Cruising Past Seventy: The Inner Journeys: TRAVEL AWAITS: The Perfect 5-Day Itinerary for the Blue Ridge Parkway

Friday, August 13, 2021

TRAVEL AWAITS: The Perfect 5-Day Itinerary for the Blue Ridge Parkway


The Blue Ridge Parkway is the most visited single unit in the US National Parks System. Driving straight through would take ten to twelve hours. It took us five days because it has: "small towns, tunnels, overlooks, campgrounds, cabins, bed and breakfasts, hotels and motels, restaurants, visitor centers, parking areas, parks, wineries, hiking trails, waterfalls, mountains, lakes, and rivers."

The main Blue Ridge Parkway Visitor Center (MP 384) near the city of Asheville helped us group our visits into five day-itineraries, presented here chronologically. We based ourselves at the G
reen Mountain RV Park in Lenoir, North Carolina before moving to the Virginia section of the parkway.

Day 1: Blowing Rock

About 30 minutes from our campground, Blowing Rock (MP 219.9 and population  1,500 which balloons to 10,000 during summer), "takes its name from an unusual rock formation that juts over 1,500 feet above the Johns River Gorge. Wind currents from the gorge often blow vertically, causing light objects to float upward into the sky." The town is also host to The Tweetsie Railroad Theme Park built around the only remaining fully functional steam engine train in North Carolina. It takes you three miles into the beautiful Appalachian mountain scenery, gorgeous in fall. 

Day 2: Grandfather Mountain And Linn Cove Viaduct

Grandfather Mountain (MP 307.4), is a UN International Biosphere Reserve because of seven protected environmental habitats for black bears, river otters, cougar, bald eagles, golden eagle, and white-tailed deer. At Linnville Peak, there is a 228-foot Mile-High Swinging Bridge that spans an 80-foot chasm a mile high, offering a  360-degree view of the Appalachians. When you visit the Linn Cove Visitors’ Center (MP 304), you'll view the lovely Linn Cove Viaduct (MP 304.4), the 1,243-foot concrete segmental snaking bridge around Grandfather Mountain.

Day 3: Asheville To Linville Falls

This is the day we headed to Asheville to take a peek at the Biltmore castle. Then we visited the Folk Art Center (MP 382) to see quality craft products from North Carolina. 

"It would have been spectacular had the Catawba rhododendrons been in full bloom, but they were just starting when we went to our next stop: Craggy Gardens at MP 364.6. Here, the parkway is literally lined with walls of the plants that are sometimes as tall as trees. The pinkish-purple blooms are at their peak everywhere from late June to early August. So, aside from fall, this is another good time to visit the Parkway."

At 6,700 feet, Mt. Mitchell (MP349) is the highest peak on the East Coast. We loved the panoramic views from the Observatory Tower and the great hot chili dogs from the diner at the top. Then we hurried to Linville Falls (MP 316.4), to see the waters cascading down the 2,000-foot Linville Peak.

Day 4: Meadows Of Dan To Roanoke, Virginia

We left our base and, just after the Nojrth Carolina border, we reached the the Blue Ridge Music Center (MP 213). "But it was Puckett Cabin (MP 190) that held our interest longer. Orelena Puckett was a famous midwife in the late 1800s. Legend has it that, traveling miles on foot when called, she assisted in giving birth to about a thousand babies in 50 years — she lived to be 102 — and was paid about a dollar for each childbirth. It was sad, however, that none of her 24 children survived beyond infancy."


And then we got to the most photographed scene along the Blue Ridge Parkway, Mabry Mill (MP 176.1) that depicts how subsistence farmers lived and managed water.

We spent the night in the charming mountain city of Roanoke (MP 120.4), population, 300,000. Shining from atop the mountains, the Mill Mountain Star, the world’s largest freestanding illuminated man-made star, stands 88.5 feet tall with 2,000 feet of neon tubing powered by 17,500 watts. It turns red whenever there is a traffic fatality.

Day 5: Beyond Roanoke And Toward The Northern Terminus


A short drive from Roanoke was Peaks of Otter (MP 86): Sharp Top, Flat Top, and Harkening Hill. We did not hike up any because it would have taken around three hours so we just took lovely pictures from the lodge. Then we drove to Poplar Forest, the summer home of Thomas Jefferson, just a short drive from the peaks.

Our next stop was the Natural Bridge near Glasgow, 15 miles from MP 61.4. Cedar Rapids has been continuing to carve it out for the last 500 million years. Look for the letters GW that are inscribed on the rocks about 23 feet from the stream’s surface in the middle below the bridge (said to have been done by George Washington).  1,600 year-old trees are in the process of being petrified all around the grounds. Just don't pay the price for the toy museum and wax factory!

We missed the open hours of the Stonewall Jackson House in Lexington (MP 46) but we visited the Virginia Military Institute, just a few miles away, dubbed the West Point of the South. 

Then we drove the parkway toward its southern terminus at MP 469. This section had so many tunnels, coming one after another and sometimes even back to back. It was an amazingly scenic drive that inspired our next adventure at the nearby Great Smoky Mountain National Park.

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29 comments:

  1. We have travelled well through the U.S. but have missed the Appalachian Mountains and the Blue Ridge Parkway on every visit to that area. Great idea to not just scream by in one long day but take a few days to really enjoy the area. We would certainly want time to visit the Biltmore castle too. Your route sounds like a great way to spend 5 days.

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  2. What a beautiful region. The greenery is so impressive - it looks almost surreal. Puckett cabin sounds lie a must-see attraction.

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  3. I want to do this trip so I pinned it as a reference for the future. We have ben thinking on doing a road trip in this area for a few years. This will help with our planning.

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  4. I just wrote about Virginia but you found some places that I missed that I will definitely check out next time! Like the Tweetsie Railroad.

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    1. And I missed a lot more. Two more days and I would have probably covered everything!

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  5. I would never have guessed that Blue Ridge Parkway of the Appalachians was the most visited of the national park system. But after reading your post, I can see why.

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  6. I love this part of the country! So lush and beautiful! My daughter and I visited Asheville about two years ago to see the Chihuly exhibit at the Biltmore. So amazing!

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  7. The Blue Ridge mountains have been coming up in conversation more and more lately. It seems like a place that many Cincinnatians are looking at for retirement. I see why; it's beautiful!

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  8. We love exploring the Blue Ridge Parkway. The winding road offers amazing scenic vistas. Cruising through tunnels carved through the heart of the mountains. It's all so relaxing and inviting. Our last journey included watching a momma and her bear cubs grazing on grass near a pullover.

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  9. I would love to visit here some day and enjoy the scenic vistas. Fall time seems like the best timeframe to explore, have you been?

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    1. No, we went in summer. Spring us also good with all the rhodies.

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  10. Wow just wow. I’d love to spend a few weeks around this route and just explore the trails, history and stunning scenery. This is an area we have been looking into recently, great article

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  11. When my daughter lived in Virginia, we had an opportunity to visit the Blue Ridge Mountains and fell in love with the area. I bought a lovely CD there in one of the shops that I still play and enjoy to this day. The relaxing music is complemented by the actual sounds of nature recorded there.

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  12. I have never heard of Blue Ridge Parkway but it looks amazing. Especially Puckett Cabin - I am in love! Such a lovely place to immerse oneself in the nature, I can totally imagine spending 5 days here.

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  13. The Blue Ridge Parkway is very close to me, but I've yet to get to the Natural Bridge near Roanoke. It looks amazing!

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  14. The Blue Ridge mountains region looks peaceful and definitely a place I would love to visit.

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  15. The Blue Ridge mountains region looks peaceful and definitely a place I would love to visit.

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