Log Hollow Falls | |
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Location | Blue Ridge Mountains, Transylvania County, North Carolina |
Coordinates | 35°19′25″N82°48′29″W / 35.323662°N 82.808118°W |
Type | Cascade |
Total height | 30 ft (9 m) |
Number of drops | 1 |
Log Hollow Falls (also known as Falls in Log Hollow, or the Falls on Log Hollow Creek) is a waterfall in the Pisgah National Forest, Transylvania County, North Carolina. [1] It's a steep cascade with a couple of sections of free falling water. Visitors can drive to within 1/2 miles of the falls, and access them via an old Forest Service logging road, making it an easy destination. Despite this, the falls aren't very well known and receives few visitors.
Macon County is a county located in the U.S. state of North Carolina. As of the 2020 census, the population was 37,014. Its county seat is Franklin.
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Triple Falls is a 125-foot waterfall located in the DuPont State Forest, southeast of Brevard, North Carolina.
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Douglas Falls are a 60-foot waterfall located in Buncombe County, North Carolina, United States. It is on a tributary of Waterfall Creek which flows into the Ivy River, and it is within the Big Ivy section of the Pisgah National Forest. The stream flows off the slope of Craggy Pinnacle, starting just below the Blue Ridge Parkway. It is surrounded by a forest of very large Eastern Hemlock trees, which are dead following attack by the Hemlock Wooly Adelgid. Visitors should be very careful when visiting this falls, as the dead Hemlocks will start to decay and fall within the next few years.
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