Hearing the name Graveyard Fields, one might think this would be an outstanding hike to do around Halloween, but as I'm in the area a few weeks prior to the holiday, I decided to check it out as I make my way up the Blue Ridge Parkway. From the minor amount of research I've done, the area was given it's name because of a natural event that occurred several hundred years ago. Apparently, a tremendous wind-blow came through the shallow valley and uprooted much of the spruce forest. Over time, the uprooted trees rotted leaving odd mounds that appeared much like graves protruding from the ground. A major fire in 1925 wiped the land clean of many of these mounds, but the name had already taken root and remains to this day.
There are a number of interconnecting trails here, as well as even more side trails made by over-enthusiastic and careless adventurers. It all makes for something of a maze, though in a place called the Graveyard Fields, this could be fun. I do my best to follow the trail to the the upper falls, but the numerous side trails, small stream crossings, and mud pits make it somewhat challenging. Though it hasn't rained here in days, the shade from the dense shrubbery seems to hold the moisture. I'm not exaggerating when I say I have to find a way around or through more than a dozen mud baths on my way to the upper falls.
From there, I turn back the way I came and upon reaching the fork to enter the Graveyard Fields, I bid farewell to some fellow hikers that were politely taking advantage of my navigation skills to find their way back to the parking lot. I point them in the right direction and head down the side trail.
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