Blue Ridge Parkway
America’s Scenic Drive…
THE BLUE RIDGE PARKWAY
BLUE RIDGE PARKWAY
The Blue Ridge Parkway is a National Parkway and All-American Road in the United States, noted for its scenic beauty.
The parkway, which is America's longest linear park, runs for 469 miles through 29 Virginia and North Carolina counties, linking Shenandoah National Park to Great Smoky Mountains National Park.
It runs mostly along the spine of the Blue Ridge, a major mountain chain that is part of the Appalachian Mountains.
Its southern terminus is at U.S. Route 441 (US 441) on the boundary between Great Smoky Mountains National Park and the Qualla Boundary of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians in North Carolina, from which it travels north to Shenandoah National Park in Virginia.
The roadway continues through Shenandoah as Skyline Drive, a similar scenic road which is managed by a different National Park Service unit.
Both Skyline Drive and the Virginia portion of the Blue Ridge Parkway are part of Virginia State Route 48 (SR 48), though this designation is not signed.
The parkway has been the most visited unit of the National Park System every year since 1946 except four (1949, 2013, 2016 and 2019).
Land on either side of the road is owned and maintained by the National Park Service, and in many places parkway land is bordered by United States Forest Service property. There is no fee for using the parkway; however, commercial vehicles are prohibited without approval from the Park Service Headquarters, near Asheville, North Carolina.
The roadway is not maintained in the winter, and sections that pass over especially high elevations and through tunnels are often impassable and therefore closed from late fall through early spring.
Weather is extremely variable in the mountains, so conditions and closures often change rapidly. The speed limit is never higher than 45 mph (72 km/h) and is lower in some sections.
In addition to the road, the parkway has a folk art center located at mile marker 382 and a visitor center located at mile marker 384, both near Asheville.
There are also numerous parking areas at trailheads for the various hiking trails that intersect the parkway, and several campgrounds located along the parkway allow for overnight stays.
The Blue Ridge Music Center (also part of the park) is located in Galax, and Mount Mitchell (the highest point in eastern North America) is only accessible via North Carolina Highway 128 (NC 128), which intersects the parkway at milepost 355.4.[7]
The parkway runs from the southern terminus of Shenandoah National Park's Skyline Drive in Virginia at Rockfish Gap to U.S. Route 441 (US 441) at Oconaluftee in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park near Cherokee, North Carolina.
In terms of design, the parkway is an undivided two-lane expressway for most of its route; access to the parkway is controlled via interchanges with local roads and state/US highways. It crosses (but does not interchange with) several interstate highways along its route and is carried across streams, railway ravines and cross roads by 168 bridges and six viaducts.
Frequent pull-offs, rest areas, and scenic overlooks line the sides of the road.
As it is rarely the fastest or most convenient route for travelers, and it avoids population centers, the road and its vistas is designed to be the attraction itself, rather than a merely a means of efficient travel.
The use of interchanges and grade separation at cross roads is designed to allow for freer flowing traffic and better vistas than frequent intersections and stoplights would allow for.
The parkway uses short side roads to connect to other highways, and there are no direct interchanges with Interstate Highways, making it possible to enjoy wildlife and other scenery without stopping for cross-traffic.
Mileposts along the parkway start at zero at the northeast end in Virginia and count to 469 at the southern end in North Carolina. The mileposts can be found on the right-hand side of the road while traveling southbound on the parkway.
Major towns and cities along the way include Waynesboro, Roanoke, and Galax in Virginia; and in North Carolina, Boone and Asheville, where it runs across the property of the Biltmore Estate.
The Blue Ridge Parkway tunnels were constructed through the rock—one in Virginia and 25 in North Carolina.
PLANNING & PREPARATION
I like to say that it takes more time to plan these road trips than it actually takes to complete them.
With the previous trip - Stage I: Operation Snowbird, completed in January, I made it a point to include areas I’ve visited before. Charleston, SC, my dream retirement city… Orlando, FL, my home for 9 years. Parts of the trip were new, but I was buoyed by the fact that I’d be visiting areas I was familiar with in between all of the unfamiliarness.
With this trip, though, almost nothing would be familiar. I planned to start out driving out of New York on a familiar route, down the western shore of Seneca Lake and into Watkins Glen, then to the supercharger near Corning NY before heading south through PA. And the trip would take me through Front Royal, VA, where I had visited during my previous road trip in January. But everything else from the moment I turned on to the Skyline Drive entrance in Front Royal, would be completely uncharted territory for me. As would completing a Tesla road trip in an area where 1) charging could be a challenge; and 2) cellular service was said to be spotty, at best.
I used a number of resources in my planning, and I’d like to share them here for others considering planning their own Blue Ridge Parkway road trip.
For routing I used several sources, including official National Parks websites and private sites run by locals who love the parkway.
The official National Parks Service website was invaluable. It is filled with information on the parkway, including the official fees/rates, campground information, road closures (for weather and other reasons), and more.
BlueRidgeParkway.org, maintained by the Blue Ridge Parkway Association, contains a wealth of information, from parkway maps to an interactive map that allows users to ‘click’ options, from restaurants to lodging to - get this - electric vehicle charging. I found hotels and a bookstore with EV charging using this tool. I look forward to using their Blue Ridge Pkwy Travel Planner mobile app, which I’m told works even without a cell signal.
VirtualBlueRidge.com, a website run by two Blue Ridge aficionados that features downloadable maps, a detailed guide of the overlooks and tunnels, and more.
For ‘Tail of the Dragon’ planning, I visited TailOfTheDragon.com. I also visited TailoftheDragonResorts.com for lodging info.
For charging I used a few familiar resources, and some specific to the Blue Ridge Parkway.
Tesla’s website allows you to input an address to find all of the nearby Tesla superchargers and destination chargers.
ChargePoint’s website allows you to view a map of nearby ChargePoint chargers, and shows other types as well.
The Department of Energy’s website tracks all types of EV chargers, from Tesla destination chargers and Superchargers to Level 2 charging. (It also shows other types of alternative fuel, including hydrogen stations).
A Better Route Planner is an app, available on Apple and Android, that allows the user to map out the best route possible using the ABRP algorithm. This probably won’t be too useful on this trip, since I am trying to stay on a particular route - Skyline Drive and the Blue Ridge Parkway - and ABPR would likely send me off to Tesla Superchargers nearby. If I get into a jam, though, ABRP FTW!
BEARRITO? BEAR BUFFET?
I’ve never seen a bear in person. If there’s one thing I’ve learned during the planning of this trip, though, it’s that areas I will be driving are apparently rife with them.
I would much prefer not to be bear food.
Thankfully, the National Park Service has tips for that on their website!
Will I remember these tips when I come face-to-face with a big brown bear? I’m not sure.
Still, it’s a good feeling, to know that others have confronted bears and made some notes about what works and what doesn’t.
