Updated on December 25, 2023
Day 2 of 2023 Independence Day Trip, South Linville Gorge
Second day of my 2023 Independence Day trip to North Carolina. Today I hiked a trail to Shortoff Mountain, located on the southern part of Linville Gorge, before making my way to Asheville while checking out Mt Mitchell, the highest mountain in eastern US.
My plan of the day was to reach Asheville from Morganton, NC. In the morning, I would check out a popular trail with gorgeous views (Shortoff Mountain), located in the southern part of Linville Gorge. In the afternoon, I will check out Blue Ridge Parkway between Buck Creek Gap and Asheville, between which was Mount Mitchell. At an elevation of 2037m/6684ft, it is the highest mountain in eastern United States. I skipped this section of the Blue Ridge Parkway last October, so this would be my proper return.
Trail to Shortoff Mountain
On AllTrails, this was a 7.2km out-and-back trail with 366m of elevation gain. Most of the elevation gain was during the first half where the trail ascended onto the eastern rim of Linville Gorge. After that, the trail passed a few overlooks with view of Linville Gorge. The trail sat at the southern gateway into Linville Gorge, with front-row views of many of the iconically-shaped mountains in the gorge, such as Table Rock Mountain and The Chimneys.
The trailhead was called “Wolf Pit Trailhead” on Google Maps. The last 2.4 miles of road towards the trailhead was unpaved. The first 1.4 miles of gravel road was in decent shape, and then it got worse. The last 300m had a high density of potholes that required extreme caution for low-clearance vehicles (think, Toyota Camry).
The actual trailhead was very limited in parking spaces. Instead, I parked 150m away in a pullout along the road. After some warmup, I started my hike at 10:30am.
Here’s GPS tracking:
Click here to display photos of the trail.
The start of the hike wasn’t the most enjoyable. I was bothered by some bugs at the parking lot, in addition to some light drizzle. Luckily, the bugs mysteriously disappeared once I was in the woods, and it turned out the majority of precipitation was further north, I was only experiencing its perimeters.
Nonetheless, the humidity made the initial uphill hike both physically demanding and water draining. And with the trail deep in the woods, there was no relief (in the form of wind) until the first overlook, about 2km from trailhead.
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The views from this overlook were mostly to the southwest. From there on, a series of overlooks dotted the trail, each with (slightly) different views of Linville Gorge. It’s also a good thing that most of the elevation gain was behind me, thus I could properly enjoy what this trail had to offer.
The next few overlooks were towards the west of the trail, still, near the southern end of Linville Gorge.
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In my opinion, the overlook with the best views was the one where the trail made a 90-degree turn towards the east. This one was located a short distance off the trail. From this overlook, the heart of Linville Gorge, its narrowest part with most unique rock formations (Table Rock Mountain, The Chimneys) were front and center, and the hills on its rims almost symmetric along Linville River. Among all the overlooks, this was the one where I looked deepest into the gorge, and the gorge into me.
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Below is a video from that overlook. Wind and light drizzle can be felt, but they were no match for the stellar views.
10 seconds, 2160p30fps, 10Mbps for both H264/H265 for a total size of 11MB.
After that, the trail briefly left the rim of the gorge where it felt more like a typical walk in the woods. This part of the trail was occasionally overgrown. This continued for about 1km before view of Linville Gorge popped back into sight.
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The first overlook after the trail emerged from the bushes was the end of “Shortoff Mountain Trail” as marked on AllTrails. Despite the name, the top of “Shortoff Mountain” was a short distance off the trail, in the bushes.
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Despite that, the physical trail continued as “Mountains-to-Sea-Trail” deep into Linville Gorge. I didn’t pre-mark this spot on my navigation app, as a result, I continued on for about 450m before reaching another overlook, which I made the destination of my hike.
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I spent 30 minutes resting at this final overlook, enjoying the both the wind and the solitude. Beyond the end of trail on AllTrails, I enjoyed this rest undisturbed. The impressive size of the gorge in front created a sense of seclusion despite only for a brief moment.
After that, I started to trace my way back. The sun broke out from the clouds during my descent, dispersing the last anxiety for rain in my mind. I spent a fair amount of time appreciating the views at the overlooks, so in the end I was back at my car at 2:30pm, 4 hours after I started.
After a brief rest by Lake James, I started driving towards Mt Mitchell, stopping at the town of Marion for a brief lunch. There wasn’t cellular coverage by Lake James, so I drove based on a rough direction, which ended up being a small detour.
Marion was the town where I spent the final night of my trip to Blue Ridge Parkway last October, so I was somewhat familiar with it, together with the twisty mountain road up Buck Creek Gap onto Blue Ridge Parkway.
Along Blue Ridge Parkway
Once onto Blue Ridge Parkway, I could easily tell that it had been visited by rain just moments ago. This was more evident when I spotted a rainbow from Laurel Knob Overlook.
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After that, it’s Mount Mitchell, the highest mountain in eastern US. Despite its height, the mountain was very visitor-friendly, with a paved road to a giant parking lot near its summit. The actual summit was 300m away along a paved walkway.
When I first arrived at Mt Mitchell’s parking lot at 5pm, the summit was in thick clouds (with occasional drizzle), and there was no view whatsoever. Not willing to give up, I waited in my car and checked out the summit again around 6pm. This time the clouds were higher, allowing me some views of the surrounding mountains. Unfortunately, with the summit observation deck barely above the surrounding trees, views were obstructed to begin with.
Click here to display photos from the summit of Mount Mitchell.
Below is a video that I took on top of Mount Mitchell, for a sense of the not-too-cooperative weather.
20 seconds, 2160p30fps, 10Mbps for both H264/H265 for a total size of 26MB.
Leaving Mount Mitchell, I stopped at two more overlooks (Glassmine Falls / Graybeard Mountain), before embarking on a final short hike of the day, Craggy Pinnacle.
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Craggy Pinnacle Hike
To the summit of Craggy Pinnacle, it was a 1.2km out-and-back with 70m elevation gain. From the summit one would enjoy 360-degree view of the surrounding mountains. The AllTrails map included a “Lower Overlook” which added some distance.
By the time I reached the summit of Craggy Pinnacle, the sun was completely out among broken clouds, so the best views were towards the east, of the ridgeline that extended south from Mount Mitchell, and Craggy Dome in the foreground. Later I found out Craggy Dome was higher in elevation than Craggy Pinnacle, despite the name “pinnacle” sounds more accomplished.
Click here to display photos from the summit of Craggy Pinnacle.
After Craggy Pinnacle, I made two more stops along Blue Ridge Parkway, before turning onto to NC-694 as a shortcut towards Asheville.
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It’s 8:30pm by the time I checked into a hotel for the next two nights, Sleep Inn Asheville, just in time to watch the sunset lighting up the distant horizon. It’s hard for me to believe this hotel only cost me 156USD for two nights, including taxes.
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Day 2 of 2023 Independence Day Trip, South Linville Gorge by Huang's Site is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.