pleasant Home Road Sparta, N.C. 28675 (336) 372-8321 www.fishthenew.com

FOSCOE FISHING CO. & OUTFITTERS

WATAUGA RIVER ANGLERS

8857 N.C. 105 Boone, N.C. 28607 (828) 963-6556 www.foscoefishing.com

5712 N.C. 105 South Vilas, N.C. 28692 (828) 963-5463 www.wataugariveranglers.com

“A lot of folks overlook the hatchery supported waters during winter for whatever reason,” Almond said. “Everybody wants to hit the delayed harvest water, but there are lots of hatchery trout, as well as wild trout that have been in these streams for a while, and they just don’t get the kind of pressure during the winter as the delayed harvest waters.” According to the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission, “Fishing is allowed on these streams because landowners have generously provided access to the public for fishing. Show your appreciation to these landowners by removing your trash and being respectful of their property.” For a different challenge, Alleghany, Watauga and especially Avery counties offer miles of colder, higher elevation wild trout waters that native brook trout call home. Unfortunately, Almond said, anglers would likely have to wait for the early days of spring to get into good smallmouth bass action, because the winter water is just too cold. “That’s not to say that you can’t catch smallies throughout the winter, but once it drops below a certain temperature, they hunker down deep in holes and you really, really have to work to get something in front of them, and then really slow down your retrieve,” Almond said. “It’s difficult.” The North Carolina Wildlife Resources commission offers fishermen information on where to fish and what’s available to catch, as well as state laws and regulations, seasons and limits, hatchery stocking schedules and state fishing records for the truly ambitious at www. ncwildlife.org/fishing.aspx. In order to fish North Carolina waters, you need a state fishing license, which you can purchase at any of the local fishing outfitters. A 10-day license costs $5 for North Carolina residents and $10 for out-of-state visitors. For an additional $10, you can add a trout stamp to the license. Before you head to the river, be sure to pick up a copy of the state regulations concerning trout streams. Pay close attention before hitting the water, as trout regulations can be complex, can vary from stream to stream, and can result in hefty fines of more than $200.


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Visit an old-fashioned general store BY ANNA OAKES

A number of general stores have persisted in Western North Carolina over the years, perhaps because the stores, which traditionally served as community centers, were valued even more given the geographic isolation of mountain towns. The general store of yesteryear sold groceries, hardware, shoes, confections, medicines, fabric and sewing supplies, jewelry, hats, dishes, books and stationery, and tobacco. Today, you can still find many of these commodities at general stores throughout the High Country, as well as modern outdoor gear and apparel, unique gifts and seasonal items.

ORIGINAL MAST GENERAL STORE AND ANNEX N.C. 194, Valle Crucis (828) 963-6511 • www.mastgeneralstore.com The original Mast General Store in Valle Crucis has been named to many lists of North Carolina and national icons. The store, built in 1882 and opened by C.D. Taylor in 1883, continues to operate full time to this day, serving Valle Crucis community members and tourists alike. The store and the Mast Store Annex down the street offer an old-fashioned candy barrel, apparel, accessories, outdoor gear and much more.

MAST GENERAL STORE OF BOONE 630 W. King St., Boone (828) 262-0000 • www.mastgeneralstore.com

Located amongst the diverse shopping atmosphere of downtown Boone, Mast General Store boasts two floors of outdoor apparel and gear, candy, books and games, home décor, gifts, seasonal fashions, jewelry, Appalachian State gear, food products and more — all on creaky wooden floors.

FRED’S GENERAL MERCANTILE 501 Beech Mountain Parkway, Beech Mountain (828) 387-4838 • www.fredsgeneral.com High atop Beech Mountain, you may feel isolated from the world, but Fred’s General Mercantile has everything you need. Established in 1979, Fred’s is a grocery store, hardware store and clothing store, all in one building. Hungry? Don’t forget Fred’s Backside Deli, open daily from 7:30 a.m. to 3 p.m.

TODD GENERAL STORE 3866 Railroad Grade Road, Todd (336) 877-1067 • www.toddgeneralstore.com The Todd General Store is closed December through March, but remember to stop by on your next visit to the High Country. The store features a deli, crafts, homemade jellies, ice cream, antiques, collectibles, music and tapes, rustic furnishings and books by local authors, as well as storytelling and live music.

The original Mast General Store in Valle Crucis is on the National Register of Historic Places, taking visitors back in time to a bygone era. PHOTOS SUBMITTED

Sitting atop Beech Mountain, Fred’s General Mercantile is a store with altitude. It has the distinction of having the highest elevation of any general store in the United States.

Located in the picturesque community of Todd, the Todd General Store offers a little bit of everything.


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THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

Vintner Takes All BY MATT GRIMLEY

The High Country has, over the past decade, become a champion of growing French-American and American grapes and turning them into wine. While many locals and tourists are reveling in this new agriculture, to the vintners themselves, the popularity is not surprising. This all started 10 years ago when Dick Wolfe, a nuclear engineer by trade and wine buff by passion, first showed Rodney Farthing how to plant grapes at 4,000 feet in elevation. Other farmers followed Farthing’s pursuit, and with Wolfe’s encouragement, Watauga and Avery counties now support 32 vineyards. The success is due to two parts, says Wolfe: the grape and the soil. The grapes in High Country are matched mainly from the mountains of Europe. There, the grapes slowly ripen, developing more complex flavors, due to the cool nights and warm days. Wolfe said he thinks that the marechal foch, steuben and seyval blanc grape varieties will become the trademarks of High Country wine. Wolfe said the earth here is chock-full of minerals and not too acidic, providing a great ground where the grape’s roots can really dig in. This region also provides completely unique microclimates among the mountains’ hollows, with differing amounts of sun, wind and rain from one field to the next. Add to that the fact that wineries like Wolfe’s Banner Elk Winery are buying up as many local grapes as possible, and it seems that local vineyards are sitting on the throne of possibility, with the ability to grow many varieties of many grapes in many different places. It’s already provided a burgeoning alternative to tobacco and Christmas tree farming, and the resulting boom in wine

2012

Wineries in the High Country W

tourism doesn’t hurt, either. As Linville Falls Winery’s Jack Wiseman said, High Country winemaking is in its infancy, and making this industry will “take a while, because it’s new.” But he’s excited for the future. His winery has only been open for a month, and he’s seen a packed bar every weekend. Wiseman has had 30 years of experience as a winemaker, and he’s been very pleased so far with the quality of his cabernet sauvignon and riesling grapes. He touts his blueberry wine and cherry bounce, whose red fruits come right from some of his grandfather’s old farms. Steve Tatum runs Grandfather Vineyard and Winery and will supply you with a delicious view of his terraced vines and nearby stream to go with a variety of different wines. “We try to be all over the place (with our wines), since we have to cater to all kinds of individuals,” he said. In particular, though, Tatum offers an award-winning ice wine, which comes from a grape that is picked in 16-degree weather. The freezing creates a super sweetness within the grape, which makes the dessert wine taste almost like pie. At Banner Elk Winery, Wolfe and company managed to match a limited edition Banner Elk chardonnay to a chicken burrito, which should say something about the quality of their staff. But beside that tactful matching, they sported a marechal foch with a wonderful lingering taste of pepper, and a cabernet sauvignon that won double gold at last year’s state fair. Wolfe, Tatum and Wiseman are friendly with each other and the other wineries, as they all seem to know what a special time it is for the High Country’s wines. So, if you find yourself wondering what to do on a cold winter day, don’t hesitate to embrace the one-of-a-kind terroir of these and other wineries.

Frozen grapes mean it’s the right time for ice wine, a unique dessert beverage and specialty of Grandfather Vineyard and Winery. PHOTO SUBMITTED

Vintner Dick Wolfe prunes the vines at Banner Elk Winery. PHOTO BY FRANK RUGGIERO

Area Wineries 1861 FARMHOUSE 3608 N.C. 194 South Valle Crucis (828) 963-6301 www.1861farmhouse.com

BANNER ELK WINERY 60 Deer Run Road Banner Elk, N.C. 28604 (828) 260-1790 www.bannerelkwinery.com

CHATEAU LAURINDA VINEYARD 690 Reeves Ridge Road Sparta (336) 372-2562 www.chateaulaurindavineyards.com

GRANDFATHER VINEYARD & WINERY 225 Vineyard Lane Banner Elk (828) 963-2400 www.grandfathervineyard.com

LINVILLE FALLS WINERY 9557 Linville Falls Highway Newland (828) 765-1400 www.linvillefallswinery.com (Site is currently in development.)

NEW RIVER WINERY 165 Piney Creek Road Lansing (336) 384-1213 www.newriverwinery.com

THISTLE MEADOW WINERY 102 Thistle Meadow Laurel Springs (800) 233-1505 www.thistlemeadowwinery.com


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A meteor streaks across the Boone sky in November. The High Country’s night sky affords visitors ample opportunity to gaze into the cosmos.

Oh, Starry Night FROM STAFF REPORTS

A look above on a dark, clear, cool night in the High Country provides a vertical panorama unlike any other: A striking mountain landscape and a seemingly endless expanse of celestial objects. It is an image that mesmerizes, inspires and creates wonder. Whether the viewer takes only a few moments or a few steps out the door or spends several hours staring into the darkness of space on a mountain trail, stargazing is of the most rewarding pastimes to be had. For Vilas resident and nature photographer Dale Forrest, that pastime turned into an artform. Last year, looking for a new palette for his work, he turned his eyes to the sky and found an unexpected answer. “I’m at the house walking the dog at night, and it was midnight, and it just happened to be a clear night and just looked up and saw the Milky Way, and just figured, that’s got to be it.” Forrest spent six months and a little more than $300 building a simple motorized tracking device that would allow him to shoot the stars with his typical

PHOTO BY DALE FORREST

High Country a stellar stargazing destination

camera. Anchoring the sky to recognizable landmarks, his photos are an astonishing depiction of the High Country nighttime sky. So far, Forrest has shot the Milky Way moving over Grandfather Mountain, Price Lake and Table Rock. “I’m going to attempt the (Linn Cove) Viaduct next and maybe Moses Cone (Park),” he said. To get the ultimate view of the sky, whether taking a photo or gazing for fun, Forrest said several considerations must be made. First, stars are best seen during the new moon phase, which only occurs once a month and is when the sky is at its darkest. Then, the weather must also be clear. Forrest also picks out a particular location from which to take photos and scopes it out ahead of time. The best places require some travel away from city centers, where light is concentrated. “You’ve got to find a dark sky somewhere,” he said. “I like Wiseman’s View myself, I love to go out there. I’d go along the parkway. Price Lake I also love because it’s dark.”

Forrest has a preference for photographing the Milky Way, which also requires him to determine the exact time when the galaxy will move across his location. He uses a program called Stellarium to determine the time, which is typically when everyone else is in bed. “It’s usually 2 o’clock in the morning, so I have to leave at midnight, and sometimes I’m out there till daybreak, just shooting whatever I can find,” he said. “So, you take all these variables and if they all come together, you hike out and try to get a shot. And then I just head out and hope for something to work.” Forrest said shooting the stars is difficult and time consuming, but “it’s worth it when you get that end shot.” Taking photographs is his personal way of catching the stars, but anyone can stargaze, Forrest said. For those wanting to try it, he has a few words of advice. “It’s best to have some knowledge of what you’re looking at before you head out there,” he said. “The key is to get out there, get settled in. Of course, if it’s in the winter, get your clothes, be comfortable. Take your flashlight. I put blue

painter’s tape on mine – you don’t want to turn the light on and kill that darkness again.” Wait a half hour, let your your eyes become acclimated to the dark, and get lost in the wonders of the sky. “It’s just amazing what you’ll see,” he said. “It’s endless” To find more information on Dale Forrest and to see his nighttime photography, visit www.lorianddale.com/ daleforrest. The following days indicate when the the moon will be in its new phase. These dates and the days surrounding them are the best time to set out on a stargazing adventure.

