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  • Tubing

    Tubing in Cherokee Go with the float. If you enjoy drifting over rippling, clear water through a lush canopy of trees, tubing in Cherokee awaits. Nothing beats the thrill of rapids tickling your toes on a hot summer afternoon. Cherokee offers several tubing opportunities that send you twirling down the Tuckasegee and the Oconaluftee rivers,…

  • Waterfalls

    Waterfalls in Cherokee They make relaxation tapes that sound like our waterfalls. Little wonder. All you need is the lullaby of falling waters from the river boulders above to fill you with a vast sense of peace. It’s true; there is nothing quite like the powerful drug of a waterfall to put everything in its…

  • Outdoor Adventure

    Outdoor Adventure Revel in nature, Cherokee style. Most of us don’t even know we’ve lost it—our innate connection to the earth. The Cherokee visualize nature as inclusive of all things: animals, plants and people—all of equal importance—to ensure balance and harmony. Doesn’t that sound refreshing? Put your shades on. It’s time for you to experience…

  • Oconaluftee Indian Village

    Oconaluftee Indian Village Cherokee history isn’t just the past.  AT Oconaluftee Indian Village, it’s alive, well, and amazing. Step back in time to the 18th century and immerse yourself in the vibrant culture of the Cherokee people nestled within the picturesque North Carolina mountains. The Oconaluftee Indian Village invites you to embark on a journey unlike…

  • Sequoyah National Golf Course

    Sequoyah National Golf Club On every hole, something historic awaits. Your perfect day begins here Relax, unwind, and get that perfect hole in one, all here at the Sequoyah National Golf Club. Sequoyah National Golf Club impressively boasts a Robert Trent Jones II design and jaw-dropping views from every tee, green, and fairway (even some…

  • Tattoos: A Language Beyond Communal Bounds

    Before the development of the Cherokee written language, tattoos were used to identify one another in historic societies, and were especially prevalent among warriors, who had to earn their marks. We talked to Mike Crowe, one of the Atsila Anotasgi Cultural Specialists at the Museum of the Cherokee Indian, to find out more about traditional tattoos and practices of the Eastern Band of Cherokee People