Below, ripped straight from their website:
Do not approach bears or allow them to approach you! Willfully approaching within 50 yards (150 feet), or any distance that disturbs or displaces a bear, is illegal in the park. Violation of this federal regulation can result in fines and arrest. Use binoculars, telephoto lens, or a spotting scope to view the animals.
Do not feed bears! Mandatory food storage regulations are in effect in all park campgrounds, picnic areas and backcountry campsites. All food, coolers, utensils, cook stoves and other food related items must be stored out of sight in a closed vehicle or in a bear proof food storage locker. Never leave food or coolers unattended—even for a minute!
My Husky storage container turned out to be raccoon-resistant on the Stage I: Operation Snowbird trip - see ‘Edisto Beach’. I don’t know that I would trust it with a black bear…
More tips are here. A few ‘bullet points’ that seem important to me:
If the bear wants your food, let him or her have it.
Do not run away. Do not turn away from the bear.
Do not play dead.
If the bear sees you and changes its behavior, you are too close.
Act aggressively to intimidate the bear. Talk loudly or shout at it. Throw non-food objects such as rocks at the bear. Try to appear larger, i.e. jumping up onto a tree stump.
Don’t try to climb a tree - most bears can climb better than you can.
I’ll update this webpage if I have a close encounter of the furry kind. (Or, maybe, I won’t?) In the meantime, I’ll probably simply avoid the trails, keep my food in my car, and keep myself in my car much of the time, as well.
Here we go…
BLUE RIDGE PARKWAY DAY 1
BLUE RIDGE DAY 1
MILE MARKER 13.1 TO MILE MARKER 86
After an initial preview of the Blue Ridge Parkway yesterday, today will be the first full day on the Parkway as I go from MM 13.1 to 86.
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6: Sherando Lake is a recreation area in George Washington National Forest 4.5 miles (7.2 km) from the parkway via VA 814. Swimming, picnicking, and camping.
29: Whetstone Ridge provided many a mountain man with a fine-grained sharpening stone.
34.4: Yankee Horse Ridge supposedly is where a hard-riding Union soldier's horse fell and had to be shot. A reconstructed spur of an old logging railroad provides access to Wigwam Falls.
58 to 63.6: Otter Creek runs 10 miles (16 km) down the Blue Ridge to the James River. Otter Lake (63.1), fishing, trail.
63.8: The James River and Kanawha Canal is where a footbridge leads across the river to the restored canal locks and exhibits. A self-guiding trail follows the river bluff.
71: Onion Mountain's short loop trail leads through rhododendron and mountain laurel.
83.4 Fallingwater Cascades can be seen along a 1.6-mile (2.6 km) loop trail.
84 to 87 Peaks of Otter are three mountain peaks which have been popular viewing sites since the days of Thomas Jefferson. A shuttle bus provides service to Sharp Top.
There is one tunnel at the north end of the Parkway:
53.1: Bluff Mountain Tunnel - 630 feet (192 m)
MIDDLE CREEK CAMPGROUND
1164 Middle Creek Road, Buchanan, VA 24066
$66.01/night
I chose Middle Creek based on a Google search and decent reviews. It seemed close to the Blue Ridge Parkway. And I suppose it was, technically, as far as number of miles go. The driving, though - windy, hilly roads at slow speeds. It took me a little while to get there. What’s more, some of the roads were straight gravel - definitely not the smooth, paved roads those of us ‘getting away’ are accustomed to. (This may have been temporary, but I got a sense that some of the roads in these parts are just unpaved). I suspect that those from this area probably navigate through it and know how to stay on the more-developed roadways, but for me and my Model 3 it was a tad bit stressful.
Middle Creek Campground is located in the Jefferson National Forest. The signs refer to it as the ‘land of many uses’, but one of those is apparently not development, because new development in the forest is prohibited.
Visiting the Blue Ridge Mountains early in the season gives you your pick of campsites. At Middle Creek I was literally the only camper in the upper section of the campground - the lower appeared to be reserved for seasonal campers and had a number of RVs lined up. Besides a car that raced through on its way to a residential road up above, I didn’t see a single soul all night long. The website advertises this as a place that groups of friends can choose sites close to each other, and I imagine that probably happens a lot during the in-season - it seems like the perfect place to stop with a caravan of RVs , or even a group of tent campers. For me it was a night of solitude, and I really enjoyed it.
The office was manned, and had various snacks and camping supplies, typical to any other campground store. The rest rooms are located behind the office, quite a hike from most of the sites, so keep that in mind when you book your site. In the summer the re appears to be a swimming pool and activities for families and children.
BLUE RIDGE PARKWAY DAY 2
BLUE RIDGE DAY 2
MILE MARKER 86 TO MILE MARKER 143.9
I left the campsite with a full charge, but the electric had stopped once overnight and I found myself wondering what would have happened if I’d found myself in a campground with less-than-stellar electric service. I’d seen a nearby Tesla Destination Charger on the car’s nav, and decided rather than getting right back on to the Parkway I’d drive past the parkway to Bedford, VA and check out the charger, the attached welcome center, and the town a bit.
I had not heard of Bedford, VA before. I arrived, plugged the car in - the Tesla charger is adjacent to a second level 2 charger, as well - and went inside.
“Are you here for the boys?” the woman at the front counter in the visitor center asked me. Taken aback, I explained that I was here to charge my car, and just wondering if she might have a recommendation for breakfast. She had several - there is a guide with a list of all of the businesses in the area, and she was happy to give me suggestions galore and even circle some and write recommendations - “delicious pancakes!” - next to them.
But then… back to the boys.
“Most people who visit Bedford are here because of the boys,” she told me. And then she gave me a brief overview of the Bedford Boys.
The Bedford Boys were a group of 30 young men from Bedford who joined the National Guard before the outbreak of WW2. All incorporated into Company A, 116th Infantry, 29th Division, they were chosen to be the first wave to land on Omaha Beach, which was the best-defended and toughest of the five invasion points on the day that has come to be known as D-Day. Of the 30 young men who had grown together, 22 were killed in the Normandy campaign, most of whom were machine gunned down on Omaha beach. This was, apparently, the largest percentage of soldiers to be killed from a single town - and that town has kept their memories alive in the decades that have followed.
In the gift shop, several books on the subject appeared to be for sale. And tours of the town centered around the Boys, with stops like the five-and-dime, where the telegram operator would have received the horrible news, and a now-closed restaurant where the Boys likely celebrated before heading off to war.
As I listened to the story, and drove around the town, banners marking the memory of each of the Bedford Boys, I couldn’t help but think how difficult it is to find a World War II veteran now. My grandfather’s generation were once everywhere, but so few are left. Any surviving Bedford Boys would be 96 years of age today. I couldn’t help but be impressed, and a little moved, by how deeply this town held its devotion to their fallen soldiers. America lost 420,000 soldiers in World War II; it’s difficult to imagine any being honored and remembered more than the 22 who lost their lives from Bedford, Virginia.
