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Birding, Trolls, and Revolutionary Roots: A Weekend in Asheville
Published 2 months, 1 week ago
Description
Good morning, this is your Asheville Local Frequency for Sunday, February 15.
What a vibrant weekend in the mountains, folks, as our community buzzes with nature's wonders, history's echoes, and a sweet spirit of giving. Yesterday at the North Carolina Arboretum, bird enthusiasts swooped in for Bird Day, joining guided walks, live wildlife demos, and a lively bird art market from local creators, all priming us for the Great Backyard Bird Count wrapping up today grab your binoculars, step outside for just fifteen minutes, and help track migration patterns that reveal how our feathered friends are faring amid changing seasons[2]. But that arboretum magic came with a twist heavy crowds chasing the final days of the whimsical Trolls A Field Study exhibit, with its twelve towering wooden trolls hidden along wooded trails, caused epic gridlock on Brevard Road Saturday, backing up NC 191 for hours and forcing a temporary closure for safety[1]. If youre heading there before it ends on the seventeenth, check updates and brace for lines its that popular for good reason, turning family outings into immersive forest adventures.
Shifting gears to heartfelt local impact, Mast General Store wrapped its Be a Sweetheart campaign today, where every pound of candy bought means a dollar to MANNA FoodBank, stretching funds to feed hungry families across western North Carolina theyve donated over fifty-three thousand dollars in five years, proving small treats can combat food insecurity in real, tangible ways[4].
Meanwhile, excitement is building for our regions starring role in Americas 250th birthday celebrations Buncombe250, powered by a ten thousand dollar state grant, is going grassroots with the Beyond the Liberty Tree initiative, planting commemorative trees for conservation and history, while libraries and museums like the Thomas Wolfe Memorial host exhibits, leading to July Fourth parades, a Great American Picnic on the fifth, and events spilling into Hendersonville, Brevard, and beyond[3]. Its a soulful nod to our Cherokee roots, revolutionary past, and inclusive future, reminding us these mountains arent just scenery theyre where stories of resilience take root.
And for a glimpse into that legacy, dive into Tombstone Tales spotlighting Franklin Silas Terry in Riverside Cemetery, the Connecticut innovator who helped light America through early electric lamps and General Electric, philanthropist to war orphans, and his trailblazing wife Lillian, first woman to drive to Mount Mitchells summit their mausoleum stands as a timeless tribute to ingenuity meeting mountain life[5].
Today, grab those bird counts, support a cause, or ponder our shared heritage Asheville, youre alive with possibility.
This has been Asheville Local Frequency. Well see you tomorrow with more local updates.
For more http://www.quietplease.ai
Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
What a vibrant weekend in the mountains, folks, as our community buzzes with nature's wonders, history's echoes, and a sweet spirit of giving. Yesterday at the North Carolina Arboretum, bird enthusiasts swooped in for Bird Day, joining guided walks, live wildlife demos, and a lively bird art market from local creators, all priming us for the Great Backyard Bird Count wrapping up today grab your binoculars, step outside for just fifteen minutes, and help track migration patterns that reveal how our feathered friends are faring amid changing seasons[2]. But that arboretum magic came with a twist heavy crowds chasing the final days of the whimsical Trolls A Field Study exhibit, with its twelve towering wooden trolls hidden along wooded trails, caused epic gridlock on Brevard Road Saturday, backing up NC 191 for hours and forcing a temporary closure for safety[1]. If youre heading there before it ends on the seventeenth, check updates and brace for lines its that popular for good reason, turning family outings into immersive forest adventures.
Shifting gears to heartfelt local impact, Mast General Store wrapped its Be a Sweetheart campaign today, where every pound of candy bought means a dollar to MANNA FoodBank, stretching funds to feed hungry families across western North Carolina theyve donated over fifty-three thousand dollars in five years, proving small treats can combat food insecurity in real, tangible ways[4].
Meanwhile, excitement is building for our regions starring role in Americas 250th birthday celebrations Buncombe250, powered by a ten thousand dollar state grant, is going grassroots with the Beyond the Liberty Tree initiative, planting commemorative trees for conservation and history, while libraries and museums like the Thomas Wolfe Memorial host exhibits, leading to July Fourth parades, a Great American Picnic on the fifth, and events spilling into Hendersonville, Brevard, and beyond[3]. Its a soulful nod to our Cherokee roots, revolutionary past, and inclusive future, reminding us these mountains arent just scenery theyre where stories of resilience take root.
And for a glimpse into that legacy, dive into Tombstone Tales spotlighting Franklin Silas Terry in Riverside Cemetery, the Connecticut innovator who helped light America through early electric lamps and General Electric, philanthropist to war orphans, and his trailblazing wife Lillian, first woman to drive to Mount Mitchells summit their mausoleum stands as a timeless tribute to ingenuity meeting mountain life[5].
Today, grab those bird counts, support a cause, or ponder our shared heritage Asheville, youre alive with possibility.
This has been Asheville Local Frequency. Well see you tomorrow with more local updates.
For more http://www.quietplease.ai
Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI