Camp and Its Neighbourhood.
Mondamin is situated to the south of Hendersonville in the mountains of Western North Carolina. To the north of Hendersonville you get into the Blue Ridge Mountains (now a park area) with their capital, Asheville. To the west there is Pisgah National Forest, further west – the Great Smoky Mountains. All of these are parts of the Appalachians. The highest peak in the Eastern US, Mount Mitchell (6684 feet/2037 metres above sea level) is to the north-east of Asheville. There are numerous lakes, rivers and waterfalls in the area. The neighbouring Transylvania County is even called the Land of Waterfalls.
If you go to the east-south-east, you’ll soon find yourself in the Piedmont, a lower area of North Carolina Heartland. At some point you can see how the western mountains give up to the central highlands, and further east to the lowlands. While you are in the camp, you are surrounded by mountains on all sides: not snowy peaks, but green giants sloping down to the lake. The land of the blue waters and green mountains, brown naked slopes and white-pink-red magnolias and other trees – that is where Mondamin is.
Tuxedo stretches along Route 25 (the Old 25 serves as the street, New 25 goes behind the town). Legally speaking, Tuxedo is not a town, as it has no City Council, but just a dwelling in Henderson County. Tuxedo was originally called Lakewood but later renamed to avoid confusion with another Lakewood. In the past there was a textile factory there, which is now out of business and is replaced by some recycling facility. There is a gas station, privately owned, with a store, and a library nearby; another gas station almost on the other side of the street, an ice-cream shop, an antique shop (you will find those in plenty in any American town, it sometimes seems that people buy only antiques), several churches, a school, and a few other buildings of public interest. There is also a public beach, close to the camp, in the corner of another harbour.
If you ride a car, you will get from Mondamin to Hendersonville in 10-20 minutes, to Asheville in 30-50 minutes, to Greenville-Spartanburg International Airport in South Carolina in 40-50 minutes. There is also a regional airport in Asheville, and an airfield in Hendersonville (now a museum).
Between Tuxedo and Hendersonville lies an area called Flat Rock. It is built around a tremendous outcrop of granite which is said to have been the site of Cherokee gatherings. Old Indian grave sites are known. A great deal of this big rock has been blasted away and used for material for highways. At present the rock is visible for about 150 by 100 feet (46 by 30.5 metres), but it continues just under the soil for some distance.
First large summer estates were built there some 150 years ago. So many of the families came from Charleston area, SC, that Flat Rock was called “The Little Charleston of the Mountains”. The entire district of Flat Rock is included into the National Register of Historic Places and is home to many attractions: Flat Rock Playhouse (the State Theatre of NC and considered one of the best ten theatres in the country), Carl Sandburg Home (National Historic Site; the house was built around 1838, there is also a working farm), St. John in the Wilderness Episcopal Church (built in 1833) and others.
Three roads lead from Tuxedo to Hendersonville: US 25 (also called Greenville Highway, through Zirconia and Flat Rock), US 176 (also called Spartanburg Highway, through East Flat Rock), and Interstate 26. The last two do not pass through Tuxedo but are within easy reach and are used by the locals: if you need to get to downtown Hendersonville you can take the first two, if you are going to Wal-Mart or to Asheville you opt for the Interstate. Greenville Highway winds through Flat Rock; it is narrow and the most picturesque of the three roads: you pass through the wooded slopes, the apple orchards of Zirconia past a post office, then several golf courses in Kenmure with rolling green lawns and blazing flowerbeds.
Posted by andyash

Posted by andyash 

Posted by andyash 