HELPFUL STARGAZING WEBSITES www.stellarium.org: Stellarium provides free, easy-to-use planetarium software that shows exactly what you see when you look up at the stars. www.dso.appstate.edu/weather: Appalachian State University’s Dark Sky Observatory website provides an astronomer’s forecast, predicting when weather is best for astronomical observation.


THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

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The Blowing Rock Those who drive just past downtown Blowing Rock on U.S. 321 will find the town’s namesake. Overlooking the John’s River Gorge, the Blowing Rock is a vast cliff, standing 4,000 feet above sea level. Northwesterly winds travel through the gorge toward the Blowing Rock and form what is called a “flume” once they reach the wall of rock. Even without a storm forming over the gorge – and impressive sight in itself, if you happen to be there at the right time – there is a steady wind that flows and maintains the flume at fairly consistent levels. This way, a lightweight object – a napkin, for instance – can be thrown over the edge of the cliff and would most likely be cast upwards and back into the hands of the thrower (although littering is not encouraged). The legend of the Blowing Rock adds to the intrigue surrounding the flume phenomenon. It is said that a Chickasaw chieftan, fearful of a white man’s admiration for his

North Carolina’s oldest travel attraction

Overlooking the John’s River Gorge, the Blowing Rock is a vast cliff, standing 4,000 feet above sea level. FILE PHOTO

lovely daughter, journeyed far from the plains to bring her to the Blowing Rock and the care of a squaw mother. One day, the maiden, daydreaming on the craggy cliff, spied a Cherokee brave wandering in the wilderness far below and payfully shot an arrow in his direction. The flirtation worked, because he soon appeared before her wigwam, courted her with songs of his land, and they became lovers, wander-

PAGE 53

ing the pathless woodlands and along the crystal streams. One day, a strange reddening of the sky brought the brave and the maiden to the Blowing Rock. To him, it was a sign of trouble commanding his return to his tribe in the plans. With the maiden begging him not to leave her, the brave, torn by conflict of duty and heart, leaped from the rock into the wilderness far below.

The grief-stricken maiden prayed daily to the Great Spirit until one evening with a reddening sky, a gust of wind blew her lover back onto the Rock and into her arms. From that day, a perpetual wind has blown up onto the Blowing Rock from the valley below. For people of other days, at least, this was explanation enough for the Blowing Rock’s mysterious winds causing even the snow to fall upside down. Considered North Carolina’s oldest travel attraction, having opened in 1933, the Blowing Rock is open year-round, weather permitting, and is wheelchairaccessible and pet-friendly. In November, December and January (first week), hours are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., weather permitting. Admission is $6 for adults, $5 for senior citizens and $1 for children ages 4 to 11. Children 3 and younger are admitted free. Group rates are also available. The Blowing Rock is located off U.S. 321, near the Green Park Inn. For more information, call (828) 295-7111 or visit www.theblowingrock.com.

A Blowing Rock Tradition for more than 10 Years

Barker Realty Group

828.406.2816

Luxury Homes by KELLER WILLIAMS

990 Main Street · Blowing Rock, NC 28605 · P (828) 295-7373

“Meet Me at the Market!”

www.blowingrockbroker.com www.blowingrockmarket.com Wine Shop · Gourmet Deli · Specialty Foods · Cigars · Craft Beer · Coffee Shop


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2012

Visit your Grandfather this winter BY KATE SMITH

Grandfather Mountain is its own country haven. The 720-acre scenic travel attraction is operated by the Grandfather Mountain Stewardship Foundation and is like a mapped summary of the 2,500 acres of the surrounding Grandfather Mountain State Park. “Winter is a special season up here,” public relations director Landis Wofford said. “You have the mountain more to yourself, and the animals really like it. The views are typically a lot clearer, because the smog of the summer is mostly gone.” Named by pioneers who claimed to see an old man’s face in its ridgeline, Grandfather Mountain is estimated to be 300 million years old, with some rocks dating back 1.1 billion years. At the drive-through admission booth, visitors are given a trail guide, brochures and a bluegrass-backed audio CD that guides through every stop and attraction. CONTINUED ON PAGE 55

Grandfather’s world-famous Mile-High Swinging Bridge closes only in the harshest of weather conditions. PHOTO BY HUGH MORTON

Come visit us at Eastern America’s Highest Town


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Grandfather Mountain CONTINUED FROM PAGE 54

As the drive up peels through stony fog, the original Cherokee name for the mountain,“Tanawha,” meaning “fabulous hawk,” is apt. Overlooks include Half Moon Overlook, shadowed by Linville Peak and Second Peak; Cliffside Overlook panoramic; Sheer Bluff; and the Grandfather outlook near the Summit. The Woods Walk Picnic Area has firepits, picnic tables and a walking trail through a mixed hardwood forest and the Woodcarvers’ Shop. Another picnic area is up two curves, toward the mountain’s middle section, beside Sphinx and Split Rock. The Sphinx and Split Rock formations feature two rocks that have arrowed up through the ground, believed to be split due to ice forming in small cracks. Sphinx weighs more than 2 million pounds. Near the Animal Habitats and Nature Museum is the Grandfather Mountain Fudge Shop, which features a dozen samples of homemade fudge, hot chocolate, apples and caramel. The Nature Museum is filled with exhibits like gems, state birds, dendrochronology, history and examples of pollution on the mountain. In the same building is Mildred’s Grill and a gift shop. The wildlife habitat features natural settings for black bears, cougars, white-tailed deer, a golden eagle and river otters. Further up the mountain is Black Rock. From the parking lot is an extension to 11 trails within Grandfather Mountain State Park. On the other side of the lot is the four-tenths-of-a-mile Bridge Trail. Visitors can either hike this 20-minute trail to the top of the mountain or drive on up. At the top, wind escalates over peaks, funneling through with a force that has been recorded at 115 mph. The weather drops and dries too, with a climate similar to that of Newfoundland, Canada. Wofford said that sometimes this upper half is closed due to wind. “It’s not specific,” she said. “We just go up to see if people can withstand it and that it’s safe for vehicles and motorcycles.” For this reason, she suggests that visitors call before their trip to be sure the upper section is open. Visitors can usually also see closure updates on Grandfather’s Facebook page.

Winter visitors to Grandfather Mountain enjoy the park during a time that is typically quieter than summer or fall. The colder season also brings the opportunity to see incredible long range views from the mountain’s high vantage point.

PHOTOS BY HELEN MOSS DAVIS At the top, the aptly named Top Shop gift shop and gallery is an example of modern convenience meeting the raw elements. It was built to withstand hurricane force winds and was recycled from the original 1961 Top Shop. From the Top Shop’s balcony, the Mile-High Swinging Bridge is accessible. The bridge is built with galvanized steel, updated from its original wood planks. The wind toys with the bridge to create a whistling harmonica sound. The swinging bridge is a mile above sea level and 80 feet over the canyon. Sometimes the skyline of Charlotte, 87 airmiles to the southeast, can be seen from the bridge or ledges on either side. Hairpin curves, used in sports car commercials and a scene from “Forrest Gump,” comprise the route back down the mountain. The park-wide conversation effort extends from the immediate protection of its animals and wildlife. It denotes installations like natural lighting LED lights, biodegradable dinnerware at Mildred’s Grill and solar panels. A day-long pass from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. can be purchased for $8 for children ages

The otters in Grandfather Mountain’s Animal Habitats love winter and playing in the ice and snow. The Secret Season pass offers a discount to those who plan to visit Grandfather a few times during winter.

4 to 12, $18 for adults ages 13 to 59 and $15 for seniors age 60 and older. Children younger than 4 can enter for free. Grandfather Mountain is located at 2050 Blowing Rock Highway in Linville. Secret season passes are now available at $32 per adult, $18 per child or $90 per group of six in the same car. The passes

allow the holder to visit every day through April 30. The Adopt-an-Animal program continues through the winter with Grandfather’s three new owls. For more information, or to plan your trip, visit grandfather.com or call (800) 468-7325 or (828) 733-2013.


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Shining a Light on Brown Mountain BY MATT GRIMLEY

You may have heard about them, the erratic and irregular Brown Mountain Lights. They float up and around and over Brown Mountain in the Pisgah National Forest, sometimes with a reddish or blue light, sometimes so quickly that it’s impossible to know what you’re seeing. Dr. Dan Caton, a professor of physics and astronomy at Appalachian State University and leading authority on the lights, has researched them for 15 years now. In total, he said that he’s seen the lights maybe once or twice. “I’m the world’s expert who’s never really seen them,” he said. One of those times, Caton saw for a half-second a fanshaped beam of light, almost at the river level. He calls this instant to mind only because it’s one that he can’t fully explain. The rest of his sightings, and maybe 95 percent of everyone else’s, are bogus, he said, because they are all taken from a mile or two away, and they can all be explained by some form of electricity. Moving vehicles, ATVs (there are 27 miles of trail on the mountain), flashlights and even city lights from nearby Lenoir are to blame for people seeing what they want to see. The fact is that there is no reliable evidence previous to the advent of electricity in this region. The Cherokee myths make no substantial mention of the lights, and the 18th-century surveyor de Brahm never even made it into North Carolina when he made mention of his “vapors.” Add on the subsequent commercialization of the lights by tourism entrepreneurs and paranormal investigators, and you can develop a healthy dose of cynicism. However, because of close-up encounters and firstperson accounts that claimed to be 20 feet from the lights, Caton said he thinks there is still a real phenomenon at work: ball lightning, an oft-reported but oft-misunderstood occurrence. By moving forward with the ball lightning hypothesis, he said that his research team can work toward establishing the patterns of this mysterious meteorology. He hopes in the coming months to install a web-accessible camera that will take snapshots of the mountain every 30 seconds throughout the night. That way, he said, he and his research group can track the occurrences of

the freaky lights and, seeing what’s real and what’s not, accurately direct tourists and visitors to the best viewing points and best viewing times. “Actually, if we can explain it,” Caton said, “the thing is still cool looking, I guess.” If you want to see if you can find the lights for yourself, check out these spots between 10 p.m. and 2 a.m. at night during the fall and winter seasons: Brown Mountain Overlook, located 20 miles north of Morganton on N.C. 181, about one mile south of the Barkhouse Picnic Area Wiseman’s View Overlook, located five miles south of Linville Falls on Kistler Memorial Highway/Old N.C.

105 or State Road 1238 Lost Cove Cliffs Overlook, located on the Blue Ridge Parkway, at milepost 310, two miles north of the N.C. 181 junction As Caton said, “science has an obligation to investigate the paranormal.” He suggests that before a person goes in search of the lights, as a control to the viewing experience, he or she should acquaint themselves with the night and how human-made lights look at varying distances. Only then can viewers make informed judgments. The truth is out there, even if it comes from a Kawasaki.


