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Clyde Holler is your North Georgia Mountain Realtor. A member of the Coldwell Banker High Country Realty team, his expert advice has assisted buyers and sellers throughout the Blue Ridge area, including Fannin, Gilmer & Union counties, as well as parts of Tennessee & North Carolina. Whatever you're looking for, be it a cabin, a family home, a vacation home on the lake, or a property to be used for rental income, Clyde is well suited to meet your specific Blue Ridge real estate needs.

The books listed in my reference library will better prepare you for the life you're about to embark upon after investing in North Georgia Mountain real estate.

Many of these books are available from Bill Alexander at the Mountain Scholar bookstore in the old downtown in Blue Ridge, 679 A E. Main Street, 706.632.1993

General

Lonstreet Highroad Guide to the Georgia Mountains by the Georgia Conservancy, with Fred Brown and Nell Jones. Atlanta, Georgia, Longstreet Press, 1998.

This is the one book that everyone who is interested in the mountains should have in their cabin at all times. Natural history, hikes, car trips, maps, and sources. This was formerly titled, The Georgia Conservancy Guide to the North Georgia Mountains.

The New Georgia Guide, Athens, Georgia: University of Georgia Press, 1996.

This is the University of Georgia’s rewrite and revision of the old WPA guide to Georgia, with completely new material. Day trips, points of interest, in-depth essays. John Inscoe’s essay is well worth reading for those seeking to understand the economic and social history of our area. Steve Gurr is a good tour guide for car trips.

Brown’s Guide to the Georgia Outdoors, edited by John W. English. Atlanta: Cherokee Publishing Company, 1986.

Selections from the now-defunct Georgia Magazine. Still very good for Biking, Hiking, and Canoeing in North Georgia.

Georgia Handbook, by Kip Stann. Chico, California: Moon Publications, 1995.

More of a typical tourist guide, with restaurant recommendations and points of interest. It’s well worth having and consulting.

Nature

Wildflowers of Tennessee, Jack B. Carman, Tullahoma, Highland Rim Press.

This book is organized by family, not flower color, but it has a good photo for every plant. It is the most comprehensive guide available, and it covers north Georgia. Highly recommended.

Great Smoky Mountains Wildflowers, by Carlos C. Campbell, William F. Hutson, and Aaron J. Sharp. Knoxville, University of Tennessee Press, 1962.

Organized by color, this is probably the best known guide to the flowering plants of our area, with photos of every plant.

Native Shrubs and Woody Vines of the Southeast, by Leonard E. Foote and Samuel B. Jones, Jr. Portland, Oregon: Timber Press, 1989.

This is scholarly, but well illustrated. This is the one for landscaping with native shrubs.

Trees of the Southeastern United States, by Wilbur H. Duncan and Marion B. Duncan. Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1988.

Scholarly, and well illustrated. If you can’t find it in this one, either it doesn’t exist, or you need to call the newspapers.

A Field Guide to Southern Mushrooms, by Nancy Smith Weber and Alexander H. Smith. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1985.

Very well illustrated. If you find any morels hereabouts, please call me collect.

Hiking

The Hiking Trails of North Georgia, by Tim Homans. Atlanta: Peachtree Publishers, 1981.
Hiking Trails of the Joyce Kilmer-Slickrock and Citico Creek Wilderness Areas, by Tim Homans. Atlanta: Peachtree Publishers, 1990.
Hiking Trails of the Southern Nantahala Wilderness, Ellicott Rock Wilderness, and Chatooga National Wild and Scenic River, by Tim Homans. Atlanta: Peachtree Publishers, 2002.

Tim Homan’s guides are the best, hands down. He’s walked them all with a surveyor’s wheel to get exact distances.

Georgia Walks, by Ren and Helen Davis. Atlanta, Peachtree Publishers, 2001.

Good walks, discovery hikes, and runs, including historic sites, battlefields, and towns.

Tennessee Hiking Guide, edited by Robert S. Brandt. Sierra Club, Tennessee Chapter. Knoxville: University of Knoxville Press, 1982.

Slim and basic, but still useful.

Fishing

Trout Fishing in North Georgia, by Jimmy Jacobs. Atlanta: Peachtree Publishers, 1993.

A comprehensive guide, with good discussions of specific streams.

A Fly Fisherman’s Blue Ridge, by Christopher Camuto. New York, Henry Holt, 1990.

Not the town of Blue Ridge, but the Eastern Blue Ridge (mountains). Philosophical and practical.

Canoeing

Northern Georgia Canoeing, by Bob Sehlinger and Don Otey. Hillsborough, North Carolina: Menasha Ridge Press, 1980.

Covers the best streams. Very helpful because it locates river gages and gives minimum readings for canoeability. They also have a guide to south Georgia. See also Brown’s Guide to Georgia (above).

Mountain Cooking Traditions

Smokehouse Ham, Spoon Bread, and Scuppernong Wine: The Folklore and Art of Southern Appalachian Cooking, by Joseph E. Dabney. Nashville: Cumberland House, 1998.

The title says it all. A good read, with many, many interesting recipes and comments by the old mountain cooks. For instance, if you don’t know how to cook a cooter (snapping turtle), this one will tell you how. Also a great bibliography.

Side Orders: Small Helpings of Southern Cooking and Culture, by John Egerton. Atlanta: Peachtree Publishers, 1990.

This has become something of a classic.

Northeast Georgia Cuisine: A Gourmet Food Guide to the Southern Appalachian Mountains, by Doc Bill. Gainesville: Georgia Design & Graphics (770.718.0538).

Very useful guide to local ingredient sources. Also, some new takes on classic recipes and ways to use local ingredients. (I found this one at the John C. Campbell Folk School gift shop.)

The Foxfire Book of Appalachian Cookery, edited by Linda Garland Page. New York: Gramercy Books, 1984.

Part of the Foxfire project.

The Flavor of Home: A Southern Appalachian Family Remembers, by Earlene Rather Odell. Johnson City, Tennessee: The Overmountain Press, 2000.

Recipes don’t impress me much, but interesting observations.

Automatic, Y’all: Weaver D’s Guide to the Soul, by Dexter Weaver. Athens, Hill Street Press, 1999.

Weaver D was of course the inspiration for R.E.M.’s “Automatic for the People.” In addition to a whole lot of uplift from the irrepressible Mr. Weaver, there’s some darn good recipes for southern soul food. If you haven’t been to his restaurant in Athens, you need to go.

Local History

In Touch with the Past: A Guide to Historic Homes and Places in Fannin County, GA and Polk County, Tennessee. Blue Ridge, Georgia: Kathy Simpson, POB 1222, Blue Ridge, Georgia, 1982.

Among other things, fascinating discussion of the construction and function of the flume that carries water to Ocoee No. 2, down past the Olympic Whitewater venue.

Facets of Fannin, edited by Ethelene Jones and Dale Dyer.

Lots of family and business histories, this much sought-after classic is now back in print. Order from Fannin County Heritage Foundation, 411 W. First Street, Blue Ridge, Georgia, 30613, 706.258.2645.

Maps

By far the most helpful map is the forest service’s Chattahoochee National Forest, Georgia because it has the forest service road numbers. It covers our entire area. This is the one I carry when I go into the field. Get it from REI or the Forest Service.

A Note on Sources: REI is a good source of maps and hiking books. The gift shop at the John C. Campbell Folk School (see Day Trips) is good for cooking and mountain crafts. The U.S. Forest Service office (near the Ingles shopping center on the opposite side of the four lane in Blue Ridge) is also a good source of books and maps.

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Living in the North Georgia Mountains is a bit different than living in Atlanta or another suburb. Clyde fills you in on the unique information that will make buying and residing in your Blue Ridge, Georgia home, cabin , or lakefront property a singular success. Clyde's monthly column lets you know what's happening, not only in Blue Ridge real estate, but also lets you know what's happening in and around Blue Ridge and the North Georgia Mountains. View Clyde Holler's featured Blue Ridge, GA and Blue Ridge Mountain real estate listings...cabins, lake homes, wooded and lake acreage and residential homes.