As you’re planning your trip, be sure not to leave out any of the following…
84 to 87 Peaks of Otter are three mountain peaks which have been popular viewing sites since the days of Thomas Jefferson. A shuttle bus provides service to Sharp Top.
114.9 The Roanoke River Gorge is visible after a short walk.
120.4 Roanoke Mountain is a 3.7-mile (6.0 km) side trip. A one-way loop road, with steep grades, crosses over the mountain. Towed vehicles are prohibited.
129.6 Roanoke Valley Overlook gives a view of the largest city along the parkway.
THE BLUE LADY CAFE
107 E. Main St. Bedford, VA
No Website
I decided to stop for lunch at a place called The Blue Lady Cafe. This was simply luck of the draw - it came recommended by the woman with the marker pen at the Welcome Center, and it was open. I also liked the fact that it had the word ‘blue’ in the name.
The Blue Lady appears to be one-part flower shop, one-part candy shop, and one-part diner. Mother’s Day was coming up, so it served as one-part reminder that I hadn’t yet sent a card - I’d be on this trip beyond that holiday. There was one other table seated when I arrived, and nobody else came in until I was about to leave, save for candy and flower customers, one of whom remarked that he always forgets that they serve food, also. I had very attentive service as a result, and my waitress was kind enough to fill me in on more of the Bedford Boys story and some tips for traveling in the area, as well. I explained the concept of my road trip, and she told me that I needed to come back when I next came to the Blue Ridge Mountains - preferably in the fall, to see the foliage, she told me.
“I’ll probably never come back here,” I told her. She seemed startled, and asked if something was wrong, making me realize how that sounded. I apologized. “This place is great,” I explained, “but this is a road trip to see as many parts of the country as possible - I don’t know if I’ll get to see this one again.” That sounded morbid, I realized, so I continued to try to explain. When I mentioned that I’d already done the Outer Banks - well, most of it, at least - she got excited… she, too, had done the Outer Banks! In fact, she and her husband had done a number of road trips around the country, which was why she’d been excited to hear about mine. She had a few recommendations for me in areas west of the Blue Ridge Mountains, and I was eager to hear them.
At one point I told her that I might come back - I hoped to do ‘stage 2’ of the trip, from the Florida Panhandle to Texas and on to Southern California - and I’d have to get there somehow. Would I start the trip in the fall and come back for the foliage? Would I embark in another season and try to complete the Outer Banks this time? She told me that she’d have an equally difficult time deciding. Then she appeared to have an epiphany.
“You know what you should do?” she said. I wondered what third way she’d thought of - was it some other amazing route that rivaled the beauty of both of these places? “You should ask Jesus. Put it in his hands. He won’t steer you wrong…”
I’d definitely return to the Blue Lady. The food was decent, the service exceptional, and the peanut brittle and fudge delicious - I grabbed a few pieces for the road. We’ll see what Jesus has to say about it…
FLOYD FAMILY CAMPGROUND
1164 Middle Creek Road, Buchanan, VA 24066
$44.57/night
Floyd Family Campground would be next on my list of overnight stops.
This campground is immense. It includes a small campground by the road that was fairly dense with RVs - a seasonal part, perhaps? - and then a gigantic field with sites smattered about. There is also a portion up above - the ‘scenic’ sites - that offer majestic views but no electric service. I needed electric to charge the car, so I settled on something in the middle - at the top of a hill, but with 50-amp service.
“You understand that your site is an off-road site?” the clerk at reception asked me. I didn’t even know what that meant. I asked him to explain, and he told me that my site was down a hill a bit. I didn’t fully understand, still, but that didn’t sound too bad. “Is it muddy or something?” I asked him. “Grass,” he assured me. That sounded fine…
BLUE RIDGE PARKWAY DAY 3
BLUE RIDGE DAY 3
MILE MARKER 143.9 TO MILE MARKER 230
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154.5 Smart View is named for having "a right smart view". A nearby cabin built in the 1890s is known as a spot for viewing dogwood blooms in early May.
167 to 174 Rocky Knob overlooks Rock Castle Gorge.
176.1 Mabry Mill was operated by E.B. Mabry from 1910 to 1935. A trail leads to his gristmill, sawmill, blacksmith shop, and other exhibits. Old-time skills are demonstrated in the summer and fall. This is said to be the most photographed site along the Parkway. It is an easy walk around the mill to explore the local history of Appalachian culture. The mill is home to a blacksmith shop and sawmill, open to visitors.
188.8 Groundhog Mountain has a variety of rural fences: snake, Post-and-rail, picket and buck. Picnic grounds and observation tower are also nearby.
189.1 Groundhog Mountain
189.9 Aunt Orelena Puckett Cabin Exhibit was the home of an area midwife.
213 Blue Ridge Music Center near the town of Galax with concerts, music demonstrations, and a 17,000-square-foot (1,600 m2) museum dedicated to anything musical, especially old-time music.
Mile 217.5 Cumberland Knob, at 2,885 feet (879 m), is the centerpiece of a small parkway recreation area.
218.6 Fox Hunters Paradise, down a short walking path, is where hunters could listen to their hounds baying in the valley below.
BLUE RIDGE DINER
The town of Floyd seems to be a hopping little place, with an emphasis on the arts. I saw several shops specializing in arts, crafts, pottery, and similar on my way out of town. Floyd on a Saturday morning is a busy place indeed, and I had to stop several times to allow pedestrians to cross across walks, or wait for people to finish parking their cars. A word of warning: stopping for people in crosswalks doesn’t seem to be a very common thing in Floyd. I had to wait for nearly a dozen cars to go before one stopped in a waved me across coming out of the diner, and that was with the flashing lights. Maybe the more you drive around Floyd, the less you want to stop for every person crossing the street?
Floyd turned out to be about 9 miles off of the parkway, and heading back my maps app gave me two choices - one that was shorter and one that had ‘more turns’. I opted for the one with more turns, feeling like an old pro at these crazy twisty roads by now and figuring it would give me more practice for what was to come at Tail of the Dragon. It turned out that the road with more turns wasn’t really that bad at all, kind of tame compared to the road going back from several of the previous mountain towns I had visited.
The Blue Ridge Restaurant had been advertised as a diner by Yelp and several other sources, and I would say it has more of a diner feel that it does a restaurant feel. It is a very busy place, and when I got there there were lines for tables of four, but I got the VIP treatment when I asked for a table for one, because there is one table by the kitchen that will only seat one. (Two, perhaps, if the other party is a small child). It was clear that the emphasis here is on speedy service, and judging from the length of time it took people around me to place their orders I gather many of these folks eat here regularly. I had to take a look at the menu, but I had coffee in front of me in a matter of seconds and my server told me to take all the time I needed. I settled on the big breakfast, which included eggs, home fries, toast, and a pancake. (It had other options, including grits instead of home fries, and gravy instead of a pancake). I toyed with the idea of going full southern, but decided against it. Who knows what the Blue Ridge Parkway had in store for services today, probably not the best time to be experimenting with different foods I’m not accustomed to.
