Black Mountain

The greening of the mountains from Blue Ridge Rd, Black Mountain, North Carolina.

Sunday, March 31, 2024

The last of March, a holy day for many

 Happy Easter to all who celebrate it.

This does not include the many people on this earth of non-Christian beliefs. For them, there are other springtime celebrations.

And an early Easter on the last day of March must have some meaning. Did you know the Christians still choose the date for Easter each year based on the first full moon after the vernal equinox. Very pagan, I'd say. 

And I'm rolling in joy with all the blossoms blooming around me.! Trees are pollinating (achoo!) and cars are suffering.

I begin with two side-shots...looking away from the banks of Flat Creek. Uphill behind the bamboo, stands a shed, which I believe once belonged to some potters who have since moved. Fun memory.

Walking down into a more flat area, we looked across the creek to see steps leading down to it. There were no buildings on that property, but it made us pause to think that at one time someone wanted to have access to the creek regularly...living perhaps in a house that is now gone. Creek water is nice to drink coming down from the mountains...though now days there might be fertilizer coming into it from a few homes upstream.


As Flat Creek passes by Ole's Guacamole Restaurant, there's a tree with a label.


There are many other treasured trees from a map that I saw at Lake Tomahawk in the bulletin board. I want to find more.
The Bistro restaurant is to the right (on State St,) while the welcome center is just beyond it.


I was stopped at the light in the center of town, and gazing around, noticed this fire hydrant had been decked out with a scarf, probably lost at some time by a visitor, who won't know where it is!

Not sure how this got in here! Makes sense...



The building in the back is Four Sisters Bakery - which has lots of goodies!

This is the Red Rocker Inn, a B&B, which has a dining room behind the many windows to the right.

Another town has a UU church with this outdoor gathering circle of benches.

Have fun, whether dying eggs and hiding them and having little ones find them, or feasting with loved ones! All our rituals do bring us together to enjoy life.

Today is:
Easter Sunday, 
National Prom Day, 
Crayon Day, 
Tater Day

Today's quote:

Novelist and poet Ben Okri, born in Minna, Nigeria (1959), lived mainly in England until he was seven years old, when his family moved back to Nigeria. Okri said: "Literature doesn't have a country. Shakespeare is an African writer. ... The characters of Turgenev are ghetto dwellers. Dickens' characters are Nigerians. ... Literature may come from a specific place, but it always lives in its own unique kingdom."




14 comments:

  1. Nice walk, I love all the trees! Happy Easter!
    March seemed to fly by!
    Have a great day and happy new week!

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    1. Well, comments are disappearing today...may have something to do with a certain bunny thinking wrongly that comments are like eggs. They aren't in my spam folder though! Going to have to look behind the flowering plants to see if replies have been hidden there!

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  2. ...Mike Luckovich is one of the best.

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    1. Second try to reply...I've guessed already that the Easter Bunny is responsible. He's paid the blogger rabbit (if there is one) to hide replies today under bushes.

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  3. well, that was a lovely day spent with you! Thank you for the look around- beautiful! I would stay (forever) at the red rocker inn , ideal!
    Loving the care taken to label treasured trees and to keep hydrants protected from the chill in the air. Springtime of course is pagan. Christians just borrowed all of the cool stuff to brand their religion in a more palatable way. A smoother transition, shall we say. Whatever, Springtime is fabulous! Thank you for the walk around!

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    1. Hi Linda Sue, we shall see if this reply stays on the blog...I've been having trouble so far today. Perhaps some bunnies, or those choco-hallics, or egg collecting kids with baskets with fake green grass. Thanks for your comment, and it's always wonderful to share pagan rites with the Christian minority...which thinks it's a majority. Delusions abound.

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  4. It is lovely to see the greens and spring unfolding.

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    1. Thanks for dropping by and commenting, Jenn. I did enjoy your post this morning also! Spring is finally here. Good riddance to winter!

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  5. As a non-believer, I see Easter (Eostre) as the joyous resurrection of the Earth and its blooming things. And it makes me very happy!

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  6. Looks a lot more like spring in your town than it does here. And it's still cold here too.

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So glad to have your comments...whatever they may be. I'm one who likes to reply sometime or another, so others will see that; or you might happen back sometime and see what conversation might have started.