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BOONE FORK TRAIL   at Julian Price Park Julian Price Park is a wonderful  4200 acre park on the Blue Ridge Parkway (MP-297) near Blowing Roc...

Julian Price Park - Boone Fork Julian Price Park  -   Boone Fork

Julian Price Park - Boone Fork

Julian Price Park - Boone Fork


BOONE FORK TRAIL  at Julian Price Park




Julian Price Park is a wonderful  4200 acre park on the Blue Ridge Parkway (MP-297) near Blowing Rock, North Carolina.  In my youth it was one of my favorite destinations as I traveled with my parents in their Airstream Travel Trailer.  The park has a great campground that adjoins an 47 acre lake.  While I had played in every nook and cranny of the campground, and had taken hikes around the lake, today was the first day I hiked the Boone Fork Trail.

The Trail is a five mile loop which originates in the Julian Price Park picnic area.  It is not named after Dan'l Boone but it is name for his uncle and generally follows the Bee Tree Creek and the Fork River.   We decided to hike the loop clockwise and found it to be a good choice.  Someone reviewing the trail said that hiking the loop in this manner made the hike seem like a symphony....it begins slowly and ends with a crescendo....this hike is one of the most enjoyable hikes we have experienced. 

The first mile of the hike takes you parallel to the Parkway and through the Price Park campground and as we emerged from the forest I was surprised to see "wild turkeys".  Then upon closer inspection we found them to be the cardboard joke of some campers who were enjoying the reaction of hikers.  This is exactly the type of thing that my dad and his best friend, Buddy Morrow would have done. The trip through the campground brought back a lot of memories...the smell of campfire....the familiar campsites....and the old stone water fountains reminded me of many good times. 

 See if you think these deer are real, as we found them near the "turkeys"?



Turns out the deer were very real and were so used to people that we got some nice photos of them as they were feeding in the woods near the trail.  The  trail leaves the campground and joins the Mountain to Sea Trail as it intersects with the Tanawha Trail.  The orange blazed  Boone Fork Trail is easy to follow and at the 1.5 mile mark emerges in to a wonderful mountain meadow.








Even though it was past peak blossom time, we found the meadow covered with wildflowers and butterflies....and this one pink mountain laurel.  From the meadow you descend into a mountain forest and soon hear the gentle roar of a Bee Tree Creek.  The trail is covered with a canopy of rhododendron and large oaks interspersed with silver birch....and birds that provide some of nature's best background music.







We soon came upon a trail cairn and is my custom I added my stones with my prayers of thanksgiving....after all we were worshiping in one of God's greatest cathedrals today!

"But ask the animals, or the birds of the air, and they will tell you; or speak to the earth, or let the fish of the sea inform you. Which of these does not know that the hand of the Lord has done this?"  Job 12:7-9




 



The trail runs with Bee Tree Creek as it meanders down the mountain toward Fork River.  Along the way we got to play in the creek, ford a few streams and see some nice small waterfalls.



Some of the best mountain creek scenes caused the FBWG to pause time and again to pull out the camera and try to capture the majesty of what we were seeing....and as good as these photographs are...it is just not close to as good as the real thing.