To the Rescue

To the Rescue

Those of us who live in Flat Rock drive past Blue Ridge Fire and Rescue’s Station #2 almost daily. Sitting adjacent to Village Hall and atop “the Great Flat Rock” that gives the village its name, the old substation was renovated last year to add living quarters. As of February 2022, Station 2 is now the home away from home for the dedicated men and women who are committed to keeping area residents safe, healthy, and protected.

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Apples to Apples

Apples to Apples

From Granny Smiths to Red Delicious, autumn in Western North Carolina delivers a bounty of sweet varieties from Henderson County’s 150 apple orchards. Occupying more than 5,500 acres, the county’s apple production ranks as the seventh largest in America and brings visitors from near and far to the orchards for wholesome fun like apple picking, hayrides, baked goods, and corn mazes.

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Alley Oop in Flat Rock

Alley Oop in Flat Rock

The year 1933 was a very good year for dinosaurs. The movie, King Kong, was released and featured a giant ape captured on an uncharted island inhabited by long-lost dinosaurs. It was also the year of the Chicago World’s Fair which featured animatronic, roaring dinosaurs. The prehistoric creatures even found their way into newspapers around the country via a cartoon strip about a Stone Age caveman and his pet dinosaur, Dinny. The strip was called Alley Oop.

Improbably, that same caveman would later find a home in Flat Rock, NC.

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Rediscovering Carl

Rediscovering Carl

When John Quinley moved to Henderson County in 2006, it was a reunion of sorts. John grew up in Maywood, Illinois just a few blocks from where a young reporter named Carl Sandburg had lived for five years. Half a century later, John found himself once again living close to a Sandburg home. Destiny, one might argue, was calling the life-long educator to revive and retell the story of Carl Sandburg.

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A Brief History of The Episcopal Church of St. John in the Wilderness

A Brief History of The Episcopal Church of St. John in the Wilderness

For nearly two centuries the Episcopal Church of St. John in the Wilderness has rested on a wooded knoll in the Village of Flat Rock. What most people likely don’t know is that the building they see today sitting on the corner of Greenville Highway and Rutledge Road is actually the third place of worship to stand on that site.

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Art With an Expiration Date

Art With an Expiration Date

This Sunday is the final day of one of Flat Rock’s most gracious and beautiful events of the year. The Gallery at Flat Rock is hosting its 7th Annual Art in Bloom - a celebration of ephemeral beauty that pairs professional floral designers with fine artists. The resulting imaginative interpretations of juried artworks result in a spectacular exhibition of creative talent and natural beauty.

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Connie Backlund: Keeping the Barn Doors Open

Connie Backlund: Keeping the Barn Doors Open

In the summer of 1971, a young college student attended an evening presentation offered by the National Park Service at a campground in the Badlands of South Dakota. During that presentation, she realized that she wanted to be a Park Ranger … and a dream was born.

Twenty-three years later, that student would follow that dream all the way to the job as the Park Superintendent at the Carl Sandburg Home National Historic Site in Flat Rock North Carolina. It was a position that Connie Hudson Backlund would hold - and cherish - for the next 18 years.

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The Marked Tree Dream

The Marked Tree Dream

When Lance Hiatt and Tim Parks first decided to step away from their professional careers in architecture and luxury retail to pursue their dream of creating a vineyard and winery, it was a daunting proposition to admit. “It was almost embarrassing to tell people that we were going to start a winery in a vineyard,” Lance recalls with a laugh “I couldn't even say it.”

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Through Kate Thayer's Eyes

Through Kate Thayer's Eyes

When Flat Rock artist Kate Thayer thinks about her painting, she is always mindful of a favorite quote from Andrew Wyeth:

“I can’t work completely out of my imagination. I must put my foot in a bit of truth; and then I can fly free.” — Andrew Wyeth

For Kate, that foot in a bit of truth involves spending time in the solitude of the woods of western North Carolina. It is in those woods that she encounters the muse that inspires her captivating landscapes.

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Barnhouse Kitchen

Barnhouse Kitchen

As a very young child, Cole Lindsey was working in a commercial kitchen, helping his father at the Highland Lake Restaurant in Flat Rock. Although one might assume that a child would find this work boring and more punishment than opportunity, that was not the case for Cole. He loved being in his father’s kitchen and now, more than three decades later, Cole Lindsey is still happily ensconced in the kitchen.

Today, however, it is his own kitchen where he pursues his passion.

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Songbirds and Stray Dogs

Songbirds and Stray Dogs

Meagan Lucas’s debut novel, Songbirds & Stray Dogs, tells the story of a young woman named Jolene who arrives in Flat Rock as an outsider and struggles to find her place in her new home.

Although the heroine of the book has challenges and struggles her author has never experienced firsthand, Meagan Lucas, who grew up in Canada, certainly understands the feeling of trying to make a new home in the mountains of Western North Carolina.

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Digging into Flat Rock's History

Digging into Flat Rock's History

In 2020, Luke Hunter was working as property manager for Susie Rindal’s home in Flat Rock. As he helped clear scrub brush in the woods that surrounded her home, Luke noticed something about the contours of the land that evoked memories from his childhood days spent roaming the abandoned rice fields on his grandmother’s land just south of Charleston, SC.

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Born with a Paintbrush in Her Hand

Born with a Paintbrush in Her Hand

From the time she was born, Marty Whaley Adams had a foot in two very different worlds. The first was her Charleston home where she was immersed in a life of gracious creativity by a mother who was an accomplished painter, gardener, and author. The second was at her extended family’s summer home in Flat Rock where her grandmother’s advice to a young granddaughter was simple and direct. “Marty, if you want it, make it.”

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Behind the Scenes

Behind the Scenes

Reading the playbill for West Side Story at Friday night’s opening, I glance over a listing of the men and women who are the beating heart and soul of Flat Rock Playhouse. They are uniformly talented and dedicated to their craft. Together, they have built the iconic musical from the ground up. And, with few exceptions, they are virtually unknown by the audiences they so routinely thrill, amaze, make laugh, and move to tears.

This is their story …

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The Photograph

The Photograph

Paul Shoemaker handed his camera to his younger brother Peter and sat down on the lush summer grass next to Simone. Peter framed the shot per his brother’s instructions - with the couple offset to the right, Paul’s flourishing garden in the background, and the summer sun shining with approval on the faces of a young couple in love.

Peter pressed the shutter release … and time stood still …

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The Bee Man of Flat Rock

The Bee Man of Flat Rock

As a young boy growing up in northern Virginia, Will Garvey was drafted to help with his father’s hobby of beekeeping. “I didn’t like it,” he recalls. “I got stung a lot.” Now, nearly five decades later, Will is the Volunteer Beekeeper for The Park at Flat Rock and a vocal advocate for the many ways individuals can help care pollinators and for the natural world around us.

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