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    Beloved Blue Ridge Parkway resembles 1800s logging road after Helene, NC photos show

    By Mark Price,

    4 days ago

    The Blue Ridge Parkway is known as “America’s Favorite Drive” — particularly during fall — but that’s not the case in its current state.

    Hurricane Helene’s winds and inches of rain turned the internationally known tourist attraction into something akin to a logging road from centuries past, photos show.

    Landslides washed away travel lanes in some spots, but far more startling are stretches where decades-old trees were folded over the road like a carpet.

    Piles are forming like walls along the parkway as crews work to get the trees off the pavement.

    “The hurricane left tens of thousands of downed trees across the roadway and caused nearly three dozen rock and mud slides,” National Park Service officials told McClatchy News on Oct. 21.

    “The slides have occurred above and below the road and have also severely damaged or swept away the roadbed in numerous places.”

    In some cases, the hazards remain hidden, including “weakened” road, unstable slopes and trees poised to tumble over at any moment, officials said.

    The parkway extends 469 miles through Virginia and North Carolina, and it’s the N.C stretch that remains indefinitely closed.

    Closing the roadway is a major economic blow to Western North Carolina. The parkway attracted 16,757,635 visitors in 2023, and they pumped $1.39 billion into the neighboring economy and supported 19,159 jobs, officials say.

    So beloved is the site that rangers are catching people sneaking onto it, despite the dangers, officials said. As a result, rangers are issuing citations, officials warned.

    “These actions are necessary to prevent accidents and injuries to the public and our crews,” officials said.

    Here are some of the images shared by the NPS of damage and ongoing restoration work.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0RuvjE_0wFWrW6500
    In some areas of North Carolina, the pavement is scarcely visible due to the amount of storm debris, photos show. NPS photo
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=4VeoRa_0wFWrW6500
    The entirety of the North Carolina stretch of the Blue Ridge Parkway remains closed as crews work to make the pavement safe for travel, officials say. NPS photo
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1QB6GJ_0wFWrW6500
    Tropical Storm Helene sent decades-old trees tumbling onto the road in some areas. Crews are cutting them into pieces for removal, park officials say. NPS photo
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=416wfK_0wFWrW6500
    The pavement vanished just outside one of the three Ferrin Knob tunnels, creating a potentially deadly trap for motorists emerging from the tunnel. NPS photo
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=24SXs6_0wFWrW6500
    Both lanes of the scenic roadway washed down steep slopes in some parts of North Carolina, photos show. NPS photo
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3TuYvl_0wFWrW6500
    Nearly three dozen landslides were reported along the Blue Ridge Parkway during Tropical Storm Helene, park officials say. National Park Service photo

    I-40 closure has truckers risking perilous roads in Great Smoky Mountains, NC park says

    NC’s Christmas tree industry — the second biggest in US — may be impacted by Helene

    Helene flooding left dog stuck for days in top of tree, TN rescuers say. ‘A miracle’

    Related Search

    Hurricane HeleneBlue Ridge ParkwayNational Park ServiceGreat Smoky mountainsWeatherWestern North Carolina

    Comments / 24

    Add a Comment
    Angela Marion
    4d ago
    😢🙏
    Epictetus
    4d ago
    They should turn it into a Rails-To-Trails path for hikers and bicyclists
    View all comments

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