Five-Star Trails: Asheville. Jennifer Pharr DavisЧитать онлайн книгу.
further safety information from other sources.
Contents
2 Destination Center Track Trail
7 Craggy Gardens and Craggy Pinnacle
19 Carl Sandburg’s Connemara Farms
20 DuPont State Forest Four Falls
26 Black Balsam Knob High Loop
31 Mount Pisgah via Buck Spring Lodge
Dedication
To my grandparents, Jones and Polly Pharr. Thank you for sharing your love of the outdoors with me.
And to my husband—always.
Acknowledgments
THANKS TO MENASHA RIDGE PRESS for producing this second edition of Five-Star Trails: Asheville. It struck me while doing work for this guidebook that a lot of credit for the trails in and around Asheville should go to George W. Vanderbilt. The owner of The Biltmore House, he collected, preserved, and managed huge tracts of property as part of his estate and forestry school. Today, those landholdings form a large percentage of Pisgah National Forest, and they also created a corridor for the southern portion of the Blue Ridge Parkway.
I want to thank the modern-day agencies that govern those former Vanderbilt holdings, along with the additional public lands and trails in Western North Carolina. A special nod goes to the private organizations and government bureaus that manage the 2,181-mile Appalachian Trail, the 1,000-mile Mountains-to-Sea Trail, and the 469-mile Blue Ridge Parkway. It is nice to know that your expedition doesn’t have to end in Asheville.
Like other outdoor enthusiasts living in the region, I am also indebted to the hardworking employees who manage Pisgah National Forest, Bent Creek Experimental Forest, and the Shining Rock and Middle Prong Wildernesses. However, my biggest thanks goes to the countless volunteers