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Choose & Cut

2012

Search for the perfect Christmas tree offers family fun

BY JESSE CAMPBELL

More than 50 years ago, some of the first known marketable Christmas trees took root to the soil of the High Country. From rolling fields of Fraser firs and spruce pines to sloping hillsides inundated with luscious hybrid species, the High Country has become known as Christmas tree central in the eastern United States. The industry’s boom was started by a Civilian Conservation Corps project, according to the Ashe County Christmas Tree Association (ACTA). Unbeknownst to local farmers who joined in, these agro-pioneers would give breath to a nationwide industry that would feature the High Country as a premier grower of these holiday centerpieces. According to the ACTA, the region has become the largest producer of Christmas trees east of the Mississippi River, with seven of these Christmastime beauties appearing the Blue Room of the White House in Washington, D.C. Several presidential selections have also came from Avery County, as well. The regional Christmas tree industry is unique in that it is also environmentally friendly. According to the ACTA, most of the region’s farms are family-owned, sustainable, and eco-friendly. While many families opt to pick out their annual Christmas tree at a nearby lot or convenience center, many choose the more traditional path during the “choose and cut” season. Scattered throughout the High Country, several of these choose and cut locales also offer a smattering of family geared activities to make the yuletide family outing one to remember. The following is a list of some of this region’s more prominent and accessible choose and cut locations.

APPALACHIAN EVERGREENS Nov. 17-18, 23-25; Dec. 1-2 and 8-9, 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. 574 R. C. Cook Road, Blowing Rock (828) 264-1609

BIG RIDGE TREE FARM Nov. 17–Dec. 22, Friday–Monday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. 762 George Eggers Road, Banner Elk (828) 773-2857

BLUESTONE GREENERY Nov. 22-25 (Thanksgiving weekend); every weekend through Dec. 16, 9 a.m.–5 p.m. 1230 Howard Edmisten Road, Sugar Grove (828) 297-5377

CLARK’S EVERGREEN & LANDSCAPING Nov. 17 and every following weekend: 8 a.m.–6 p.m. 2930 Liberty Grove Church Road (336) 877-5014

The High Country has become known as Christmas tree central in the eastern United States. FILE PHOTO

COOL SPRINGS NURSERY INC.

HIGH COUNTRY NURSERY

Nov. 23–Dec. 16, 9 a.m.–dark 224 Brownood Road, Deep Gap (828) 832-1036

Nov. 23-25, Dec. 1-2, Friday and Saturday, 9 a.m.–5 p.m., Sunday 1-5 p.m

CORNETT DEAL CHRISTMAS TREE FARM Nov. 17-18, 23-25; Dec. 1-2, 8-9 and 15-16; 10 a.m.–5 p.m. 142 Tannenbaum Lane, Vilas (828) 964-6322

DARK MOUNTAIN TREE FARM Nov. 16–Dec. 23, Friday–Sunday, 9 a.m.–dark 556 Laurel Gap Ridge Road, Boone (828) 364-5078

DAVIS TREE FARM Nov. 20–Dec. 4, Monday–Saturday, 9 a.m.–5 p.m., and open till 1 p.m. on Sunday 1620 Piney Creek Road, Lansing (336) 384-3388

JOHNSON TREE FARM Nov. 19–Dec. 24, Monday–Friday, 9 a.m.–5 p.m., Saturday, 8 a.m.–5 p.m., Sunday, 1-5 p.m. 796 Piney Creek Road, Lansing (336) 384-2768.

LEE’S TREES Nov. 22–Dec. 9. Monday–Saturday, 10 a.m.–5 p.m., Sunday 1–5 p.m. Located at the end of Helen Blevins Road, West Jeffer son (336) 846-1288

LIL’ GRANDFATHER TREE FARM Nov. 22-25, Dec. 1-2, 8-9, Friday–Saturday, 9 a.m.–dark. Sunday, noon to dark. 15371 N.C. Highway 18 S., Laurel Springs (336) 372-9613

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While many families opt to pick out their annual Christmas tree at a nearby lot or convenience center, many choose the more traditional path during the ‘choose and cut’ season. FILE PHOTO

Choose and Cut

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 58

LYALLS NURSERY Nov. 22–Dec. 24. Monday–Wednesday, 3:30 p.m.–dark. Thursday–Sunday, 9 a.m.–dark. 238 Mt. Valley Drive, West Jefferson

MISTLETOE MEADOWS Nov. 22–25, Dec. 1-2, 9 a.m.–dark. Also by appointment Located .6 mile on the right on Big Peak Creek Road, Laurel Springs (336) 982-9754

MOUNTAIN ADVANTAGE Nov. 15–Dec. 9, Friday–Sunday, 9 a.m. –5:30 p.m. and open on Thanksgiving 644 Roy Goodman Road (336) 846-1006

MY TWO GIRLS Nov. 22–25, Dec. 7-9, 14-16 and 21-23. 8 a.m.–dark 7297 Old U.S. 421 South, Deep Gap

REINDEER CROSSING CHOOSE & CUT Nov. 23-25, Dec. 1-2, 8-9, 9 a.m. - dark From Highway 221,

turn right on Highway 163 farm is located 4.4 miles on the right. (336) 846-5529

SUNNYSIDE TREES Nov. 23–Dec. 15, Friday–Saturday, 8 a.m.–5 p.m. Located .5 mile down Glendale School Road on the right (336) 982-9235

TOP OF THE MOUNTAIN CHRISTMAS TREES Nov. 23-25, Dec. 1-2, 9 a.m. –4:30 p.m. W. Reno Road Farm, .25 mile on the right (336) 982-3507

TURTLE CREEK CHOOSE & CUT Nov. 22–Dec. 22, All day Saturday, Friday and Saturday noon to dark, Monday–Thursday, 4-6 p.m. 453 Turtle Creek Drive, Boone (828 964-3474

WESTEND WREATHS Nov. 23–25, Dec. 1-2, 7-8, 9 a.m.–dark 2152 Beaver Creek School Road, West Jefferson (336) 846-7300 Source: Ashe County Christmas Tree Association, Watauga County Christmas Tree Association.

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8645 Hwy 105, Boone (Foscoe) 828-963-1183 UNIQUE GIFTS CABIN DECOR LOCAL CRAFTS SOAPS & CANDLES WE HAVE ANTIQUES TOO! www.bearcreektrader.com

‘Thicket’ by Tonya Bottomley, who exhibits her work at Alta Vista Gallery in Valle Crucis.

The High Country’s

EDGE WORLD Art Galleries SNOWBAORD SHOP OF THE

Art buyers and enthusiasts will find that the High Country’s art galleries have much to offer. Home to almost countless venues that host a variety of styles and mediums, there’s a gallery for just about every artistic disposition.

Something for Everyone ArtWalk, Boone’s largest arts emporium, may have the most eclectic mix of art in the High Country. Earrings made from guitar picks, picture frames constructed from twigs and junkyard materials transformed into animals liven up a downtown hotspot that also features paintings, photography and pottery. Three floors of space are covered with the works of local and regional artists. ArtWalk is located at 611 W. King Street

in Boone. For more information, call (828) 264-9998 or visit www.artwalkboone. com.

Snowboarding Legally Since 1986

Fine Art

Carlton Gallery in Banner Elk is one of the largest fine galleries of the area, featuring more than 300 artisans. For more than 25 years, Toni Carlton has selected aesthetically pleasing pieces, ranging from traditional to contemporary. Showcased in a casually elegant atmosphere, visitors will find blown glass, wind sculptures, jewelry and paintings, among other attractive pieces. Carlton Gallery is located at 10360 N.C. 105 South in the Grandfather Mountain community, 10 miles south of Boone and seven miles north of Linville. For more information, call (828) 963-4288 or visit CONTINUED ON PAGE 62

Downtown Banner Elk 800-SUX-EDGE (789)

(3343)

@edgeoworldnc edgeoworldnc.com

Brackish


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‘Winter Tree’ by Debbie Arnold, whose work is available at Carlton Gallery in Foscoe.

Art Galleries • Antiques • Winery Cabin Rentals • Festivals • Outdoor Recreation & much more... Home of

Home of Rubber Duck Festival- May 25 Ola Belle Reed Festival- August 9-10 Pond Mountain Wildlife Recreation & Nature Conservancy

For directions to the most beautiful vistas in Northwest North Carolina visit

www.ExploreLansingNC.com

11 miles from the Virginia Creeper Trail 4 miles from the New River 33 miles from Boone • 45 miles from Banner Elk

High Country Art CONTINUED FROM PAGE 61

www.carltonartgallery.com.

Pottery

Doe Ridge Pottery is the High Country’s premier local pottery dealer. Bob Meier opened the gallery and store in 1988 and remains a resident potter with numerous other artisans. With a freshly designed showroom and new displays, Doe Ridge’s collection of fine pottery includes functional, specialty and home decor pieces. Doe Ridge Pottery is located at 585-D W. King St. in Boone. For more information, call (828) 264-1127 or visit www.doeridgepottery.homestead.com.

Learning

Appalachian State University’s Turchin Center for the Visual Arts, the largest educational arts facility in the region, presents exhibitions, workshops and visual arts activities. With a focus on new and historically important artwork, the Turchin Center displays nationally and internationally renowned artists, as well as regional artists. The Turchin Center for the Visual Arts is located at 423 W. King St. in Boone. For more information, call (828) 262-3170 or visit www.tcva.org.

Other Galleries Banner Elk THE ART CELLAR 920 Shawneehaw Ave. (828) 898-5175 www.artcellaronline.com

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High Country Art CONTINUED FROM PAGE 62

CLARK GALLERY 393 Shaneehaw Ave. (828) 898-2095 www.clarkgallerync.com

Blowing Rock ART & ARTIFACTS 159 Sunset Dr. (828) 414-9402 www.artandartifactsbr.com

BLOWING ROCK FRAMEWORKS & GALLERY 7935 Valley Blvd. (828) 295-0041 www.blowingrockgalleries.com

MORNING STAR GALLERY 257 Sunset Dr. (828) 295-6991 www.morningstargalleryusa.com

ROCK GALLERIES OF FINE ART 1153 Main St. (828) 295-9752 www.thomaskinkadeasheville.com/ blowingrock ‘Raccoon’ by Derfla, whose work is available at ArtWalk in Boone and other High Country galleries.

Boone HANDS GALLERY 543 W. King St. (828) 262-1970 www.handsgallery.org

JONES HOUSE COMMUNITY CENTER 604 W. King St. (828) 262-4576 www.joneshousecommunitycenter.org

MODERN RUSTIC 182 Howard St.

