Blowing
Rock is an enchanted place where folklore and history abound. The winds blow continuously
here because the walls of the Johns River Gorge form a flume through which the Northwest
wind sweeps with such force that it will return light objects thrown over the edge.
The Legend of The
Blowing Rock
It is said that a Chickasaw
chieftain, fearful of a white man's admiration for his lovely daughter, journeyed far from
the plains to bring her to The Blowing Rock and the care of a squaw mother. One day the
maiden, daydreaming on the craggy cliff, spied a Cherokee brave wandering in the
wilderness far below and playfully shot an arrow in his direction. The flirtation worked
because soon he appeared before her wigwam, courted her with songs of his land and they
became lovers, wandering the pathless woodlands and along crystal streams.
One day a strange reddening
of the sky brought the brave and the maiden to The Blowing Rock. To him it was a sign of
trouble commanding his return to his tribe in the plains. With the maiden's entreaties not
to leave her, the brave, torn by conflict of duty and heart, leaped from The Rock into the
wilderness far below. The grief-stricken maiden prayed daily to the Great Spirit until,
one evening with a reddening sky, a gust of wind blew her lover back onto The Rock and
into her arms. From that day a perpetual wind has blown up onto The Rock from the valley
below. For people of other days, at least, this was explanation enough for The Blowing
Rock's mysterious winds causing even the snow to fall upside down.
Legend of Blowing Rock taken
from the Blowing Rock brochure.
Open: Daily March through November
Weekends through winter months weather permitting.
Information Call: 1(828)295-7111 |