Archive for the ‘Craggy Gardens’ Category
Couple at Craggy Gardens Calls 911 to Report They Might be Dead
Wednesday, April 11th, 2012On the evening of March 31st, rangers were dispatched to the Craggy Gardens picnic area in response to a 911 call concerning a probable drug overdose. Upon arrival, they found a man and woman parked in a vehicle, both exhibiting an altered mental status. They said that they’d ingested psilocybin mushrooms, with the woman adding that she was dead and had no pulse. Blue Ridge Parkway Rangers and EMS personnel began an assessment and noted that the woman was suffering from periodic convulsive events. At one point, she jumped from the stretcher, climbed into the rear seat of a patrol car, exited again, dropped to the ground, and experienced another convulsion. She was eventually placed in an ambulance, where she was transported to a hospital for treatment and evaluation. During the transport, she continually asked if she was alive or dead and if what was happening was real.
Rangers remained at the hospital until she returned to a coherent state. Both the man and woman were issued violation notices for using a controlled substance. The driver was released to the custody of his father. The 911 call actually originated from the couple, who were concerned that they were already dead.
Jeff
HikingintheSmokys.com
Blue Ridge Parkway closures
Monday, August 16th, 2010In Virginia:
* The Peaks of Otter Picnic Area has been closed temporarily due to a sow with three cubs that have been acting aggressively and have bluff charged several people over the past week in the picnic area and on nearby trails. Employees and visitors are advised to stay out of the area until further notice.
In North Carolina:
* Tree removal projects are being conducted near Deep Gap at Milepost 275 to the Yadkin Valley Parking Overlook at Milepost 290. Parkway visitors should expect minor delays as a result of traffic control through this area.
* The Linville Falls Picnic Area, near Milepost 316, is scheduled to be temporarily closed beginning today, August 16, at 8 a.m. and will remain closed until Wednesday – August 18, 2010 at 4:30 p.m. This closure is necessary for the completion of the paving of the picnic area entrance road, which includes asphalt sidewalks, drain repairs, and re-striping of the road and parking areas.
* The Craggy Gardens Picnic Area at Milepost 367.6 will be temporarily closed from Monday, August 16, at 6:00 a.m. until noon Friday, August 20. Due to the narrow road leading up to the picnic area, pavement overlay activities require complete closure of the entrance road.
* The Blue Ridge Parkway will be temporarily closed from Wagon Road Gap at Milepost 412 to the Graveyard Fields Parking Overlook at Milepost 418 on Monday, Aug. 16 through Tuesday, Aug. 24, 2010, to conduct storm debris removal and hazardous tree work. Access to the parkway from U.S. Route 276 will remain open.
For updates on parkway road and weather conditions, please call 828-298-0398.
Jeff
HikingintheSmokys.com
Craggy Gardens minus the rhododendrons
Saturday, July 3rd, 2010Craggy Gardens, about 20 miles north of Asheville on the Blue Ridge Parkway, is a must visit in mid-June, when the peak bloom of the Catawba rhododendron lights up vast swaths of the Blue Ridge Mountains.

As you’ve no doubt noticed I’m writing three weeks later — I took my Fourth of July day off on Friday and headed down I-40 to the Craggies, where I was hoping a day of abundant sunshine and jagged stone would yield a harvest of photo ops. I left mostly disappointed: no blue sky, not many crags, and the annoying realization that it’s not called “Craggy Gardens” because of the crags, but because the rhodo bloom creates a high-country flower garden.
I went to bed last night convinced there’s no earthly reason to hike here outside the bloom season. This morning I trudged to the computer with the idea of throwing something on the blog to get it out of the way and get back to enjoying my three-day weekend.
Then I looked at my pictures again. Turns out there’s a lot going on in the Craggies that you’ll never notice while the Big Bloom is hogging the spotlight. And the bonus: no swarms of rhodo gawkers (presumably the area gets pretty crowded on peak-season weekends, since it’s so close to Asheville).
Just so I’m not overselling it: the hikes with the best scenery are pretty short; not flat enough to be called “easy” but not challenging by any stretch. I added two miles on the Mountains-to-Sea Trail to notch a five-miler.
Note you could get in an intriguing strenuous hike from the Craggy Gardens Visitors Center: Just pick up the MST at the south end of the parking lot and head down to the Douglas Falls Trail. This is an eight-mile out-and-back on a very rugged backcountry trail — the page for this hike at LocalHikes.com includes bear sightings three weeks ago and last summer (a much easier route to the falls is posted at North Carolina Waterfalls.)
The Craggies have three areas: Craggy Pinnacle. the Visitors Center on the Parkway, and Craggy Gardens. I started at Craggy Pinnacle, stopped by the VC, and finished at Craggy Gardens. Let’s see some pictures:
Craggy Pinnacle is a parking area just north of the Craggy Pinnacle Tunnel on the Parkway. The hike starts out in a rhodo tunnel that must be quite impressive during the bloom.
The trail is pretty rocky but not super steep.
Can anybody ID this wildflower?
Mountain Laurel, as we all know.
The trail to the overlook at Craggy Pinnacle splits in two parts, with spectacular views at both ends on clear days. I had to make do with overcast.
SmokyScout has been helping me identify the mountain flora. This is a morning glory.
Looking south over the Parkway and the Visitors Center.
Another St. John’s Wort sighting (last seen at Grandfather Mountain last week).
Another excellent feature of the Craggies: Trees bent in very strange configurations.
OK, on to Craggy Gardens and the (you guessed it) Craggy Gardens Trail, which climbs rather steeply for .8 mile to a hiker shelter and a “bald” — a large treeless summit. More on the bald is coming up. Craggy Gardens Trail, which is a segment of the MST, starts at the north end of the picnic area. There’s a split in the trail after a very short walk; I went right, which seemed to be the right way.
A few white rhododendrons remain.
See, even more wacky trees.
SmokyScout suspects this is a morning glory. Do I hear a second?
Another scene from the Craggy Gardens Trail.
This is the shelter — a spur trail explores the nearby “heath bald,” which from the air must look like somebody came through with a lawnmower with the adjustment set too low.
View from the bald. Not bad even on a cloudy day.
After wandering around the bald, I hiked the rest of the Craggy Gardens Trail, which ends at an intersection with the Douglas Falls Trail; I hiked about a mile of it one-way, then returned. This section of trail is underwhelming — all tree tunnel, few cool rock formations, lots of dicey footwork, and you can hear people and their Hogs at the visitors center for the first half-mile (every year I become 1.6% less patient with people who thunder through spectacular settings on Harleys; heard ‘em at Yosemite, hear ‘em along the Parkway. When are they going to grow up and install mufflers?).
So that’s a first look at the Craggies — not bad for arriving at the fourth-best time (1: peak bloom; 2: fall colors; 3: any sunny day). Craggies links:
- Everytrail GPS tracks.
- Visitors’ center homepage.
- Blue Ridge Parkway page.
- Virtual Blue Ridge page, with printable map
- Romantic Asheville’s Craggy Gardens Page.
View 7-2-10 Craggy Gardens in a larger map
















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