The service was as friendly as it was speedy, and my coffee cup was refilled three or four times, topped off really. I finally had to say ‘no more, thanks’. Everything was delicious and I felt fueled up and ready to return to the parkway, if nature and construction road closures would allow.
I headed back to the parkway, just about 10 miles from the diner. From my GPS I inputted the Blue Ridge Parkway, Rocky knob information center. It was unlikely to be open, I figured, but I knew it was right on the parkway and if I got lucky, maybe they could answer some questions about the road closures ahead. Alas, no such luck.
BLUE RIDGE PARKWAY DAY 4
BLUE RIDGE DAY 4
MILE MARKER 230 TO MILE MARKER 294.1
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238.5 Brinegar Cabin was built by Martin Brinegar about 1880 and lived in until the 1930s when the homestead was purchased from his widow for the parkway. The original cabin stands there today.
238.5 to 244.7 Doughton Park was named for Congressman Robert L. Doughton, a staunch supporter and neighbor of the parkway. The park has many miles of hiking trails, a lodge, dinner, picnic area and a campground.
258.6 Northwest Trading Post offers crafts from North Carolina's northwestern counties.
260.6 Jumpinoff Rock is at the end of a short woodland trail.
264.4 The Lump is a grassy knob that provides views of the forested foothills.
272 E. B. Jeffress Park has a self-guided trail to a waterfall known as the Cascades. Another trail goes to an old cabin and church.
285.1 Daniel Boone's Trace, which Boone blazed to the West, crosses near here.
291.9 The Blowing Rock. Named for the strong northwest wind that blows up from the rock, The Blowing Rock is a cliff that hangs 3,000 feet above Johns River Gorge in North Carolina. The force of the wind is so strong that it returns light objects that are cast out over the gorge. Admission costs $6 for adults and $1 for children ages 4-11. Hours vary by season. Be sure to stop at the gift and snack shops to complete your visit.
292 to 295 Moses H. Cone Memorial Park has hiking, fishing and horse trails. Flat Top Manor, the former house of Moses H. Cone, is now used as the Parkway Craft Center.
BANDIT’S ROOST CAMPGROUND
667 Jess Walsh Dr. Wilkesboro, NC 28697
$14/night - includes National Parks Access Pass
GREENSBORO, NC
GREENSBORO, NC
SPENDING THE DAY IN GREENSBORO
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BLUE RIDGE PARKWAY DAY 5
BLUE RIDGE DAY 5
BOONE, NC & MILE MARKER 294.1 - TO MILE MARKER 331
Today’s ride was one of the longest - from Greensboro back to the Parkway - but my time on the parkway was short. I was running late, so I made it my goal simply to get to my next destination as quickly as possible.
I did make a few overlook stops, though, along the way.
I had tried to get in the habit of taking pictures of signs at the various overlooks, if only so I might get some of them right later when it came time to post them to the website. (This is easier said than done - I need to do a much better job of organizing my photos during the trip, as doing so afterwards is close to impossible). I was taking a picture of the sign at one of the overlooks along my route when a young woman in a vehicle pulled in and parked, stepped out of the car, and watched me for a moment. At some point she walked up to me and held out her hand. In it was a sharpie marker.
“I don’t know if you are the type or not, but if you are.“ She held the sharpie and I looked at it, wondering if it was just a usual sharpie.
“The type?“ I asked her. Was she asking me to take a huff?
“It’s a tradition now, pretty much,“ she told me. I was still confused. She pointed to the sign with a laugh. “I don’t know if you want to write your name or not, but if you do, here.“
I took the sharpie and turned toward the sign hesitantly.
“It’s OK,“ she told me. “They wash these off pretty regularly. Like I said, it’s a tradition.“
Oh, what the hell. I’d seen some of these other signs marked with names of families, businesses, nicknames, and even drawings. I held the tip of the marker to the sign and wrote out “StaveIVTesla.com.” Then I handed the marker back to her and she looked satisfied.
She walked back to her car, got in, and drove off. It seemed that her mission had been to provide me the tool for which to leave my mark on the Parkway. What an odd experience - what about me had made her think that she should stop? Did she stop for everyone she saw parked near a sign? Just me? I had so many questions, but hadn’t thought to ask a single one. Well, except to confirm that I was headed in the right direction on the Parkway. She pointed north and told me that was heading south - she wasn’t even right about what direction she was headed in. Who was this person, this angle of parkway signage destruction or - if you prefer - this guardian of parkway traditions?
To make things even more confusing, no matter how many times I looked through pictures from the trip, I for the life of me could not find the photo I took of my marking.
The navigation suggested my trip was head around 35 miles to go, and it suggested I was looking at a timeframe of over 70 minutes. How could that be possible? That implied it thought I would be driving under 30 mph. Part of this was highway driving, it said. Were there some extra miles it wasn’t calculating? I read through the step-by-step and indeed, it appeared I would be driving a very short distance in a very long time.
I realized once we turned back onto the back roads, our speed would be slower than usual. It was clear from the number of guardrails dented, blown tires in the road, and even marks were vehicles had clearly brushed up against the rocky side of the road, but this was an area filled with accidents. It only took a few minutes to figure out why. Although there were multiple signs recommending commercial vehicles and trucks avoid these roads, this is also eight prime walking area. Gigantic logging trucks came rumbling down hills and around corners, seemingly struggling to keep their trucks under control. After the first or second close calls a slowed down significantly, no longer going the speed limit of 45 but closer to 25. Whoever is doing these GPS calculations knows their stuff.
My altered route meant I would miss the stop through Grandfather Mountain. I have been excited to do a little top off there, since the utilities here had gone through the trouble of installing an EV charger somewhere in the facility. I also wanted to see what all of the fuss was about - Reid couldn’t recommend it highly enough. I was disappointed to miss it, but my expectation being I might come back through this area on my longer around the country tour, I would wait until everything was open and then really get to experience it.
Before my detour to Greensboro I had been the only person at many of the overlooks, or if I was sharing I would share them with one or two other vehicles max. Today many of the overlooks were close to being full, and one was even full with people parking in the grass and a Jeep parking in the median. This is the off-season when most things aren’t even open yet? I shudder to think of how crowded some of these overlooks must get when foliage season arrives. I was glad today that I took my first Blue Ridge Mountain Parkway trip when things weren’t fully open yet and the parkway was less crowded.