THE NTH DEGREE GALLERY 683 W. King St. Open for First Friday Art Crawls www.nthdegreegallery.com

WATAUGA ARTS COUNCIL GALLERIES 783 W. King St. (828) 264-1789 watauga-arts.org

Linville 87 RUFFIN STREET GALLERY 87 Ruffin St. (828) 733-6449

Crossnore CROSSNORE FINE ARTS GALLERY The Crossnore School 205 Johnson Lane 828) 733-3144 www.crossnoregallery.org

Valle Crucis

(828) 963-8623 www.rivercrossmarket.com

West Jefferson ASHE ARTS CENTER GALLERY 303 School Ave. (336) 846-2787 www.ashecountyarts.org

ACORN GALLERY 103 Long Street (336) 246-3388 www.acorngallery.com

BOHEMIA 106 N. Jefferson Ave. (336) 846-1498

ALTA VISTA

www.bohemianc.com

2839 Broadstone Rd. (828) 963-5247 www.altavistagallery.com

BROOMFIELDS GALLERY

RIVERCROSS MARKET 3595 N.C. 194

414 E. 2nd St. (336) 846-4141 www.broomfieldsgallery.com

RIPPLES GALLERY 101 N. Jefferson Ave. (336) 219-0089 www.claytonproctor.com

R.T. MORGAN ART GALLERY & GLASS BY CAMILLE 120 N. Jefferson Ave. (336) 246-3328 www.rtmorganartgallery.com

THE ARTISTS’ THEATRE 8 E. Main St. (336) 846-3355 www.theartiststheatre.com

ASHE CUSTOM FRAMING & GALLERY 105 S. Jefferson Ave. (336) 846-2218 www.ashecustomframing.com

ORIGINALS ONLY 3-B N. Jefferson Ave. (336) 846-1636 www.originalsonlygallery.com


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BRAHM hits its stride

2012

PHOTO BY JEFF EASON

Blowing Rock Art and History Museum offers much more than just art on the wall BY JEFF EASON

On Oct. 1, the Blowing Rock Art and History Museum (BRAHM) celebrated its first birthday. It’s come a long way in just one short year, hosting art exhibits, community meetings, artists’ and authors’ lectures, and musical gatherings. Fans of Bob Timberlake’s artwork will have one more opportunity to see his wonderful collection, titled “North Carolina Treasures,” in BRAHM’s Main Gallery. Timberlake will host a book signing at BRAHM on Saturday, Nov. 24. Timberlake will be signing copies of his book, “Life Lessons,” between 3 and 5 p.m., after the annual Blowing Rock Christmas parade. The event is free. Following the Timberlake exhibit, the main gallery will be home to a preview exhibit, featuring the works Tar Heel painters. Opening Nov. 29, BRAHM will feature the 2012 traveling exhibit by the Watercolor Society of North Carolina. The exhibit includes a wide variety of beautiful watercolors by 29 North Carolina artists. A second traveling Watercolor Society exhibit will open at BRAHM in

September 2013. Opening in February 2013 is an exhibit, titled “The Carolina Mountains: The Photography of Margaret Morley.” Current exhibits include “From Secession to Sesquicentennial: Commemorating the Civil War in Western North Carolina.” The exhibit is upstairs at BRAHM and includes weaponry, photographs, documents, uniforms and other items from the war our nation fought against itself 150 years ago. BRAHM’s permanent collection includes a number of works by its “patron artist,” Elliott Daingerfield, donated by Cora and LaMont Hudson. It was the Hudsons’ intent to find a home for their Daingerfield collection that inspired the idea for the museum in 1999. The BRAHM collection also includes a selection of glass art made by artists at the Penland School of Crafts, donated by Sonia and Issac Luski, and examples of North Carolina pottery, donated by Elizabeth and Leo Kohn. In addition to its regular exhibits,

BRAHM hosts a number of regular events that are of interest to residents and visitors alike. They include the “Cork and Canvas” events for adults who would like to learn about art, while enjoying a nice glass of wine. BRAHM also regularly hosts book signings, live music and artists lectures. This winter, BRAHM is working in conjunction with Chetola Resort to give area kids something to do on days when school is canceled due to bad weather. The Snow Days program at BRAHM will provide snacks and art projects for kids during the early part of the day. The kids will then travel to Chetola Resort for play, fitness lessons, study time and swimming. BRAHM’s Saturday Art Club is for kids in grades three through seven and is $15 per child. The Doodlebug Club at BRAHM is an hour-long class for preschool aged children. It begins with a fun and educational art project. After clean up and when everyone is finished, children enjoy

a healthy snack, followed by a couple of stories in BRAHM’s reading area. It’s a great way to introduce your child to art and meet other children and parents. Cost is $5 and it takes place every Friday from 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. in the Education Center at the Blowing Rock Art and History Museum. For more information, contact Virginia Falck at (828) 295-9099, extension 3006, or email virginia@blowingrockmuseum.org.

HOURS AND ADMISSION BRAHM is open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday, and from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Thursday. It is closed on Sunday and Monday. Admission to the museum is $8 for adults and $5 for children, students and military personnel. The Blowing Rock Art and History Museum is located at 159 Chestnut St. in downtown Blowing Rock. For more information, call (828) 295-9099, or visit www.blowingrockmuseum.org.


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The Frescoes of Ashe County BY HEATHER SAMUDIO

‘The Mystery of Faith’ fresco can be found at St. Mary’s Episcopal Church in West Jefferson.

FILE PHOTO

Arts are a big part of the High Country area, and art galleries galore can be found. Another treasured work of art can also be found in the area in the form of frescoes. Fresco painting is an old world style of painting directly on wet plaster walls. These types of mural paintings are especially hard to do, as a great deal of technique, skill and preparation is required to create the desired effect. Ashe County is host to some of these exquisite works of art by Benjamin F. Long IV. The area first became familiar with frescoes, when, in the spring of 1974, Long contacted Father J. Faulton Hodge to begin work on the fresco they had discussed in the spring of 1972. The first fresco painted by Long in Ashe County was “Mary Great with Child” and was painted at St. Mary’s Episcopal Church in West Jefferson. In the summer of 1976, Long returned to paint “John the Baptist.” “The Mystery of Faith” was done in the summer of 1977. The locations for the frescoes are St. Mary’s Episcopal Church and Holy Trinity Church. St. Mary’s is located near West Jefferson and features “Crucifixion,” “John the Bap-

tist,” “The Mystery of Faith” and “Mary Great with Child.” Holy Trinity is located at 195 J.W. Luke Road in Glendale Springs and features “The Last Supper” mural, which was painted in the summer of 1980. During work on “The Last Supper,” approximately 20 young artists studied with Long and learned the art of the frescoes. At St. Mary’s, interior beams are incorporated into part of the fresco mural. The frescoes in Ashe County are visited by thousands of people annually. In April 2009, the Ashe County Frescoes Foundation was created for the purpose of protecting and preserving the paintings themselves and assisting the churches in making them readily accessible to visitors and keeping their settings attractive and well-maintained. To accomplish these objectives, this independent foundation solicits funding from public and private sources. For more information about the Ashe County frescoes, visit www.ashefrescoes.org. For more information about the trail of frescoes in the High Country, including the Ashe County locations, visit www.benlongfrescotrail.org.


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ASU Performing Art Series BY JEFF EASON

Expect some major changes in format for the 2012-13 Performing Arts Series at Appalachian State University. That’s because current renovations to Farthing Auditorium will put it out of commission for the coming school year. As a result, this year’s Performing Arts Series will have more of a departmental feel, with performances scheduled to take place in alternate venues. Two Performing Arts Series events, however, will take place at the Holmes Convocation Center. On Jan. 22, 2013, the ASU Office of Multicultural Student Development will present “An Evening with Maya Angelou” as part of the 29th annual Martin Luther King Jr. commemorations. The event begins at 7 p.m. The unique sounds of New York Polyphony will be presented at the Rosen Concert Hall at 8 p.m. on Friday, Feb. 8, 2013. Walnut Street Theatre will present “Around the World in 80 Days” at Valborg Theatre at 8 p.m. on Wednesday, Feb. 20, 2013. Adapted from the novel by Jules Verne, the stage show is written by Mark Brown and directed by Bernard Harvard. ASU’s Hayes School of Music will present Henry Purcell’s “Dido and Aeneas” and W.A. Mozart’s “Bastien und Bastienne” at the Rosen Concert Hall at 8 p.m. on Thursday, April 4, through Sunday, April 8, 2013.

New York Polyphony will perform Feb. 8, 2013, at Appalachian State University. PHOTO BY CHRIS OWYOUNG

The concert is part of the Hayes School of Music Opera Program. On April 16, the Holmes Center will be host to “An Evening with Garrison Keillor and Musical Guests.” The show starts at 8 p.m., and musical guests are to be announced in the near future. Ticket for all 2012-13 Performing Arts Series productions are available online at www.pas.appstate.edu or by calling 1-800-841-ARTS.

Garrison Keillor will return to ASU April 16, 2013, as part of the 2012-13 Performing Arts Series. PHOTO SUBMITTED


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Ensemble Stage presents ‘Christmas in Blowing Rock 4,’ a throwback to the Bing Crosby and Perry Como Christmas variety shows of yesteryear, Dec. 14 to 16. PHOTOS BY AMY MICHAEL

Take in a Show in the Snow BY LAURA MINNICH

Theater in the High Country comes from multiple sources in various forms. Appalachian State University and Lees-McRae College offer performances by students, while Ensemble Stage is the High Country’s only professional theater company. From concerts to variety shows, comedies to dramas, there’s something for everyone. Appalachian State University theater students will have a chance to showcase their own works during the New Play Festival, Nov. 29 to Dec. 1. The festival features several one act plays, all written, produced, directed and performed by students. The New Play festival is sponsored by Playcrafters, the university’s theater student organization. On Sunday, Dec. 9, at 2 p.m. and 8 p.m., the Appalachian Musical Theatre Club will perform a concert-style production of the popular musical, “Rent,” at Rosen Concert Hall. The Musical Theatre Club is new to Appalachian,

and includes members from 20 majors. Tennessee Williams’ “The Glass Menagerie” will be performed in Valborg Theatre Feb. 13 to 17, 2013. The Wednesday through Saturday performances will begin at 7:30 p.m., and Sunday’s performance will begin at 2 p.m. Tickets for all performances are $8 for students and $15 for the public. On Feb. 20, 2013, at 8 p.m., Appalachian State University’s Performing Arts Series welcomes the Walnut Street Theatre for “Around the World in 80 Days.” Performances will be held at Valborg Theatre. Tickets are $8 for students and $15 for the public. For ticket information on Appalachian performances, visit the box office website at www.theatre.appstate.edu/ performances/box-office. The Performing Arts at Lees-McRae College in Banner Elk present “Rumors,” a comedy by Neil Simon. The productions are Feb. 28 to March 2, 2013, at 7:30 p.m., and March 3, 2013, at 2 p.m. All performances will be held in the Hayes Auditorium at the Broyhill Theatre, located on the college campus in Banner Elk. Tickets are $5 for students and children, and $12 for the public. For more information, contact the box office at (828) 898-8709. Ensemble Stage, the High Country’s only professional theater company, will present the fourth annual “Christmas in Blowing Rock.” This variety show production will be presented Dec. 14 to 16. For times and tickets, contact Ensemble Stage at (828) 414-1844 or online at www.

From left, Lees-McRae College students Emma Sheffer, Sarah Rutzen and Ryan Tucker star in an autumn production of ‘Pride and Prejudice.’ The Banner Elk college’s performing arts program will present ‘Rumors,’ a comedy by Neil Simon, Feb. 28 to March 3, 2013. PHOTOS BY FRANK RUGGIERO

ensemblestage.com. In January 2013, Ensemble Stage will perform an “Old Fashioned Interactive Melodrama,” during Blowing Rock Winterfest. Activities for Winterfest will run from Jan. 24 to 27. Ensemble Stage’s production is scheduled for Saturday, Jan. 26. For time and tickets, see the festival’s website at www.blowingrockwinterfest.com.


