McAfee Knob
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McAfee Knob is a geological feature with an elevation of 3,197 feet (974 m) above sea level, located on Catawba Mountain in Catawba, Virginia, roughly 15 miles northwest of Downtown Roanoke. It is named for a Scottish-Irish 18th-century settler. Considered to be among the most iconic points along the Appalachian Trail, the vista offers panoramic views of the Catawba Valley, 1,600 feet (490 m) below.
- A "knob" is a rounded hill, or mountain, usually found in older mountain ranges.
- McAfee Knob is named after James McAfee (Mac-a-fee), a Scottish-Irish immigrant who settled in the Catawba Valley in the late 1730s.[1]
- McAfee Knob is the tallest mountain in the area surrounding Catawba, at an elevation of nearly 3,200 feet (980 m).[2]
- Much of Catawba Mountain was open farmland in the mid-1900s.[2]
- McAfee Knob's ridge line is covered in a pine forest.
- McAfee Knob has been labeled the most photographed point along the Appalachian Trail.[3]
Appalachian Trail
McAfee Knob is located on the Appalachian Trail, a four-mile hike northbound from the intersection with VA-311 in Catawba, Virginia or a 16-mile (26 km) hike southbound from US-220 in Troutville, Virginia. The Appalachian Trail is a 2,190-mile (3,520 km) hiking trail following the Appalachian Mountains between Georgia and Maine, and is a unit of the National Park Service. The McAfee Knob hiking trail is along the Appalachian Trail and is managed by the Appalachian Trail Conservancy. This is a part of over 120 miles (190 km) of hiking trails in the Roanoke region, which are maintained by the volunteers of the Roanoke Appalachian Trail Club (RATC).[4]
Popular culture
- McAfee Knob is known as the most photographed point of the Appalachian Trail.[3]
- McAfee Knob was prominently featured in the 2015 major motion picture A Walk in the Woods, starring Robert Redford and Nick Nolte.[3] McAfee Knob appears on the movie's poster.[2] The movie is based on travel writer Bill Bryson's 1998 autobiographical book, A Walk in the Woods: Rediscovering America on the Appalachian Trail.[5] Unfortunately, viewers who are familiar with or have hiked the trail are aware that the McAfee Knob scene does not match up with the chronological order of a traditional northbound hike when taking into consideration their stated locations beforehand.
- McAfee Knob appeared in the October 2015 issue of the international, award-winning UK magazine, Wanderlust.[6] The author of the article traveled the trail with Bill Bryson, stopping at his favorite locations, including McAfee Knob.[7]