Most of the things that I would have been able to enjoy on a later-season visit to the Blue Ridge were closed in early April. I did not stop at Grandfather Mountain, for example - charging considerations - although it sounds like on a late-spring/summer/early-fall trip that would require a minimum of an entire day. Likewise, I did not stop at Little Switzerland - later I’d meet a couple on a motorcycle who’d tell me that it was an absolutely amazing place and not-to-be-missed. And, they claimed, it had the Blue Ridge Parkway stickers I’d been looking for all this time! Damn. Next time…
295.1 to 298 Julian Price Memorial Park, the former retreat of the insurance executive Julian Price, offers a variety of hiking trails, campground, and 47-acre (190,000 m2) Price Lake. This is the only lake on the parkway on which paddling is allowed.
304.4 Linn Cove Viaduct, the last segment of the parkway built, skirts the side of Grandfather Mountain. A visitor center is located nearby and provides access to a trail under the viaduct.
308.3 Flat Rock provides views of Grandfather Mountain and Linville Valley.
316.3 Linville Falls Recreation Area provides trails with overlooks of Linville Falls and the Linville Gorge. A campground and picnic area are also provided. This is the most popular and spectacular waterfall in the Blue Ridge Mountains and is easily accessible off of the Parkway. Three cascading waterfall tiers plunge 90 feet into the equally stunning 12-mile-long Linville Gorge. It’s an excellent choice for a nature-filled pitstop.
331 The Museum of North Carolina Minerals interprets the state's mineral wealth.
334 Little Switzerland. Several trails here offer gorgeous views and impressive waterfalls, such as Wiseman’s View, Crabtree Falls, and Grassy Creek Waterfall Trail. There are also several quaint Inns to stay in for the night. Little Switzerland Books and Beans is an adorable bookstore and gallery featuring work by local artists. If you’re up for it, you can even drive the Diamondback, a winding road notorious for motorcycle and sports car enthusiasts.
MOUNTAINAIRE INN & LOG CABINS
827 Main Street Blowing Rock, NC 28605
$/night
Tesla Destination Charger
My original plan for today had been to spend the day hanging around Boone, NC.
Tesla owners who’d done the Blue Ridge Parkway before me recommended a Japanese steakhouse there. The owner of Mokota’s, it was said, was one of the early-adopters of Tesla - he drove one himself - and his restaurant was one of the first to have a Tesla Destination Charger. My plan was to have lunch, charge up, explore the town a bit, and then head to the Skyline Village Inn, in Spruce Pine, where I’d spend the evening getting my pictures categorized (haha!) and planning the next few days in more detail. I was excited, because the Skyline Village Inn boasted balconies, beautiful views, and EV charging.
Things didn’t go quite as I’d planned.
I hadn’t wanted to book a room in advance, because the website was clear that no refunds would be given. When you are road-tripping with an illness, you worry that complications could set your planning back a bit. A campground at $20/night was an easy write-off, but a hotel at $150/night not so much.
Also, because the weather in April is iffy and closures of the Parkway can and do happen I didn’t want to assume that I’d even be able to drive this portion of the Parkway. There was still snow in the forecast in the higher elevations. Would I get stuck somewhere, unable to make it to the Skyline Village Inn? It was quite a possibility. Booking in advance just didn’t make sense, I figured.
Of course, I wished I had when I called and they told me that they had no vacancy.
Damn! That wasn’t supposed to happen - this was the ‘slow season’.
I was too late to have lunch at Mokota’s, anyway, so I decided to adjust my plans. Being flexible on any road trip is sometimes necessary - especially a Stage IV trip on the Blue Ridge Parkway in early April.
On to… Blowing Rock!
Reid had highly recommended Blowing Rock - “you can’t skip the Blowing Rock!” he’d told me several times - so I decided to incorporate it into the trip. A desert of charge options in/around the area made this more attractive, as well, as not one but two of the hotels in the town of Blowing Rock were listed on the Tesla charging map as having a Destination Charger. Score! I called both to confirm they were working - they were - and then picked one at random. They were both equal to me, and the prices were similar, but the voice on the phone of one seemed to be confident about the Tesla charging status, whereas the other one hesitated a moment before answering. I went with confidence! The Mountainaire Inn!
If you are looking for accommodations in Blowing Rock, you will find in wide selection. Hotels, motels, inns, bed and breakfasts, cabins, and other types of accommodations abound. I counted more than 30 places to stay on my way out of town. A small number offer dedicated Tesla charging, though. Some of those do not show up in PlugShare. PlugShare does show Tanger Outlets, which appears to show two J1772 chargers, and it claims that the town of Blowing Rock offers J1772 chargers at five dollars a pop. If you should arrive at your choice of hotels to find your charging options ice’d or otherwise unavailable, there are other - albeit slower - options.
The Mountainaire Inn in Blowing Rock was very much a throwback to what folks road tripping a couple of decades past likely experienced at all of their stays. Most of the fixtures, the furniture, and even the electrical seemed to be relics of a bygone era. I haven’t been handed an actual key to a motel room door in several years, so holding that little key was a nice reminder of how things used to be. The property was in fairly good condition as older hotels go, but I had been taking pictures of my car in front of abandoned hotels, and a picture of this property as being somewhere in between those and the newer chains I stayed at on my last road trip.
I was greeted by a young woman who while friendly was matter of fact: she had the script down pat and the entire transaction took less than a minute. She gave me a list of restaurants in the area and recommended the one right across the street, where hotel guests receive a 10% discount. The hotel had a Keurig available 24/7, and fresh coffee at 7 a.m., I was told. I’d already eaten out that morning, and unless I am visiting relatives I try to limit myself to one local restaurant a day, so I decided to hold off on dinner and head across the street for breakfast the next morning instead.
My usual strategy is to drive into a town, pull into the hotel that is advertised as having a Tesla destinations charger, plug my car in, confirm that it’s working, and then quickly book the room from my phone. I wasn’t sure what kind of cellular reception awaited me in Blowing Rock, and after the Skyline Village Inn had filled up I had decided to go ahead and book in advance. When I got there I saw that the charger was in a very small parking lot, all the way to the left, and the parking spot was available. There was a small, faded sign next to the charger that stated that the parking lot was for Tesla customers only. It occurred to me, in that moment, how lucky I had been that the space was available. All it would have taken was one other Tesla customer, or one other customer who didn’t recognize where they were parked and didn’t notice the sign, and I would be out of luck. I thought, perhaps in the future it would be better to employ my usual strategy, and just go book at the front desk once I am plugged in.
Edit: Someone in my North Carolina Tesla Owner’s group tells the group that, if you call ahead, this hotel will cone off the Tesla parking space, if necessary, to save it for you. I didn’t know about the coning-off policy when I called ahead, and only booked the room afterward, on their website.
I had been very low on charge, well under 20% when I arrived, and the car suggested it would be between four and five hours until it had completed the charge at the hotel. I was looking at between nine and 10. I had planned to stay in for the evening and work on some things - this website, for example - so I set a reminder for 9:30 intending to check the parking lot afterwards, and move my car if another Tesla was present and needed the space.
