Scoop There it is: A 3-Day Hendersonville Ice Cream Trail Itinerary

Scoop There it is: A 3-Day Hendersonville Ice Cream Trail Itinerary

Scoop There it is: A 3-Day Hendersonville Ice Cream Trail Itinerary

The sweetest trail in North Carolina churns out tasty adventures on a daily basis. Chill-seekers, both young and old, follow the Hendersonville Ice Cream Trail to more than a dozen spots for spoon-licking scoops of their favorite flavors.

Start Here: Get Your Ice Cream Trail Pass

Get your Ice Cream Trail Pass. This is the first step of your Hendersonville Ice Cream Trail journey and your ticket to exploring the sweetest spots across the region.

As you make your way from downtown Hendersonville to Flat Rock, Fletcher, and beyond, the pass guides your stops, tracks your progress, and turns every scoop into part of the experience. It’s the easiest way to dive into the trail, discover local favorites, and officially kick off a weekend built around exploring Hendersonville one scoop at a time.

Day 1: Downtown Hendersonville + Ecusta Trail

Morning: Start in Historic Downtown Hendersonville

Begin with breakfast at Mike’s On Main, a local favorite known for hearty, classic breakfast plates and a relaxed downtown atmosphere. It’s the perfect way to fuel up before a full day of exploring the Ice Cream Trail.

After breakfast, take a short walk down Main Street and make your first sweet stop at Kilwins.

Handcrafted fudge, fresh waffle cones, and rich ice cream flavors set the tone for the weekend ahead. It’s the “first scoop” moment of the trip and an easy introduction to what the Ice Cream Trail is all about.

From there, continue exploring downtown’s walkable district filled with shops, galleries, and cafés before heading into the rest of the day.

Mid-day: Ecusta Trail Outdoor Break

Step just outside downtown to experience the Ecusta Trail, a developing rail trail that connects Hendersonville with surrounding communities.

This is the perfect mid-day reset where visitors can walk or bike through shaded stretches of the trail (bike rentals are available at Venture Ecusta) take in mountain views and quiet green space, and experience how the town naturally connects to its surrounding landscape.

It’s an easy, low-effort way to balance out the sweetness of the day.

Along the way, Whit’s Frozen Custard is right on the trail and a must-stop for a creamy break, featuring a rotating flavor of the day and a weekly flavor that keeps each visit a little different and worth coming back for.

Afternoon: Dinner + Live Music

For a livelier afternoon option, spend time at Packa’s Place, also located right along the trail, where visitors can enjoy live music, food trucks, and a relaxed outdoor atmosphere that makes it easy to linger a little longer.

Craving a late-night sweet treat? Head to sweetFrog Hendersonville on Main Street for a build-your-own frozen yogurt creation with endless toppings—an easy, flexible stop to end the night on a sweet note.

DAY 2: Flat Rock

Morning: Historic Flat Rock Exploration

Start the day in Flat Rock, along Rainbow Road, a quiet and scenic stretch that sets the tone for a slower, more local morning in the mountains.

Begin with breakfast at Flat Rock Village Bakery, a cozy neighborhood favorite known for fresh pastries, breakfast sandwiches, and locally baked goods. An easy, relaxed start before heading into the day’s exploring.

From there, continue on to the Carl Sandburg Home, the former home of Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Carl Sandburg.

Here, visitors can walk scenic trails, explore the historic home and working goat farm, and enjoy sweeping views of the Blue Ridge foothills.

Midday: Lunch and a Sweet Treat

Head straight to Dairi-O for a classic Hendersonville lunch stop where the Ice Cream Trail briefly turns into a “you might as well do both” situation. Grab a burger, fries, or a hot dog. Then follow it up the only responsible way: with a milkshake or ice cream cone.

Or, if you’re in the mood for something a little lighter and fruit-forward, head over to El Rio Ice Cream & Paleteria for fresh paletas and creamy ice cream in flavors like mango, coconut, and other tropical favorites.

Afternoon: McConnell Farms

Spend the afternoon at McConnell Farms, a working farm offering wide-open countryside views, seasonal picking, and a relaxed, scenic atmosphere that feels rooted in local agriculture.

A must-try stop here is the ice cream sampler, which lets visitors taste multiple small-batch, seasonal flavors in one go. Often featuring farm-inspired options like blackberry, peach, fig, and honey depending on what’s fresh. It’s an easy, all-in-one way to experience the Ice Cream Trail in a true farm setting.

Evening: Slow Dinner in Town or Flat Rock

Wrap up the day with a relaxed dinner in either Flat Rock or Hendersonville. This is a good night to slow down after a full day of exploring culture, farms, and multiple ice cream stops.

DAY 3: Fletcher

Morning: Fletcher Start

Start the morning in Fletcher with breakfast at All is Well Cafe, a cozy local café known for its relaxed atmosphere and simple, feel-good breakfast options. An easy and unhurried way to start the day.