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The Sweet Celebration of SugarFest

Sugar Mountain Resort mascot Sugar Bear invites skiers, snowboarders and ice-skaters of all ages to the slopes for the annual SugarFest, returning Dec. 7 to 9. PHOTO SUBMITTED

Now in its 10th year, SugarFest will be held Dec. 7 to 9, sponsored by Sugar Mountain Resort and the Tourism Development Authority of the incorporated village of Sugar Mountain. “The unique collaboration between public and private sectors has produced an alpine celebration,” said Gunther Jochl, Sugar Mountain Resort president. Weekend festivities begin Friday, Dec. 7, when the 19th annual Pre-Season Ski Clinic introduces Olympic Gold Medalist Diann Roffe to those taking part in three days of personalized instruction on the slopes. The all-inclusive clinic is open to everyone and includes three days on the slopes, video analysis, tuning seminar and a banquet Saturday night. Later that evening at 7, 1992 Olympic Silver Medalist Paul Wylie will perform his signature skate routines for the public. “The approachable Wylie is a great showman who interacts with all the skaters, from beginners to expert,” a Sugar Mountain Resort spokesperson said. “If you’ve never seen or held a real Olympic gold or silver medal, stop by the ice rink. Paul and Diann will share their medals and Olympic experiences with you.” During the evening’s skate show on Sugar’s 10,000-square-foot outdoor ice rink, festivalgoers will enjoy the beginning of the three-day SugarFEAST.

CONTINUED ON PAGE 69

The Crossnore School is celebrating one hundred years of bringing mountains of hope to children in need. When visiting the campus take a glimpse back into the age-old tradition of weaving at Crossnore Weavers: A Working Museum. Purchase the work of regional painters, sculptors and fine craft persons at Crossnore Fine Arts Gallery while supporting the children that call Crossnore their home. Find your hidden gem at Blair Fraley Sales Store and treat yourself to something sweet at Miracle Grounds Coffee Café & Creamery. Before leaving campus view the beautiful fresco, Suffer the Little Children, 2006, by Benjamin F. Long, IV located at The Sloop Chapel.

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THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

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“To keep you warm and well-hydrated, a hot chocolate and whip cream bar will flow creamy, smooth chocolate pleasures,” the spokesperson said. During the weekend, ski and snowboard manufacturers will roll out the newest equipment for a demo inventory that allows any valid lift ticket holder with a driver’s license to sample the latest in ski and snowboard technology, the spokeperson said. Participating brands include Salomon, Volkl, Nordica, Burton, Head, Never Summer, K2, Atomic, Dynastar, Rossignol, Ride and Line. “Just bring your boots, register and test drive the good stuff’ from 9 a.m. until 3:30 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. The SugarFest demo is brought to you by Ski Country Sports,” he said. SugarFEAST continues throughout the weekend. Browse through the cafeteria line each day to experience the “Soup Safari.” Or later at 5 p.m., North Carolina barbecue and sweet tea should satisfy your appetite after a productive and rewarding day demoing the season’s new equipment, the

spokesperson said. At SugarFest, après ski isn’t a thing of the past. The fireworks continue with a pyrotechnic display you can take in from the base lodge just before 6 p.m. In addition, live bluegrass music from SugarFest’s favorite local music group, Boss Hawg, delivers a foot-stomping good time, the spokesperson said. The Last Run Lounge will feature SugarBrew’s award-winning “best in show” Southern Tier, choklat, porter brewed in Lakewood, N.Y. Of course, a good old German beer, Spaten, will be on tap among others, he said. On Sunday beginning at 10 a.m., come out and watch or throw down with some of the area’s most daring and creative riders and skiers as they deliver thrilling entertainment during the Rail Jam, the spokesperson said. More than $4,500 in cash, prizes and giveaways, courtesy of Alpine Ski Center (www.alpineskicenter. com), RIDE Snowboards, Salomon, Burton, Scott, Oakley, 686, One Ball Jay, The North Face, Dalbello and Dakine. Interested persons can preregister at any Alpine Ski Center throughout the Southeast. To learn more about SugarFest 2012, visit www.skisugar.com/sugarfest or call (800) SUGAR-MT.

PAGE 69

SugarFest is slated for Dec. 7 to 9 at Sugar Mountain Resort. FILE PHOTO

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2012

THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

Winterfest fans leap into a frozen Chetola Lake for the annual Polar Plunge. PHOTO BY JEFF EASON

Winterfest

BY JEFF EASON

For the past decade-and-a-half, the town of Blowing Rock has been throwing one of the biggest winter parties the Southeast has ever seen. The 15th annual Winterfest celebration, scheduled for Jan. 24 to 27, 2013, looks to be the biggest one yet with even more events than ever before. With the slogan “Don’t hibernate… celebrate!” Winterfest is an ideal way to shake of the winter doldrums and get together with local residents and visitors for a variety of fun events. This year’s Winterfest actually begins with a pre-event, the Little Miss & Master Winterfest Pageant, taking place at the Blowing Rock School Auditorium on Saturday, Jan. 19, 2013. The pageant is open to all children from babies through teens and is sponsored by Little Miss Teen North Carolina. Registration for the pageant takes place at 10 a.m., the competition begins at 11:30 a.m., and the crowning ceremony takes place at 3 p.m. For more information, visit www.LittleMissNC.com.

THURSDAY, JAN. 24 Winterfest officially begins on Thurs-

day, with the fabulous culinary event called Winterfeast. Timberlake’s Restaurant at Chetola Resort will host the event and feature three seatings at 5:30, 6:30 and 7:30 p.m. While the lineup of restaurants for this year’s event is incomplete, last year’s participants included Rowland’s Restaurant at Westglow Resort, The Table at Crestwood, The Gamekeeper, The Best Cellar, Six Pence Pub, Canyons of the Blue Ridge, Foggy Rock Eatery and Pub, the Laurel Room at the Green Park Inn, Bistro Roca, Woodland’s Barbecue, Meadowbrook Inn and Ooh La La Cupcakes. Tickets for Winterfeast are $25 in advance and $30 at the door, if available. Chetola Resort is located at 500 Main St. in Blowing Rock. For more information, call 828) 295-5500. Following each Winterfeast seating, diners are invited to go to Foggy Rock Eatery and Pub for the Winter Ales Craft Beer Tasting. Come enjoy some hearty North Carolina-brewed winter ales and meet the distributors. All weekend long, Foggy Rock will be offering winter ale specials. Foggy Rock is located at 8180 Valley CONTINUED ON PAGE 72

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A young chili chef, perhaps in disguise, serves a sample at the 2011 Winterfest Chili Cook-Off, to be held again in the Blowing Rock School gymnasium. PHOTO BY FRANK RUGGIERO

Winterfest CONTINUED FROM PAGE 71

Blvd. (U.S. 321) in Blowing Rock. For more information, call (828) 295-7262.

FRIDAY, JAN. 25 Blowing Rock School’s Parent-Teacher Organization (PTO) will host its annual Spaghetti Dinner and Bingo event at the school’s cafeteria and gymnasium from 5 to 7:30 p.m. on Friday. Five dollars gets you delicious meat or vegetarian spaghetti, salad, rolls and a drink. There will also be a large selection of homemade desserts for purchase. Bingo will be held in the gymnasium and cards are $1 apiece. All proceeds go the PTO for Blowing Rock School projects. If you haven’t heard the Harris Brothers perform, you are missing out one of the musical treasures of western North Carolina. The Blowing Rock Chamber of Commerce presents “Chillin’ with the Harris Brothers,” a special concert scheduled for Friday at the Blowing Rock School Auditorium (Sunset Drive entrance). Tickets are $15 per person or $25 per couple. Call (828) 295-7851 to reserve your ticket. On Friday, Appalachian Ski Mountain will host a special event with reduced pricing for skiing, snowboarding or skating. The event takes place from 5 p.m. to midnight and lessons are available. Reservations are required. Call (828) 295-7828.

SATURDAY, JAN. 26 The annual Winterfest Raffle and Silent Auction will take place at the Blowing Rock School Cafeteria from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday. Buy your raffle tickets for a chance to win fantastic prizes such as trips, hotel packages, ski packages, merchandise and dinners at our area restaurants. The silent auction features dozens of great items and packages. All proceeds go to benefit Mountain Alliance, a program to promote leadership and bring outdoor activities to our youth. The ever-popular Polar Plunge returns to Chetola Lake, beginning at 10 a.m. on Saturday. Sponsored by Chetola Resort, the Polar Plunge gives brave souls a chance to raise money for charities by securing sponsors and then jumping into the lake in the middle of winter. Individuals and teams are welcome. It costs $25 to jump. The Watauga Youth Network will sponsor a number of programs for kids on Saturday of Winterfest. The programs begin at 10 a.m. at the American Legion Hall (behind Memorial Park) and include arts and crafts projects, reading and snowflake decorating. A new event at this year’s Winterfest celebration is the Cross-Country Ski and Snow Equipment Exhibition. Blowing Rock Realty and SweetGrass will present the exhibition on the beautiful grounds of SweetGrass, about 6 miles from downtown Blowing Rock. Enjoy games, prizes, a “snowdog” building con-

CONTINUED ON PAGE 73


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test, hot chocolate and cookies. Call (828) 255-9861 for details and directions. The annual Winterfest Chili CookOff, held at the Blowing Rock School gymnasium, is one of the most popular events of the entire weekend. The event features chili competitions for amateurs, professionals (restaurants and catering services) and members of the Chili Appreciation Society International (CASI). The event takes place from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., and guests are invited to meet the cooks and sample their wares. The amateurs are vying for cash prizes of $350, $200 and $100, while the pros are aiming to claim the coveted Chili Challenge Trophy. Tickets are $7 for adults and $5 for children 12 and younger. To download an application to compete, visit www.blowingrockwinterfest.com. Canyons of the Blue Ridge will host a Saturday Jam Brunch from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Come hear some of the area’s talented musicians perform live music in an intimate setting with a great view of the

THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE mountains. No cover charge. Call (828) 295-7661 for more information. Who knew that there was such a thing as the U.S. Army Special Forces Ice Carving Team? Well, there is, and it will be turning giant blocks of ice into enchanting works of art at noon in Blowing Rock Memorial Park. The demonstrations are free. The annual Winterfest Wine Tasting will begin at 2 p.m. on Saturday at the historic Green Park Inn. Enjoy tasting a wide selection of local, regional and international wines. Wine reps will be on hand to answer questions and wines will be available for purchase. Following the wine tasting, at 4 p.m., the Green Park Inn will host the annual Winterfest Wine Auction. A selection of wine and wine-related items will be auctioned off, with part of the proceeds going to local charities. At dusk on Saturday, join your fellow Winefest attendees at the big bonfire at Blowing Rock Memorial Park. Show your kids how to make toasted marshmallows and s’mores. The event is weather permitting and supplies will be provided. Ensemble Stage Company will presCONTINUED ON PAGE 74

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ent an old-fashioned interactive melodrama on Saturday. More information on this event will be announced in the near future. Check www.ensemblestage.com for updates.