Instead, I found that exhaustion had caught up with me. Reid had me marching all over his community into the late hours of the night, and I’d found myself waking up early the next day. Between the excitement of seeing relatives for the first time in a while, and a few days of staying up late trying to enjoy as much of the experience as possible, I was tired. It wasn’t even 5 p.m. yet, but I needed sleep. I stared at my computer screen for a few minutes trying to scramble up some energy but just couldn’t do it. I lay down on the bed for a little bit, just to rest my eyes, and - zonk.
The car finished charing just a little my alarm went off, so I got out of bed and stumbled outside to have a look around. My plan had been to move the car to another space, but there was only one other space available - this hotel, too, seemed to be pretty fully booked. I walked all the way around the hotel, even checking the street in front. No other Tesla vehicles appeared to be in the vicinity. Did it make sense to move my car to the only other space, taking up that parking spot, while the space for Tesla charger would become the only space available? I always hate thinking I am the reason someone drives by and doesn’t stay in a particular hotel seeing me taking up the charger - but at the same time I didn’t want to move the car and leave the space open for a standard ICE vehicle, which would almost certainly not be able to see that sign reserving the space for Teslas at night time. I decided to leave my car plugged in, and I put my business card on my windshield wiper and one in the driver’s side window just in case someone came nosing about trying to see how much time I have left to charge.
I stopped over at the front desk but nobody appeared to be there, so I went back to my room. An hour or two later I went to sleep, hoping I hadn’t been the reason someone’s night might have been ruined. I will send a note to the hotel at some point in the future recommending they include a bigger, more noticeable sign regarding that being a spot adjacent to a Tesla charger, which most motorists probably wouldn’t even recognize as a charger.
I woke up refreshed, and decided to head across the street for breakfast. The restaurant was a Mexican one, and it turned out that, unlike most Mexican restaurants I have been to, this one was operated by people who had thick Mexican accents and appeared to speak very little English. After some difficulty ordering because of the language barrier - my questions went unanswered because my server didn’t quite understand me - I was served a cup of coffee and Sopapilla pancakes, eggs, and toast.
Sopapilla pancakes are covered with cinnamon and sugar, and little dollops of whipped cream. (See the photo below). I’ve never had anything like them. They were very tasty. I’m not sure if those are a Mexican dish or just something the restaurant created on its own, but I enjoyed them. I decided to forgo the 10% discount, as I didn’t want to go through the trouble of asking for it, and just paid my check without an exchange of words - other than thank you from both of us - instead.
I walked across the street, unplugged the car, checked out - I usually skip going to the front desk, but when you have a metal key to turn in - and, after a fill-up on coffee from that Keurig, headed on to the next part of my journey.
BLUE RIDGE PARKWAY DAY 6
BLUE RIDGE DAY 6
MILE MARKER 331 TO MILE MARKER 397.3
My first stop on today’s journey would be the Blowing Rock.
THE BLOWING ROCK
432 The Rock Road Blowing Rock, NC 28605
$9 per person
I decided to start the day off with a trip to the Blowing Rock.
This was, after all, the town’s namesake.
And Reid had recommended it several times over.
It must be pretty impressive, no?
I searched for the attraction in the Tesla nav system and pulled out onto the street, following the directions. It turned out that it wouldn’t be too long of a drive - Blowing Rock is a small town, and the Blowing Rock was just a couple of miles from the motel.
As I drove I noted that the town seemed to revolve around a theme of cowboys and Indians. Or, maybe, a theme of the frontier. I wasn’t sure what this was all about. I hoped that it would be explained at the Blowing Rock.
As I entered the Blowing Rock parking area I counted at least two dozen vehicles. This was clearly quite the attraction, and I was getting excited.
The Blowing Rock is billed as North Carolina’s Oldest Attraction. This means that it’s been a staple of Blue Ridge Parkway road trips for decades. I pictured so many of those who came before me making this same stop, pulling in to this same parking area, all to see this same rock. Judy and Reid, their parents, my own grandparents, and who knows how many other ancestral relations - we’d all come to this place to see this one special rock. The Blowing Rock. This was a ‘road trip’ tradition.
Even as I learned, in the gift shop, that it would cost me $9 to get in to see the Blowing Rock, nothing could dampen my spirits. I plunked down my money, purchased a sticker or two, and walked through the door into the attraction.
“It is said that a Chickasaw chieftan, fearful of a white man’s admiration for his 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 playfully shot an arrow in his direction. The flirtation worked because soon he appeared before her wigwam, courted her with songs of his land and they became lovers, wandering 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 plains. With the maiden’s entreaties 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 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.”
At the risk of being affected by some kind of curse, I will admit here, on these pages, that I was less enthusiastic about the Blowing Rock when I drove away from the attraction than I had been when I arrived.
Perhaps if I had not just spent days on the magnificent Blue Ridge Parkway.
If I had come in on a tour bus (tour rates are available for $6 per person) that had followed a highway-only route along North Carolina’s cities, and the Blowing Rock had been a stop on the tour, I’d remember this as the most scenic among all of the tour stops. It is quite beautiful.
But put it up against a few of the overlooks I’d already seen - and a few that I’d see over the next few days - and I’d say that this was an average stop on the tour. And one that I had to pay $9 to see.
The Blowing Rock - see photos below - is a cool rock outcropping along the side of whatever mountain we found ourselves on. It offers a beautiful view, and for the daring - which this day included children under 10 and a few adults, but not me - you can climb out onto the Blowing Rock for photo ops. Cool spot. But worthy of a $9 admission charge? Not sure about that.
Still, I am a sucker for good marketing. And at the risk of appearing indifferent to the legend and its origins, I will say that any town that can keep a story like that going over decades and decades, collecting $9 a pop and creating a whole tourism industry around it? That was impressive. And worthy of my $9 to say that I got to see it.
Would I go again? Probably not. Would I go again if someone was with me and wanted to see the ‘legend’ and this rock? Absolutely.
Especially if that someone was a friend working in public relations looking to be inspired.
I did enjoy the museum, which included a lot of nostalgic photos and news clippings centered around tourism in the area. And the cat that I met - absolutely beautiful. Apparently there are a number of strays that have made the Blowing Rock their home. Not sure how much of that is manufactured, as well, but the cat I encountered upon entering the museum was so still that I thought it was a part of the exhibit - until it turned and looked at me. Amazing animatronics or - no, what, that’s a real cat.
I would later return to Greensboro to visit Judy and Reid on my way back through to New York.
Reid would ask excitedly if I’d had a chance to stop at Grandfather Mountain. (I hadn’t.)
“Well, did you stop to see the Blowing Rock?” he asked me.
“I did.”
“Ohhhhh,” he said, wincing, with an almost-pained expression. “You were disappointed, weren’t you?”
“A little,” I admitted.
