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My daughter who lives in Ashville, NC recently became the proud owner of a new dog named Maddie. Maddie was purchased as a small puppy but is now 40 pounds and still growing. Since we were due for visit, we drove up to visit her, meet Maddie and to take them both for a hike. Liz researched the area and found many hiking trails that welcomed dogs.

Hiking Little River - Triple Falls and High Falls

Our choice was a trail on Little River that offered several water falls and lakes. This trail located in the Dupont State Forest about 45 minutes south of Ashville near Cedar Mountain and the airport. The hike was only about 3.7 miles total in-and-out and not too strenuous. But the falls are spectacular and well worth making the trip.

Triple Falls

Starting at the first parking lot we crossed Staton Road and began going up the river. The first falls is named Triple Falls since there are three primary cascades. There were stairs that take you from the trail down to the base of the one of the cascades and offers lots of space for a picnic or relaxing in the sun.

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High Falls

Further up the river you come a spectacular view of High Falls, named for it’s 150 foot drop. At the top of the falls is a large covered bridge on Buck Forest Road. It’s only a short hike further up to reach the bridge and trail takes you around a ridge so the climb is gradual. But the best part of High Falls is hiking down to the foot of falls. Although the trail down does not have stairs, the descent is well worth your time. At the bottom you can get within a few feet of a large wall of water where the mist is just perfect for cooling you off. If you having a bathing suit on (unfortunately we did not), there is one of the best swimming spots I have seen. There was a large group there who were swimming and even sliding down the rocks into the pools at the bottom. Lots of flat rocks to picnic or relax on make this a spot where you will want to spend some time.

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Next we hiked up to the top of the falls to see the covered bridge. This huge structure was built to be the grand entrance into a new development but apparently the State won a legal battle and preserved the land as a protected park area.

We hiked back down the cars and by then the parking lot was nearly full. On the other side of Staton Road, you can see Hooker Falls which is only a short hike down the river. Hooker Falls feeds into the Cascade Lake which is a privately owned lake that offer camping, canoeing and more.

We plan to go back and spend a few hours swimming at High Falls, then make a longer hike up past the covered bridge to a couple of small lakes. We also want to visit Hooker Falls if we have time and energy left. We recommend this easy hike if you are ever near Ashville. The elevation is from around 2200 to 2600 feet.

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Photos of our Trip


Rafting the Chattooga River - Section IV

My wife Liz asked for one thing for her birthday this year…a rafting trip on the Chattooga River, Section IV with her family. We have rafted other, nearby rivers including the tame Nantahala and the more challenging Ocoee in the past. But the Chattooga River Section IV is where the movie Deliverance was filmed in 1972, a thriller film starring Jon Voight, Burt Reynolds, Ronny Cox, and Ned Beatty. The movie provided a new level of popularity for the river and especially for thrill-seeking whitewater rafters. Around this time, the river was restricted to commercial development and only three rafting companies in business there at the time were grand-fathered in and allowed to continue providing white-water rafting trips on river.

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The river follows the Georgia – South Carolina border and this section covers level IV and V rapids which in rafting lingo is code for difficult and dangerous (expect to go swimming)! But the other rivers were just too tame for my thrill seeking wife so I got my son Matt and daughter Lauren in the loop and plans were completed. I had recently rafted with my men’s discipleship group on the Nantahala earlier in the summer. Fortunately, the water in the Chattooga is significantly warmer than the Nantahala which gets its water from the bottom of a lake making it too cold for me. 

This was an all day event beginning at 8:00 am and going until about 3:30 pm that afternoon. We drove to the Wildwater campus in Long Creek, South Carolina where you board a bus for about a 20 minute drive to the river. Once there, we had to all pitch in and carry the rafts and equipment about 1/4 of a mile down to the river’s edge. This is because there is a protected barrier along the length of the river so you will not see any signs of civilization on this trip.

 

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We were one of few rafts that never flipped and we only lost my daughter once when we entered a rapid with no warning. Most of the other six rafts in our group were not so lucky with many folks getting to swim part of river without a raft under them. Fortunately, the water was warm and we stopped at several locations to jump off the rocks into the water, some spots being around 30 feet high. At one point we got out and each person who wanted to could crawl down into a water-filled hole about 6 feet deep and about 4 feet of water. We would then hold our breath, go under-water and swim through a hole in the rock about 2 feet in diameter and come out on the other side under a water-fall. This was an unusual experience and nearly everyone tried it.

 

Family Portrait in Front of Falls

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At one point, there is a beautiful waterfall from a stream that enters the river. We stopped there and had our photo taken in front of the falls. Other stops included more swimming, jumping off of high rocks into the river and a final stop for lunch on a sandy beach. At the end of the trip, the rapids end and the river enlarges into a broad, deep and sleepy flow. There, all the rafts are tied to a small motorized fishing boat that pulls them further down river into beautiful Tugalo Lake, formed by a damn just beyond our pull-out point.

This trip was truly a great one and am so pleased my wife chose this as her birthday treat. We all had a great time and now look forward to when we can do it again.


Christmas at Marco Island Florida

Christmas was early us this year as we worked around the best schedule for both Lauren and Matt to be there at the same time. It was a wonderful time and I wish it could have lasted longer. Lauren was able to visit for a few days before returning home to Memphis. She is in your last semester at school and so ready to get it over with. She has been looking at several prospective cities to call home when she start her new life as a working girl. Below is photo of the two of them.

Lauren and MattSince our family Christmas events all occurred before Christmas due to scheduling and Atlanta was headed for chilling temperatures in the teens, we decided to head south. We flew down to Fort Myers, Florida and Canary Transportation drove us down to the Marriott Resort hotel on Marco Island about 1 hour south. What a great decision that turned out to be. The weather was sunny with 80 degree temperatures the entire time. Only one morning was cloudy but turned  into blue skies by 10:00 am.


One of two large pools

The hotel is a large resort with two very large pools separated by one of two large room buildings. One of the pools is heated so we lived there, read, relaxed, talked and slept. We also maintain our exercise regime by working out in the fitness facility as well as a couple of walks. In the afternoon, we walked down to the shopping area on the bay (4+ miles round trip) to eat dinner and watch the sun set.

Of course you can't visit the Gulf and not walk on the beach (I think there is law against it) so we hiked in both directions. The beach was full of shells so unlike the Emerald Coastline at Destin (our beach home), you had to wear shoes unless you were a Marine or the Terminator looking for Sarah Conner. I was pretty sure I could see Key West from the south point.

down at the bay

A 2.5 mile walk got us to the bay area where we ate dinner next to the water.

 

 

 

 

beautiful white beaches

The beach was very wide with lots of shells. You could not walk bare-foot without feeling some pain.

 

 

 


Before walking to dinner

Getting ready to go out for dinner. The weather was great with temps around 70+ degrees every day.