SUNDAY, JAN. 27 Blowing Rock Fire and Rescue will host the annual Winterfest Pancake Breakfast from 8 to 11 a.m. on Sunday at the Blowing Rock School cafeteria. Enjoy pancakes, bacon and sausage, coffee and juice. Tickets are available at the door and proceeds go to Blowing Rock Fire and Rescue.

2012

Jazz saxophone maestro Todd Wright and his musical friends will perform at the Winterfest Jazz Brunch on Sunday at Canyons of the Blue Ridge. The show takes place from 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Winterfest 2013 wraps up with the Winter Paws dog show, beginning at 1:30 p.m. at the Blowing Rock School gymnasium. Sponsored by the Watauga Humane Society, the event features prizes for all different categories, including best look-alike of dog and master. Ongoing Winterfest activities include “Shop ’til You Drop” merchant specials, hot chocolate in the park, and hay rides. For more information, call the Blowing Rock Chamber of Commerce at (828) 295-7851.

Mike Foley mans the ever-popular liquor luge at Winterfest 2011’s wine-tasting event at the historic Green Park Inn. PHOTO BY FRANK RUGGIERO


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Stay fit on your winter vacation BY ANNA OAKES

Your winter trip to the High Country may include physical activities, but if it doesn’t, consider taking some time to visit a local gym or park to ensure you get your daily recommended amount of exercise. Exercise has numerous physical, mental and emotional benefits, but more than half of North Carolina adults do not engage in recommended amounts of physical activity. Research shows that physical activity results in a lower risk for coronary heart disease, stroke, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, diabetes and cancer; prevention of weight gain or weight loss; improved cardiorespiratory and muscular fitness and balance; reduced depression; better cognitive function; better sleep patterns; and increased energy, according to Be Active North Carolina. According to the Appalachian District Health Department, only 46.4 percent of the state’s adults get the recommended amounts of physical activity. Parks and recreation departments, schools and other organizations offer a number of local facilities and programs for exercising, including numerous parks, swimming pools, an ever-expanding trail system, adult and youth sports teams and equipment rentals. And if there’s snow on the ground, go play in it! Sledding, snowball fights, building a snowman and simply walking around in the snow will provide more of a workout than you realize.

Where to Work Out

Below are exercise facilities located in Watauga, Ashe and Avery counties, but this is by no means an all-inclusive list. And remember, you can exercise anywhere — in your front yard, in your living room or walking around your neighborhood.

Gwen Dhing, right, leads a Zumba class demonstration. The class, which focuses on exercise through dance, is regularly held at the Broyhill Wellness Center on Boone Heights Drive in Boone. PHOTO BY FRANK RUGGIERO

101, Boone, (828) 386-1100 •

The Gym, 253 New Market Center, Boone, (828) 355-9988

Lansing Creeper Trail Park, 9281 N.C. 194, Lansing, (336) 384-3938

X-treme Fitness, 1434 N.C. 105, Boone, (828) 266-1110

Ashe County Park, 537 Ashe Park Road, Jefferson, (336) 982-6185

Buckeye Recreation Center, 206 Grassy Gap Creek Road, Beech Mountain, (828) 387-3003

Memorial Park, 1036 Main St., Blowing Rock, (828) 295-5222

Lees-McRae College, Banner Elk, (828) 8988753.To purchase a community membership to recreation facilities, stop by the Office of Student Development, located in the Cannon Student Center

Brookshire Park, Brookshire Park Road, Boone, (828) 264-9511

Rocky Knob Park, U.S. 421 east of Boone, (828) 264-9511

GYMS/REC CENTERS •

Mountain Hearts Center, 200 Hospital Ave., Jefferson, (336) 846-0744

Little’s Health and Fitness Center, 1114 N.C. 194 N., West Jefferson, (336) 846-7474

Curves, 249 Wilson Drive, Boone, (828) 2630007; 409A S. Main St., West Jefferson (336) 846-2610

PARKS

Broyhill Wellness Center, Boone Heights Drive, Boone, (828) 266-1060

Williams YMCA of Avery County, 436 Hospital Drive, Linville, (828) 737-5500

Greenway Trail, 141 Complex Drive, Boone, (828) 268-6200

Watauga County Swim Complex, 231 Complex Drive, Boone, (828) 264-0270

Rock Gym, 185 Shady St., Newland, (828) 7338266

Old Cove Creek School, 207 Dale Adams Road, Sugar Grove, (828) 297-2200

Anytime Fitness, 148 N.C. 105 Extension, Suite

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2012

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Spas offer visitors and residents alike a relaxing respite from the winter doldrums. PHOTO SUBMITTED

A Message about Massage Relax at a High Country spa BY KATE SMITH

The spa at Chetola Resort, the Sanctuary Day Spa, Westglow Resort and Spa, Serenity Day Spa and Heavenly Touch Massage offer different treatments and packages that ease the crinkled cold.

CHETOLA

Regular Hours:

Tuesday - Friday 9am until 5pm Saturday 9am until 3pm Sunday and Monday Closed

Please call for Holiday Hours

Owners: Tim and Karen Bounds Same location since 1985

Hwy 194 Between thee ttwoo sstoplights oplight 205 Pineola Street Newland, NC

(828)733-0186

Chetola means “haven of rest” in Cherokee tongue. Even without the spa’s modern luxuries, the 87 acres of the resort have a 166-year-long recorded history of revitalizing its inhabitants. The spa at Chetola in Blowing Rock opened on Oct. 17, 2009. Spa and recreation director Robyn Lindenmuth said managers preserve the resort’s history by keeping the rustic mission-style wood beneath sensual pomegranate and green décor. The spa is adjacent to a heated indoor pool, Jacuzzi, sauna and fitness room, which hosts daily fitness, yoga classes and personal training classes. To the right of the spa’s entrance is the nail salon. Behind the front desk are wooden shelves of organic products available for purchase, like lotions, cleansers and makeups. Through French doors is the relaxation room with a coaxing brick fireplace on one end and the complimentary swan bar on the other. Past the bar are five private treatment rooms, one for couples.

The spa offers soft indulgences like botanical oils and hot stones to deliver one of 12 massages like Swedish, craniosacral or maternity. Prices begin at $60 for a 30-minute massage. Facial treatments use medical grade and organic products that the esthetician will select to fit the individual’s skin type. Prices begin at $80 for 60 minutes. The spa also offers teeth whitening and makeup application. Ladies, Men, Overnight and wedding packages are available online. Chetola’s spa’s most popular package is the Day-Cation, available Sundays through Thursdays. For $99, guests receive a signature massage or facial; lunch by the pool; unlimited use of the pool, Jacuzzi, relaxation room and fitness center; fitness classes; yoga classes and complimentary hot tea, coffee, Kangen water and trail mix from the swan bar. All guests receive a comment card after their visit to the resort, and Lindenmuth says that most cards remark on the staff’s friendliness. “We go out of our way for our guests,” Lindenmuth said, including children. A children’s program that is becoming increasingly popular is the Snow Day Program. On any Watauga County School snow day, children can come to the resort for arts and crafts at The Blowing Rock Art and History Museum, CONTINUED ON PAGE 77


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swimming, fitness and healthy snacks. A full day is from 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. The cost is $35, and $30 for each additional sibling or members of Chetola or BRAHM. A half-day is from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at BRAHM or 1 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. at Chetola. For more information, contact Virginia Falck, education program coordinator, at (828) 295-9099 ext. 3006 or virginia@blowingrockmuesum.org. To register, call the Chetola Recreation Center at (828) 295-5535. For more information on the spa, visit chetola.com.

SANCTUARY DAY SPA Sanctuary Day Spa is like an effortless health retreat within relaxation. The spa offers massage and body work, body treatments, waxing, nails, tanning, facials, skincare and wedding packages. But it also offers select services, like acupuncture, therapeutic massage for cancer patients, sea mud therapy, microdermabrasion and back facials. The estheticians use Dermalogica products, voted the No. 1 line in America, for all skin and anti-aging treatments, and the spa sells a full line of Dermalogica retail products. Gift certificates are available for purchase. Sanctuary has three winter package specials. The Relaxation Package is a 60-minute Swedish massage and a 60-minute condensed facial for $110.50. The Condensed Relaxation Package is a 60-minute Swedish massage and a 30-minute condensed facial for $89.25. The Fresh Start Package is a 75-minute full facial with a neck, shoulders and back massage and a nourishing mud treatment for $144.50. Sanctuary Day Spa is located at 717-A Greenway Road in Boone. Hours are Monday, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Tuesday, from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.; Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Saturday, from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.; and Sunday, from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. For more information, call (828) 268-0003, visit sanctuaryinboone.com or email santuarydayspa@bellsouth.net.

HEAVENLY TOUCH MASSAGE Heavenly Touch Massage offers various massages like deep tissue, sports, couples and prenatal. Upgrades like hot stone and hot candle wax are available. Heavenly Touch also gives a signature ladies’ and signature men’s facial. Memberships are available for $49.95 a month and include benefits like One Customized 60-Minute Massage Each Month and Unused Massages Roll Over. Gifts certificates are available for purchase. Heavenly Touch is offering a 60-minute therapeutic massage at $39.95 for new clients. Its current special is a 60-minute massage and 60-minute facial with a free aromatherapy upgrade for $99. There’s also a holiday special of one free $50 gift card with the purchase of four $50 gift cards or one free $25 gift card with the purchase of two $50 gift cards.

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Heavenly Touch Massage is located at 246-D Wilson Drive (next to Verizon Wireless & Which Wich) in Boone. Hours are Monday through Friday, from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Saturday, from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.; and Sunday, from 12:30 to 6 p.m. For more information, call (828) 264-4335, e-mail info@ heavenlytouchmassage.com or visit heavenlytouchmassage.com.

WESTGLOW Westglow Resort and Spa treats guests with pampering that becomes art with a 3 to 1 staff to guest ratio. Westglow Spa offers Vichy rain therapies like firming seaweed and mud wrap and eucalyptus salt glow. Westglow also offers 12 body services from an aromatherapy massage to the Blue Ridge body wrap. The spa performs 12 customized facials, makeup application and brow and lash tint, as well as complete salon, nail and wax services. Starting the day after Thanksgiving, Westglow is offering 10 percent off of its day and overnight spa packages. More custom day and overnight packages and prices are available on the website. Westglow Resort and Spa is located at 224 Westglow Circle in Blowing Rock. For more information, call (828) 295-4463 or (800) 562-0807, email info@westglow.com or visit westglowresortandspa.com.

SERENITY DAY SPA Serenity Day Spa offers massage, facials, microdermabrasion, body treatments, manicures, pedicures and waxing. “We do a lot of spa parties and girls weekend groups,” said owner and operator Cari Ashbaugh. “Gift certificates are great holiday gift options. I’ll create a package customized to a customer’s needs. We don’t have a one-size-fits-all approach.” Serenity Day Spa is located at 72 Arnett Road in Banner Elk. For more information, call (828) 898-3550, email cashbaugh@charter.net or visit relaxatserenity.com.