“Yea, I thought you might be,” he told me. (He might have mentioned that before this part of the trip). “But at least you can tell people you’ve seen the Blowing Rock!”
Yes. At least there’s that.
They don’t call them the Blue Ridge Mountains for nothing. The color blue is everywhere on the Parkway.
I’d seen it so many times in others’ photos as I researched and prepared for this trip. Today I began to see those same areas for myself. I’d always suspected that some of the photos I’d been seeing were taken with special lenses that brought out the blue color. Or, perhaps, a filter accentuating the color had been added after the fact, some sort of magic worked during the editing process. Today I realized that even the worst photographer couldn’t help but take a beautiful picture on certain parts of the Parkway - it was just beautiful here.
Along the parkway there are many bridges. You can’t build a mountain road without them.
One of them, though, is especially iconic.
A ‘famous’ bridge, really.
It features prominently in much of the marketing for the Blue Ridge Parkway. Communities around the parkway often choose it as the image for the Parkway in the ‘nearby attractions’ portion of their websites.
I’d fallen in love with this bridge before I even arrived at the Blue Ridge Parkway.
I just hoped I’d have a chance to see it…
MOUNT MITCHELL STATE PARK
2388 N.C. 128 Burnsville, NC 28714
Mount Mitchell State Park, reached via NC 128, is at 6,684 feet the highest peak in the Appalachian Mountains and the country east of the Mississippi. You can drive almost to the summit or make the six-mile trek to the top. The observation deck offers some of the most incredible 360-degree views in the area, where you can see as far as 85 miles out.
As with most days of this trip, some of the things I’d bullet pointed along the way were unavailable to me because of seasonal closures. Still, I list them here for your own trip planning.
339.5 Crabtree Meadows & Crabtree Falls is a parkway recreation area with a picnic area, campground, giftshop and hiking trails.
349.2 Laurel Knob provides views of Grandfather Mountain, Linville Mountain, Hawksbill Mountain, and Table Rock.
355.4 Mount Mitchell State Park, reached via NC 128. At 6,684 feet, this is the highest peak in the Appalachian Mountains and the country east of the Mississippi. To explore this natural wonder, you can drive almost to the summit or make the steep six-mile trek to the top. The observation deck offers some of the most incredible 360-degree views in the area, where you can see as far as 85 miles out.
359.8 Walker Knob, formerly known as Balsam Gap, is located where the Black Mountains and the Great Craggy Mountains meet.
361.2 Glassmine Falls is an 800-foot (240 m) ephemeral waterfall visible from an overlook on the side of the parkway.
363.4 to 369.6 Craggy Gardens in the Great Craggy Mountains are covered with purple rhododendron in mid-to-late June. Craggy Pinnacle Trail and other trails (364.1 and 364.6); road to picnic area and trails (367.6).
382 The Folk Art Center is the flagship facility of the Southern Highland Craft Guild. It offers sales and exhibits of traditional and contemporary crafts of the Appalachian region. There are interpretive programs, three galleries, a library and a book store.
384 The Blue Ridge Parkway Visitor Center is the newest along the parkway. Exhibits focus on the history and heritage of the parkway and western North Carolina.
There are a number of tunnels at this end of the parkway:
333.4: Little Switzerland Tunnel, 542 feet (165 m)
336.4: Wildacres Tunnel, 330 feet (101 m)
344.6: Twin Tunnel (North), 300 feet (91 m)
344.7: Twin Tunnel (South), 401 feet (122 m)
349.0: Rough Ridge Tunnel, 150 feet (46 m) - at 21 feet, 6 inches this is the tallest of the tunnels
364.4: Craggy Pinnacle Tunnel, 245 feet (75 m)
365.6: Craggy Flats Tunnel, 400 feet (122 m)
374.4: Tanbark Ridge Tunnel, 780 feet (238 m)
397.1: Grassy Knob Tunnel, 770 feet (235 m)
BLUE RIDGE PARKWAY DAY 7
BLUE RIDGE DAY 7
MILE MARKER 397.3 TO MILE MARKER 469 (SOUTH END)
Across any of my road trips I have not been so happy to leave a city as I was to leave Asheville North Carolina.
At one point the navigation appeared to be directing me down old Charlotte Highway, and a right turn was promised that should have taken me to Blue Ridge Parkway. Instead the car got to the end of the road, which turned out to be a dead end. The navigation simply said “do a U-turn to stay on the road.“ A nice feature of the navigation would be if it took responsibility for making mistakes. Instead of letting the driver feel that they have not followed the navigation correctly. And then sent me back the way that I came from, and yet again onto another highway. How did the people of Asheville survive before the interstates were developed?
Looking back on it, the morning was really a comedy of errors. If I could have time lapse everything and watched it back quickly I would probably have a chuckle. Parked cars blocking roads, FedEx trucks making the route unnavigable, mopeds slowing traffic down to ridiculous speeds. This was my morning in Asheville. I had been parked outside of biscuit head around 1015, and I finally pulled into a Parkway welcome center to begin enjoying my Panda Express at almost noon.
408.6 Mount Pisgah was part of the Biltmore Estate. The estate became home of the first forestry school in America and the nucleus of the Pisgah National Forest. Also located here is the Pisgah Inn resort, a park service concession.
417 Looking Glass Rock is visible from many spots on the parkway starting at Mount Pisgah.
418 East Fork Overlook. Located here are the headwaters of the Pigeon River. Yellowstone Falls is a short distance away and gets its name from the yellowish moss covering the rocks.
420.2 Shining Rock Wilderness is the largest wilderness area in North Carolina, covering 18,483 acres (74.80 km2), with 25 miles (40 km) of trails and peaks over 6,000 ft (1,800 m). The wilderness is named for Shining Rock.
420.2 Black Balsam Knob is a grassy bald with panoramic views just outside the Shining Rock Wilderness in Pisgah National Forest. The wilderness area also includes Cold Mountain.
422.4 Devil's Courthouse is a rugged exposed mountaintop rich in Cherokee traditions.
423.5 Herrin Knob Overlook. A hiking trail goes around Tanasee Bald and Herrin Knob. Tanasee Bald (423.7) is said to be the home of the mythical Cherokee giant Tsul 'Kalu.
431 Richland Balsam is the highest point on the parkway at 6,053 feet (1,845 m). There is a self-guiding trail that passes through a remnant spruce-fir forest.
435.7 Licklog Ridge once hosted cattlemen and their herds of cattle before it became part of the national forest. The area earns its name from the cattlemen who would place rocks of salt into logs and holes in the earth.
451.2 Waterrock Knob provides a panorama of the Great Smokies, visitor center, trail, comfort station, exhibits.
458.2 Heintooga Ridge Road runs north from the parkway 8.8 miles (14.2 km) to Heintooga Overlook in Great Smoky Mountains National Park.
Mile 469 The southern end of the Blue Ridge Parkway intersects with U.S. 441 in Great Smoky Mountains National Park near Cherokee, North Carolina.
