place

Shining Rock

Landmarks in North CarolinaMountains of Haywood County, North CarolinaMountains of North CarolinaProtected areas of Haywood County, North CarolinaReligious places of the Indigenous peoples of North America
Southern Sixers
Shining Rock from Haywood Jackson Overlook, October 2016
Shining Rock from Haywood Jackson Overlook, October 2016

Shining Rock is a mountain in western North Carolina. The mountain is one of the Great Balsam Mountains which are a part of the Blue Ridge Mountains within the Appalachian Mountains. It is the 38th tallest mountain in the eastern United States.Shining Rock is in the Shining Rock Wilderness near milepost 420 of the Blue Ridge Parkway. The Art Loeb Trail passes just below the summit. Shining Rock is named for the large white quartzite rock outcropping near its summit.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Shining Rock (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Shining Rock
Old Butt Knob Trail,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Shining RockContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 35.368055555556 ° E -82.862222222222 °
placeShow on map

Address

Old Butt Knob Trail

North Carolina, United States
mapOpen on Google Maps

Shining Rock from Haywood Jackson Overlook, October 2016
Shining Rock from Haywood Jackson Overlook, October 2016
Share experience

Nearby Places

Graveyard Fields
Graveyard Fields

Graveyard Fields is the name of a flat mountain valley in the Blue Ridge Mountains of western North Carolina. It is located in the Great Balsam Mountains. The valley, itself over 5,000 feet in elevation, is surrounded by mountains exceeding 6,000 feet in elevation, such as Black Balsam Knob, Tennent Mountain, and Sam Knob. These high peaks form the source of the Yellowstone Prong of the Pigeon River, which flows through Graveyard Fields valley. Yellowstone Prong goes over 3 waterfalls in the valley: Upper Falls, Second Falls, and Yellowstone Falls. Graveyard Fields is a very popular hiking destination, accessible from the Blue Ridge Parkway. The valley's name may originate from a time when a great windstorm fell hundreds of spruce and fir trees on its slopes. These moss-covered stumps resembled graves. Another theory says that extensive logging during the early 1900s left stumps behind. Mosses and lichens grew on the stumps, resembling an overgrown graveyard. Later, during the time when this area was logged, major forest fires swept through the area. These fires devastated the entire valley, and heated the soil enough to sterilize it. Even now, plants have difficulty growing in the fire-ravaged soils, although some trees, shrubs, and grasslands are slowly beginning to thrive. Today, some forest has started to regrow, with species such as Red Spruce and Catawba Rhododendron, however much of the valley is still open and only covered in shrubs.