Other Spas 7TH HEAVEN DAY SPA 4457 N.C. 105 South Boone, N.C. 28607 (828) 963-2355, (828) 719-0740, 7thheaven.vpweb.com

SPA AT CRESTWOOD 3236 Shulls Mill Road Boone, N.C. 28607 (877) 836-5046, (828) 963-6646 crestwoodresortandspa.com

LAVENDAR FIELDS SKIN CARE & LASER SPA 820-C State Farm Road Boone, N.C. 28607 (828) 265-1029 lavenderfieldssalon.com

The Paul H. Broyhill Wellness Center in Boone is the largest gym in the area and offers machines and classes for members of all ages and abilities. PHOTO BY KELLEN MOORE

Working Out in the High Country CONTINUED FROM PAGE 75

Bethel School, 138 Bethel School Road, Bethel, (828) 297-2240

Valle Crucis Community Park, 2918 Broadstone Road, Valle Crucis, (828) 963-9239

Adventure Trail Park, 301 Beech Mountain Parkway, Beech Mountain, (828) 387-3003

Tate-Evans Park, 200 Park Ave., Banner Elk, 828-898-5398

Riverwalk Park, Beech St., Newland, (828) 7332023

OTHER •

Rock Dimensions (climbing wall), 131-B S. Depot St., Boone, (828) 265-3544

All-Out Fitness Camp, meets at Greenway Trail, Boone, (828) 773-6482


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Beware the Wily Black Squirrel BY HEATHER SAMUDIO

Black squirrel sightings could be synonymous with ‘a rough winter ahead.’ FILE PHOTO

If you like seeing snow, and lots of it, you’ll love the forecast Ashe County’s Joe Mullis is predicting this year for the area. He is expecting 14 total snows this winter, including nine large snows, three of which could be extremely big, and five smaller snows. He has already removed one of the big beans from the jar for the snow that the area received just before Halloween. “This is the earliest that I’ve ever removed a big bean from the jar,” Mullis said. “I’ve removed small beans this early, but never a big one.” Following the traditions of mountain people and Native Americans, Mullis places a bean into a canning jar for each fog he sees during the month of August. For bigger, thick fogs, he places larger beans and places smaller beans for smaller, light fogs. The big beans are representative of

Bean There, Done That

In August, place a bean in a jar for each fog. Use a big bean for big, thick, blanketing fogs and small beans for a light, wispy fog. At the end of August, the number of beans foretell the number of snows and if it will be a big snow (big bean) or a small one. large snows bringing four inches or more. The small beans signify a lower precipitation with just enough snow to cover the ground. “It’s going to be an interesting winter,” Mullis said. In addition to the beans, Mullis watches other signs as he develops his opinion on what the weather will be. Squirrels and birds are eating a lot of

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Ashe County’s own prognosticator, Joe Mullis, can be found at Parker Tie, where he works in West Jefferson. PHOTO BY HEATHER SAMUDIO

Black Squirrel CONTINUED FROM PAGE 78

seeds and walnuts, which, according to Mullis, seems as though they are getting prepared for a hard winter. “Everything has been coming in one month early this year,” he said. Spring, summer and fall arrived early, and, just as he predicted, the area had snow on Halloween.

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“I told people the signs were saying we would have snow on Halloween, but they didn’t believe it,” he said. “They said it was too warm.” Mullis said he was just going to follow the signs and expect the snow, and sure enough, the signs were right, and the area saw a major blast of cold temperatures and as much as 18 inches in some of the higher elevations. Sightings of a black squirrel are also synonymous with “a rough winter CONTINUED ON PAGE 86

• •

2146 Blowing Rock Road • Boone (Located between Makoto’s and Walgreens)

www.apprhs.org/appurgent-care

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Your Winter Times Calendar Nov. 22

SECOND ANNUAL HIGH COUNTRY TURKEY TROT: will be held from 8 to 11 a.m. Nov. 22 at the Boone Greenway Trail, Hunting Hills Lane (Watauga Parks and Recreation lot), Boone. The timed 5K run will kick off at 8:30 a.m. with casual walkers, with runners and joggers starting at 9 a.m. Registration is $25 for adults and teens and $10 for children 12 and younger. Every preregistered participant will receive a commemorative long sleeve T-shirt. All ages are welcome; it’s family, children and pet friendly. Register online at www.hospitalityhouseofboone.org. All participants are encouraged to bring nonperishable items for donation as well.

TREE FEST EXHIBIT: featuring decorated trees, holiday gift items and miniature paintings begins at 10 a.m. Nov. 22 at the Ashe County Arts Council. For more information, call (336) 846-ARTS.

Nov. 23

CHRISTMAS IN THE PARK and the LIGHTING OF THE TOWN: will take place in Blowing Rock Nov. 23, sponsored by Blowing Rock Parks and Recreation. Special activities on Friday in Memorial Park will include a visit by Santa Claus in the Gazebo from 2 to 4 p.m.; hayrides from 4 to 7 p.m.; caroling by the Vagabonds from 5 to 6:30 p.m.; and Diana and Sarvis Ridge singing “Bluegrass Christmas” from 7 to 9 p.m. The Lighting of the town takes place at 5:30 p.m. when Mayor J.B. Lawrence flips the switch. Activities continue on Saturday, Nov. 24, with the Blowing Rock’s Christmas parade starting at 2 p.m. For more information, visit www.townofblowingrock.com or call Blowing Rock Parks and Recreation at (828) 295-5222. WEST JEFFERSON HOMETOWN CHRISTMAS: will be held beginning at 5:15 p.m. Nov. 23. There will be the lighting of the community Christmas treet, caroling, Santa on an antique fire engine, free hot chocolate and free candy canes. For more information, visit www.VisitWestJefferson.org. CHETOLA RESORT’S FESTIVAL OF LIGHTS: takes place Nov. 23 to Jan. 27 at the Chetola Resort grounds in Blowing Rock. More than 50,000 illuminations are featured throughout the holiday season. For more information, visit www.chetola.com. CHETOLA HOLIDAY EVENTS: in Blowing Rock will take place Nov. 23-24 from 5:30 to 9 p.m. with free cookie decorating and visits with Santa. Visitors can also book horse-drawn carriage rides around Chetola Lake. For more information, call (828) 295-5500.

WINTER FESTIVAL OF LIGHTS: at Linville Land Harbor takes place Nov. 23-Dec. 31. Take a winter drive through Linville Land Harbor’s Festival of Lights. “This is a great way for families and children of all ages to celebrate the spirit of the season,” a spokesperson for

the community said. For more information, visit www. linvillelandharbor.com.

Nov. 24

BLOWING ROCK CHRISTMAS PARADE: This year, Blowing Rock Parks and Recreation will be organizing the annual parade for the town of Blowing Rock. The Nov. 24 parade begins with line up at noon, with the parade starting at 2 p.m. Those interested in taking part in the parade, can call (828) 295-5222 or visit www.townofblowingrock.com. Only 100 entries will be accepted. FOURTH ANNUAL HOLIDAY MARKET: sponsored by the Watauga County Farmers’ Market will be held from 9 a.m. to noon Nov. 24 at the market grounds at Horn in the West in Boone. There will be plenty of trees, wreaths and seasonal items, along with homemade crafts and goodies of all types. The market also offers a final opportunity for the Kid’s Mini-market and sales of holiday craft items, wreathes, ornaments, made by children 12 and younger. In addition, there will be free cildren’s activities sponsored by Preserve Heritage Agriculture & Regional Markets Now. For more information, visit www.wataugacountyfarmersmarket.org. BEECH MOUNTAIN HOLIDAY MARKET: will be held from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Nov. 24 at the Buckeye Recreation Center at Beech. There will be artists featuring their crafts. For more information, visit www. beechrecreation.org. BLUE RIDGE DINNER THEATER: will feature Michael Combs in two shows, at noon and 6 p.m. Nov. 24. Admission is $30 in advance or $35 at the door. The theater is located in West Jefferson. For more information, visit www.BRDT.net. ANNUAL THANKSGIVING KILN OPENING: will take place at 10 a.m. Nov. 24 at Traditions Pottery Studio near Blowing Rock. For more information, call (828) 295-3862. BOOK SIGNING WITH BOB TIMBERLAKE: will take place at 3 p.m. on Nov. 24 at the Blowing Rock Art and History Museum in Blowing Rock. For more information, call (828) 295-9099. MOUNTAIN HOME MUSIC: A Celtic Christmas concert will be held at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 24 at St. Luke’s Episcopal Church in Boone. Anne Lough, from Asheville, plays the mountain and hammer dulcimer, the auto harp and the guitar, and she sings like an angel. She has written five instructional books for the mountain and hammer dulcimer and she has recorded five CDs. Lough and some of her MHM friends will play Celtic folk songs, Christmas classics and old-time tunes played on the fiddle and banjo. Admission. For more information, call (828) 964-3392.

ARTS AND CRAFTS CHRISTMAS SHOW: will be held Nov. 24 in Banner Elk. More than 40 artists will showcase crafts, Christmas items and specialty foods. The show will be held at the Old Banner Elk School, located in downtown Banner Elk. For more information, call (828) 898-8395. A PUNT, PASS AND KICK COMPETITION: will be held from noon to 2 p.m. Nov. 24 at the Buckeye Recreation Center at Beech Mountain.

Nov. 25

ELK KNOB STATE PARK: at 5564 Meat Camp Road, Todd, will offer a program on “The Elusive Mink” from 2 to 3 p.m. Nov. 25. This animal has been prized throughout the years as having the softest fur in the animal kingdom. Come and see for yourself during this one-hour indoor program. This nocturnal animal has some unique habits that allow it to thrive in the area. A COMMUNITY BONFIRE: will be held from 8 to 9 p.m. Nov. 25 at Beech Mountain, at the Famous Brick Oven Pizzeria.

Nov. 27

APPALACHIAN CHORALE: will be in concert from 8 to 9 p.m. Nov. 27 at the Rosen Concert Hall on the Appalachian State University campus, sponsored by the Hayes School of Music. Admission is free. For more information, call (828) 262-3020.

Nov. 28

WATERCOLOR SOCIETY OF NORTH CAROLINA: traveling exhibit featuring 30 selected paintings will take place Nov. 28-Feb. 10 at the Blowing Rock Art and History Museum in Blowing Rock. For more information, call (828) 295-9099.

Nov. 29

WATAUGA HABITAT’S SECOND ANNUAL GINGERBREAD HOUSE COMPETITION: will be held at 7 p.m. Nov. 29 at the Helen Powers South Room at the Broyhill Events Center, 775 Bodenheimer Drive, Boone. Groups will be provided with the basic materials to build their home. Teams will compete to build the most favored houses of the judges, and at the end of the night prizes will be awarded to the winning teams. There will also be a raffle of items donated from businesses within the community. For more information, visit www.wataugahabitat.org.

Nov. 30

GIVING THANKS HOLIDAY BAZAAR: will be

CONTINUED ON PAGE 81


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Your Winter Times Calendar held at 2 to 8 p.m. Nov. 30 and from 8 a.m. to noon Dec. 1 at Howard’s Creek Baptist Church, 240 Howard’s Creek Church Road, Boone. There will be a cake walk, country store, silent auction, face painting and food. There will be dinner on Friday night and breakfast Saturday morning. For more information, call (828) 264-1908.

CHRISTMAS CRAWL: will take place from 5 to 8 p.m. Nov. 30 with an open house at downtown galleries and shops in downtown West Jefferson. For more information, call (336) 846-ARTS.

