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In these modern times, there aren’t as many reasons to hang our stockings “by the chimney with care.” That is until Christmastime arrives, and then we all want the biggest, grandest stocking we can find to be filled by Santa on Christmas Eve. How did that even become a thing? And what are some ideas for stocking stuffers? We’re glad you asked. ...read more
Inspiration | Mast Family Favorites
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Jack Tales are one of Appalachia’s most beloved storytelling traditions. The oral folklore series recounts the antics of Jack, a clever young boy, who finds himself in countless predicaments.
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Adventure | Inspiration | Local Flavor
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The cities of Winston and Salem, North Carolina, merged in 1913. Winston, a growing tobacco and textile town, also served as Forsyth County’s seat of government. Salem had been the center of culture and commerce for the area’s large Moravian population since the 18th century. Festival of Lights in Tanglewood Park - photo above courtesy of Visit Winston-Salem and Forsyth County Parks & Recreation ...read more
At Home | Local Flavor | Travel
Winston-Salem
In the days after September 27, 2024, highway information signs were emblazoned with a message... Do Not Travel in Western North Carolina. That sounds ominous, but its message was not overstated. Because of the tireless work by state and federal employees, local folks, and thousands and thousands of volunteers, the mountains are OPEN – including two lanes of Interstate 40 – and we invite you to vacation... And volunteer! ...read more
Inspiration | Local Flavor | Travel
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... Our favorite foods! Food is universal because everybody’s got ta eat! And the last two months of the year are filled with more than their fair share of family meals, work gatherings, special outings to favorite restaurants, tins filled with homemade cookies and fudge, and the anticipation of food traditions handed down from generation to generation ...read more
At Home | Recipes
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Even before we bought the Mast General Store, we were taken by the beauty of Valle Crucis. We’ve heard people describe the drive out Broadstone Road as traveling through a time portal. In the 1970s, fields in the river bottoms would be filled with tobacco, cabbage, or high with hay to feed cattle that were grazing in the summer pasture. ...read more
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Mast Family Favorites | Inspiration | Adventure
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Zephyr-roughened and patinaed cliffs began to narrow all around. I watched for the indications of our journey’s end, read where we were in the encyclopedic rocks in my enfeebled way. Past the friable Tapeats Sandstone, fascinating Vishnu Schist was yards First time reactions differ. The Grand Canyon. One of the World’s Wonders. Stillness pervades my whole self.
The colors of the uneven mesas and the weathered cliffs range from desert umbers and burnt siennas, apricots, cadmiums, coppers, Mediterranean blues, turquoises, slates, conifer greens, amethysts, magentas, vermilions, pinks, garnets, sepias, saffrons, milks, French grays. Composite hues that exhilarate the imagination.
It is a vast, broken land. “What God has put asunder, let no man join”. This is a deep landscape with so much visual information the mind rebels, becomes suspicious and soon tires.
Early to bed. Tomorrow is THE DAY.
It was a pale dawnzerly glow that welcomed us at the South Kaibab trailhead. Just light enough to see_ a little. The Canyon yawned and stretched a greeting. Long-time friend Nansi Lee, my son Matt and I accompanied by Nansi’s brother and park employee, David strove to be down at Ooo- Ahh Point at sunrise. The Kaibab trail is seven miles of steps of varying height. Stark landscape rounded off by harshness encompassed us.
From the Ooo-Ahh elevation on down though, birdsong, intriguing plants, flowers and evidence of turbulent history revealed the affluence of the Canyon. Matt said he did not expect so much life. Rich.
Temperatures were moderate for a desert. Fathoms below the Colorado voiced its sanguine chant. The trail went down through layers and colors of rock: laminated layers and heathered colorsand yards of stone glowing black. Zoraster Granite was our destination; the Floor. Where is that Floor?
Steps quickened as the 440 foot in length, black metal, Kaibab Bridge swung in to view. Cross the Colorado. Hurry. There is a tide of mules coming (mule trains have the right-of-way). They come with a rush, too.
Almost to camp, now. We said adios to Dave.
We set up camp on the leaf-shadows of cottonwood trees by the bank of Bright Angel Creek. I stuck my feet in the 47 degree water. Bright Angel was a several yards wide, mighty, raucous raceway. Loud!
We saw tunnels of grasses which smelled of desert thyme, crushed coriander and…Arabia; saw cactus and scorpions, too. Delicious family-style supper and conversation with other hikers at Phantom Ranch kitchen; then I waved East to you all. Goodnight.
Pack at 4am; breakfast at 5am; hit the trail. Bad choice of words. Two miles up (out of the nine total) at Pipe Creek_ trauma. I stepped into the water. My foot slipped on a rock. Tilt to the left. Clatter, confusion, trekking poles, pack, ground (rushing up). Crack! Broken nose. Get up. Cross creek. Sit on rock. Blood dripped and fused to the Canyon dirt Let Eagle Scout son render first aid. An inch back and the rock would have contacted my temple instead. It’s just a nose. Not a life. Up.
Seven more miles to go, now. Canyon miles are not the same as normal miles. Switchbacks and stairs, straight-a-ways and steeps. As the two experienced hikers, my son and I stuck Nansi Lee in the middle, switched leads often, set landmark goals, measured breaks, maintained cheerful conversation, tried to regulate breaths, pushed with the trekking poles…CLIMB.
Breathe this rare air. Gaze. Eavesdrop on the wilderness. Record it in memory’s ledger... You won’t soon return. Seven hours down to the floor. Fourteen hours up to the rim.
We returned to Charlotte, said our faretheewells to our friends and headed for home.
I told my pets all about the trip. Things I haven’t told you. How we saw Condors, flowers that bloom when the moon beams, free-roaming elk, Joshua trees, bobcat tracks, 5”of desert snow in May, lava fields, Saturn’s rings and a rattlesnake. But this much I’ll tell you all:
I’m waving again, like I did our first night on the floor of the Canyon, waving wistfully to the West. Could a Canyon remember? Only if it’s Grand enough.
– Jeanie, Mast Store Home Office
For more of our Mast Family National Park Service adventures and recommendations, click HERE
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