This section of the parkway also includes tunnels:
399.3: Pine Mountain Tunnel, 1,434 feet (437 m)
400.9: Ferrin Knob Tunnel #1, 57 feet (17 m)
401.3: Ferrin Knob Tunnel #2, 421 feet (128 m)
401.5: Ferrin Knob Tunnel #3, 375 feet (114 m)
403.0: Young Pisgah Ridge Tunnel, 412 feet (126 m)
403.9: Fork Mountain Tunnel, 389 feet (119 m)
406.9: Little Pisgah Tunnel, 576 feet (176 m)
407.4: Buck Springs Tunnel, 462 feet (141 m)
410.1: Frying Pan Tunnel, 577 feet (176 m)
422.1: Devil's Courthouse Tunnel, 665 feet (203 m)
439.7: Pinnacle Ridge, 813 feet (248 m); at 13 feet, 1 inches this ties for one of the shortest of the tunnels
458.8: Lickstone Ridge Tunnel, 402 feet (123 m) - at 13 feet, 1 inches this ties for one of the shortest of the tunnels
459.3: Bunches Bald Tunnel, 255 feet (78 m)
461.2: Big Witch Tunnel, 348 feet (106 m)
465.6: Rattlesnake Mountain Tunnel, 395 feet (120 m)
466.3: Sherril Cove Tunnel, 550 feet (168 m)
TAIL OF THE DRAGON
TAIL OF THE DRAGON - FULL DAY
Deals Gap is a popular and internationally famous destination for motorcycle and sports car enthusiasts, as it is along a stretch of two-lane road known since 1981 as “The Dragon” and the "Tail of the Dragon". The 11-mile (18 km) stretch of the Dragon in Tennessee is said to have 318 curves. Some of the Dragon's sharpest curves have names like Copperhead Corner, Hog Pen Bend, Wheelie Hell, Shade Tree Corner, Mud Corner, Sunset Corner, Gravity Cavity, Beginner's End, and Brake or Bust Bend. The road earned its name from its curves being said to resemble a dragon. The stretch bears the street name "Tapoco Road" in North Carolina and "Calderwood Highway" in Tennessee and is signed entirely by US 129 (hidden SR 115).
Since part of the road is also the southwestern border of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, there is no development along the 11-mile (18 km) stretch, resulting in no danger of vehicles pulling out in front of those in the right of way. It mostly travels through a forested area and there are a few scenic overlooks and pull-off points along the route. The speed limit on the Dragon was 55 mph (89 km/h) before 1992; it was reduced to 30 mph (48 km/h) in 2005.
In December 2021, YouTuber CGP Grey drove a Tesla Model 3 equipped with the latest beta version of Tesla Autopilot through Deals Gap. The autopilot successfully navigated the route without human intervention. (I won’t be doing that…)
For more information, visit TailOfTheDragon.com
A company called Smoky Mountain Drives offers private and group tours.
We can do a guided tour through the most iconic driving roads America has to offer! The tour would be a little over 120 miles and would take approximately 3.5 with fuel stops and our introductory driver meeting. We include loaner FRS radios so we can communicate, since there is little to no phone signal throughout the drive. We know these area roads better than just about anyone and can easily alter our plans based on area conditions. For example, one of these iconic roads is undergoing repaving and another is down to one-lane in a section because of a sinkhole. This cost would be $150 for the drive and would include a guide with downloadable map and a printed map, along with the loaner radio. It would be $175 if you want the Dragon Rally decals included, which pop and look great for the photos. The Tail of the Dragon has photographers along the road, so you can purchase pictures of your drive.
Smoky Mountain Drives also organizes sports car rallies once a month. The cost is $20. A list of dates for this year is as follows:
March 19
April 23
June 18
July 16
August 12-14
September 17
October 15
November 5
There are also a list of dates to look forward to (or avoid). For April and May 2022…
April 8-9 Wookies in the Woods event
April 13-17 Pride at the Dragon at Fontana Village website
April 14-18 - 14th Annual Spring Dragon for Chrysler Crossfire cars. website
April 22-24 - BMW's MOA Getaway at Fontana. website
April 23 - Dragon Rally - For car enthusiasts in sports cars, exotic cars and luxury cars. smokymountaindrives.com
April 27-May 1 - 19th Annual Minis on the Dragon. website
April 27 - May 1 - Deal’s Gap Rotary Club. website
April 29 - May 1 - Spring Thunder in the Smokies in Maggie Valley website
May 5-8 - Spring FIAT on the Dragon in Townsend TN. event
May 5-8 - Sidecars in the Smokies at Ironhorse Motorcycle Resort. website
May 8-15 Electrics at the Dragon event
May 10-14 Sport Riders Unlimited event
May 12-15 Rock the Dragon at Fontana Village event
May 12 - She Rides Moto at Smoky Mountain HD event
May 14 - Dragon Rally - For car enthusiasts in sports cars, exotic cars and luxury cars. smokymountaindrives.com
May 14 - Elements on the Dragon. event
May 14-16 - Jaguar F-Types of North America at Tapoco Lodge. event
May 15 - Central Jersey Corvette Club website
May 24-28 WRX/STI Dragon Run
May 31-June 4 May 31st/June 4th - Slingshots in the Smokies in Maggie Valley website
A number of videos exist of Tesla drivers traversing the curves of Tail of the Dragon. I definitely won’t be the first. A few of my favorites:
WITH GRATITUDE…
This trip wouldn’t have been possible without the support and generosity of my family, closest friends, and some support from within the Tesla community. Thank you all so much for helping me complete ‘Stage I’ of this adventure. From my brother, Jeff, who bought me a Tesla Model 3, to my parents and Santa, who helped with the outfitting of it. To my friends and ‘family’, who have supported the idea of a ‘road trip’ from the very beginning. From those who met me on my route and took me out to eat, and to those I didn’t get to meet but who extended offers of meals, free overnight stays, and more - thank you, thank you, thank you!
Tesla Camping
Traditional ‘car camping’ is eschewed by campgrounds for obvious reasons: internal combustion engines carry with them everything from the annoyance of an all-night hum to the risks of carbon monoxide poisoning, illness, and death. #vanlife #vandeath
EV (electric vehicle) camping, on the other hand, turns your Tesla or other vehicle into an emissions-free, climate-controlled sleeping pod on wheels. Join us as we work to educate the camping public on the differences - and convince campgrounds that #evcamping is the future, one campground at a time…
The Gear
This ain’t no #vanlife over here - we’re traveling in a Tesla Model 3 with a limited amount of space. If it doesn’t fit in the trunk, the sub-trunk, or the frunk, it can’t come.
Check out the gear that makes #teslacamping as comfortable as possible. From tents that extend the vehicle’s climate control to portable toilets that extend campers’ ability to go off-the-grid, if we fit it in, we’ll showcase it here…