MORAVIAN MOUNTAIN CHRISTMAS FESTIVAL: will be held beginning at 7 p.m. Nov. 30 at the Laurel Ridge Camp, Conference and Retreat Center, 124 Pendry Dr., Laurel Springs. Come for the day, overnight or the entire weekend! Enjoy sounds of the season, shop for that “traditional” Christmas present. Music, crafts, food and fellowship will ring in the season. Call Erin Key, program manager, for more information and to register at (336) 359-2951 or email erin@laurelridge.org.

Dec. 1

A HOLIDAY OPEN HOUSE: will be held from noon to 3 p.m. Dec. 1 at the Blowing Rock Art and History Museum in Blowing Rock. The event features a performance by the Rumple Children’s Choir, cookie decorating, ornament making, refreshments, and free admission to the museum. A special gift to the community will also be unveiled. For more information, call (828) 295-9099.

MOUNTAIN HOME MUSIC: An Appalachian Christmas concert will be held at 7:30 p.m. Dec. 1 at Grace Lutheran Church in Boone. Mountain Home Music closes its season each year with a free Christmas concert. In place of admission, a collection is taken and 100 percent of the proceeds go to the Santa’s Toy Box and the Hospitality House. Santa’s Toy Box helps to assure that children in Watauga County get a visit from Santa, and the Hospitality House is Watauga County’s homeless shelter. The concert will feature the Mountain Home Bluegrass Boys, Scott Freeman, Steve Lewis, Josh Scott and David Johnson, plus Mary Greene, Nancy Scheenloch-Bingham and the Mountain Laurels. For more information, call (828) 964-3392.

HOLIDAY OPEN HOUSE AND SATURDAY WITH SANTA: will take place Dec. 1 at the Ashe County Arts Council. Saturday with Santa starts at 8:30 a.m., with sessions at 9:15 a.m. and 10 a.m. The actual open house at the Arts Center will be from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. For more information, call (336) 846-ARTS. DOWNTOWN BOONE CHRISTMAS PARADE: will be held from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Dec. 1. Join Santa Claus and your friends and neighbors on King Street in downtown Boone for the annual Boone Christmas parade.

ANNUAL CHRISTMAS PARADE: in Mountain City, Tenn., will be held at 3 p.m. Dec. 1.

HOLIDAY MARKET: The Johnson County, Tenn., Farmers Market will hold a Holiday Market from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Dec. 1 at God’s Country Church fellowship hall, 1568 Crossroads Dr., Mountain City, Tenn. For more information, call (423) 727-1605.

Dec. 2

HOLIDAY TOUR OF HOMES: will be held from 1:30 to 4 p.m. Dec. 2. It is a benefit for Ashe County’s school-based health center. Tickets are $25. The tour includes four homes, West Jefferson United Methodist Church and the Ashe County Art Center’s Festival of Trees. Tickets are available at the Ashe Art Center, Warrensville Drug, Hair Quest, Becky’s, Ashe County Cheese, Jefferson Drug, The Honey Hole, Libby’s and the Ashe Chamber and Visitor Center. ASHE CHORAL SOCIETY’S ANNUAL CONCERT: will be held at 2 p.m. Dec. 2 featuring both secular and sacred music. It will be held at the Ashe Civic Center. Tickets are $12 for adults and $5 for students. For more information, call (336) 846-ARTS. TIS THE SEASON! HOLIDAY CONCERT SERIES: featuring the Appalachian Symphony Orchestra will be held from 2 to 3:30 p.m. Dec. 2 at the Rosen Concert Hall on the Appalachian State University campus in Boone. Admission is $5. It is sponsored by the Hayes School of Music. Purchase your tickets at the Valborg Theatre. If you purchase at the Valborg, the tickets are $5 each , if you call , they will add a $2 handling fee to your order/not each ticket. Valborg Theatre is located on Howard Street, or call (82) 262-3063 and press “1” for tickets. For more information, visit http://theatre.appstate.edu/ performances/box-office.

Dec. 3

TIS THE SEASON! HOLIDAY CONCERT SERIES: featuring the Appalachian Wind Ensemble will be held from 7:30 to 9 p.m. Dec. 3 at the Rosen Concert Hall on the Appalachian State University campus in Boone. Admission is $5. For more information, visit http://theatre. appstate.edu/performances/box-office.

Dec. 4

TIS THE SEASON! HOLIDAY CONCERT SERIES: featuring the Appalachian Glee Club and Treble Choir will be held from 7:30 to 9 p.m. Dec. 4, Dec. 5 and Dec. 6 at the Rosen Concert Hall on the Appalachian State University campus in Boone. Admission is $5. For more information, visit http://theatre.appstate.edu/performances/box-office.

Dec. 7

BANNER ELK CHAMBER OF COMMERCE CHRISTMAS IN THE PARK: will be held all day Dec.

7 at the Evans Park on Main Street, N.C. 194, in Banner Elk. Festivities will begin at 6 p.m. with the “Parade of Lights.” The parade will begin at the old Banner Elk Elementary School, and conclude at Tate Evans Park, behind Town Hall. Santa and Mrs. Clause will be on hand to hear children’s Christmas lists. The alpacas from Apple Hill Farm will be in the parade and available for petting upon arrival in the park. Eight hundred luminaries will light the walkways of the park this year, and Santa’s Train will be waiting to take you through those luminaria lighted walkways. Free cookies, hot chocolate and hot apple cider will be served in the Banner Elk Town Hall. For more information, visit www.bannerelk.org/events. php?view=d&id=1543&m=12&y=2012. DOWNTOWN BOONE ART CRAWL: begins at 5 p.m. Dec. 7 in downtown Boone. Hosted every first Friday of the month, Downtown Boone’s Art Crawl is an opportunity to enjoy a celebration of art and community, along with refreshments. The monthly event is sponsored by the Downtown Boone Development Association Public Art Program. For more information, visit www.boone-nc.org/ artcrawl.html. GALLERY RECEPTION AT JONES HOUSE: in downtown Boone is held the first Friday of the Boone. The town of Boone hosts a reception honoring the month’s gallery exhibitions. For more information, visit www. joneshousecommunitycenter.org.

Dec. 8

ELVIS HOLIDAY SHOW: will be held at 5 p.m. Dec. 8 at the Blue Ridge Dinner Theater in Ashe County. Admission is $30 in advance; $35 at the door. Relive the fantasy as Starrlyte Promotions presents Jimmy W. Johnson in the “Spirit of Elvis.” “Elvis never left the building like we thought; you may not be able to see him at the moment, but if you’re quiet, long enough, you can still hear him singing.” The legend lives on. For more information, visit http://blueridgedinnertheater.com.

Dec. 9

MESSIAH SINGALONG: will be held from 6 to 7 p.m. Dec. 9 at the Rosen Concert Hall on the Appalachian State University campus in Boone. Admission is free. For more information, call (828) 262-3020.

Dec. 14

‘CHRISTMAS IN BLOWING ROCK 4’: a variety show will be held Dec. 14-16 at the Blowing Rock School Auditorium in Blowing Rock. Patterned after the Andy Williams and Perry Como television specials of the 1960s and 1970s, it’s filled with music, dancing, beautiful costumes and silly skits. For more information, call (828) 414-1844. CONTINUED ON PAGE 82


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2012

RESTAURANTS

Winter Times Calendar CONTINUED FROM PAGE 81

Dec. 15

Dec. 31

Dec. 20

Jan. 1

SANTA: will visit Beech Mountain and there will be Lighting of the Tree from 4 to 6 p.m. Dec. 15 at 4 Seasons at Beech and the Visitors Center.

STORYTELLING AT TODD MERCANTILE: will be held at 6:30 p.m. Dec. 20 with local storyteller John Ashburn. It will be held in the upstairs gallery. Todd Merchantile is located at 3899 Todd Railroad Grade Road in Todd. For more information, call (336) 877-5401.

Dec. 22

BREAKFAST WITH MRS. CLAUS: will be held from 9 to 11 a.m. Dec. 22 at the Buckeye Recreation Center at Beech Mountain.

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be held from 10 to 11 a.m. Dec. 29 at the Buckeye Recreation Center at Beech Mountain.

Dec. 29

GUIDED SNOWSHOE HIKE: will

A ROCKIN’ NEW YEAR’S EVE BASH: will be held from 6 to 8 p.m. Dec. 31 at the Buckeye Recreation Center at Beech Mountain.

A BMR NEW YEAR’S EVE PARTY: will be held beginning at 8 p.m. 31 at Beech Mountain Resort in Beech Mountain.

Jan. 12

N.C. SNOWSHOE CHAMPIONSHIP RACE: will be held from 9 to 11 a.m. Jan. 12 on the Emerald Outback Trail System at Beech Mountain.

Jan. 19

KIDS’ DAY AT THE SLEDDING HILL: takes place from 10 a.m. to noon Jan. 19 at the Sledding Hill at Beech Mountain.


THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

2012

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2012

RESTAURANTS

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THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

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THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

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2012

RESTAURANTS

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This shot of two well-fed bluebirds was captured during the first snow of the winter. Many animals, including birds, insects and the infamous black squirrel, can sometimes point to the kind of winter that is ahead. PHOTO BY MARIE WEAVER

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Black Squirrel CONTINUED FROM PAGE 79

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ahead,” and this year there’s been no shortage of sightings of this ominous harbinger. According to folklore, a “Black Squirrel Winter” occurs every 100 years. “I’ve seen probably 11 or 12 black squirrels this year,” he said. Last year, Mullis, who works at Parker Tie in West Jefferson, said that approximately 40 people came in and told him of seeing black squirrels, but this year, more than 100 people have told him of the sightings. “It’s the most reports of these sightings that I’ve ever heard of,” Mullis said. “Some people have asked me about killing a black squirrel, but, according to folk lore, it’s bad luck to kill them and keeps winter in the area longer.”

He is expecting a little bit of mild weather this winter, but said the area will definitely have cold temperatures, especially with all the snow he expects. He said ice could also be a problem, and he believes it will “horseshoe” around the county, going from Deep Gap, by the Parkway, around Glendale Springs into Crumpler and the Virginia line. “I think that area will get most of the ice,” he said. What Mullis is doing by watching the signs and counting the beans for fogs in August is an oral tradition passed down through the years by family. He was taught by his mother, who was taught by her mother. The oral tradition was passed down through his ancestors who learned it from Native Americans and those who settled in the region many years ago. He is now teaching his son, Jeremy, the nearly lost art of natural prognostication. CONTINUED ON PAGE 87


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RESTAURANTS The Rich Hill area of Creston in Ashe County piled up more than 18 inches of snow in some spots during the first big snow of the year, just before Halloween. Mullis had predicted the area would get snow for Halloween, but residents were skeptical due to the warm weather. PHOTO BY MARIE WEAVER

Black Squirrel

season or huddled on the ground

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 86

Signs of a Bad Winter

Black squirrel sightings

Squirrels frantically gathering nuts in the fall

Husks on corn are thicker than usual

Excess numbers of acorns, hickory nuts and walnuts

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Animal coats for cows, horses, dogs, rabbits and squirrels come in thicker

Numerous pine, spruce and fir cones at the tops of the evergreens

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Birds eating berries earlier in the

Smoke from a chimney flowing toward or settling on the ground

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RESTAURANTS

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THE MOUNTAIN TIMES WINTER GUIDE

Best Mountain Views Around

2012


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