Coming Home
From September/October 2008 Issue
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A Rush of Water
 

PHOTO ABOVE BY PAT AND CHUCK BLACKLEY
STORY BY MICHELLE SKEEN AND REBECCA TABOR ARMSTRONG

People of all ages are deciding to settle in the Blue Ridge. Here are three couples’ stories, and our annual selection of mountain communities.

Rediscovering a family getaway. Opening a bed and breakfast. Finding a niche for a family business. Three couples, from their 30s to their 60s, have one thing in common: moving to the Blue Ridge.

It’s not just older folks who are relocating to the Blue Ridge, but fresh faces from a more youthful generation.

While generation X-ers are significantly impacting the trends in today’s housing market, echo boomers – children of baby boomers born between 1979 and 1994 – are growing up and have quickly become rivals to baby boomers in numbers and spending power. In the next few years echo boomers will continue leaving home, and by the year 2011 will become the driving demand as first-time homebuyers while the older generation downsizes.

Read this complete article in the new Blue Ridge Country, now available at bookstores, on newsstands or by calling (800) 877-6026. Or try our Free Issue Offer.

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Table of Contents

Heading for High Country

Don West: Flash Point in History

Three Days in Charleston, WV

Urban Eats: Chattanooga and Knoxville

Moving to the Mountains: Relocation & Retirement

Log Home & Timberframe Living: A Shenandoah Retreat



BOOK

A Vegetable for a Laugh: Barter Theatre Celebrates Its 75th Anniversary

GUEST COLUMNIST

The Ballad Singer's Lesson: Appalshop's Art Menius

DEPARTMENTS
From The Editor
The Hike
Mountain Garden
Mountain Report
On The Mountainside

 

Our Cover:
A raccoon in Cades Cove, on the Tennessee side of Great Smoky Mountains National Park.

“I saw the raccoon go into the hollow log,” writes photographer Bill Lea. “Then once he realized I was not a threat, he emerged from the log and I was able to get a few photos.”


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