From there, head over to Bill Moore Community Park for a laid-back stretch of the morning. With open green space, walking paths, and a quiet local feel, it’s the perfect spot to slow down, take a stroll, or just enjoy some fresh mountain air before the next stop.

Mid-day: Classic Local Favorites

On your way out of Fletcher, make a final stop at Baabal’s Ice Cream Shoppe for a laid-back mid-day treat and one last scoop on this part of the Ice Cream Trail. Be sure to visit Roy at Baabal’s for a friendly local welcome and a true small-town send-off. He’s part of what makes this stop feel personal, easygoing, and worth slowing down for.

Your Trail, Your Way

This is just a taste of what the Hendersonville Ice Cream Trail has to offer. You don’t have to visit every stop to enjoy the experience, part of the fun is mixing and matching your favorites, discovering new spots, and making the trail your own.

Have a bigger sweet tooth? See all of the locations here and keep exploring your way through every scoop, swirl, and sundae waiting across the region.

jeter-mountain-orchard-coffee-house

Quirky Hendersonville: Interesting and Often-Overlooked Attractions

Quirky Hendersonville: Interesting and Often-Overlooked Attractions

Quirky Hendersonville: Interesting and Often-Overlooked Attractions

There are many well-known ways to enjoy Hendersonville, NC. But for those fascinated by quirky, off-the-beaten-path attractions, here’s a list of interesting places and things that make this mountain town unique.

main-street-coffee

Thomas Wolfe’s “Look Homeward, Angel” Statue

One of the greatest novelists in American history was born and raised about 20 miles from Hendersonville in Asheville. As a boy, Thomas Wolfe was fascinated by the Italian marble statue of an angel displayed at his father’s funeral monuments shop.

Years later, Wolfe penned a detailed description of the angel in a short story titled “An Angel on the Porch,” which formed the basis for his famous novel, “Look Homeward, Angel,” in 1929.

The statue Wolfe admired as a boy was sold by his father in 1906 to a family in Hendersonville. It has stood ever since in Hendersonville’s Oakdale Cemetery, marking the grave of Margaret Bates Johnson, wife of the late Dr. H.F. Johnson, a minister and former president of Whitworth College in Brookhaven, Mississippi.

Wolfe’s father actually sold several marble angel monuments to families in the North Carolina mountains, and for many years after the book was published, debate raged as to whether the Hendersonville statue was indeed the inspiration for his novel. Literary historians researched the statues, which each had different characteristics, and determined in 1949 that the muse for the book was the Hendersonville statue.

Oakdale Cemetery is located adjacent to U.S. 64 West, just a short distance from downtown. A wrought iron fence protects the statue, a few dozen yards from a state historical marker located on the side of the highway.

main-street-coffee2

Woodmen of the World Memorial Water Fountain

An oft-overlooked water fountain, carved from white granite to resemble a tree stump, has stood near the corner of Second Avenue and Main Street since 1947.

The beautiful fountain serves as a memorial to Joseph Cullen Root, a Massachusetts native who founded the Modern Woodmen of America in Lyons, Iowa, in 1883, and also founded the Woodmen of the World Life Insurance Society in Omaha, Nebraska, in 1890.

So why in the heck was a memorial to Root, known as one of America’s most prolific founders of fraternal societies, erected 34 years after his death in the Blue Ridge Mountain town of Hendersonville? As it turns out, it marks the approximate location of his untimely death.

Root traveled to Hendersonville from Omaha in December 1913 for a gathering of thousands of the Woodmen of the World in which 200 new members were to be initiated.

Unfortunately, Root fell sick with a bronchial infection during his travels and was committed to a bed at the St. John’s Hotel on the corner of Second Avenue and Main Street, where he died on Christmas Eve 1913.

Thirty-four years later, members of the local camps of the Woodmen of the World dedicated the fountain in his memory. Inscribed on the fountain are the words “dum tacet clamat,” Latin for “though silent, he speaks.”

The Woodmen of the World Life Insurance Society was established by Root to make life insurance available to everyone, particularly families of hourly workers. The company, much like the water fountain dedicated to its founder, is still operational today.

A train passes Hendersonville at the Apple Valley Model Railroad Museum

Local Depot has One of Nation’s Largest Model Railroads

At its peak, the historic Hendersonville Trail Depot (circa 1902) served as a stop for six passenger trains a day, boarding and discharging passengers from such distant cities as Cincinnati, Ohio, and Charleston, South Carolina. Unfortunately, passenger service ended in 1968.

The depot sat empty for more than 20 years, until the Apple Valley Model Railroad Club received permission from the City of Hendersonville to move into the depot in 1992.

Not only did the club likely save the depot from a wrecking ball, but it also filled the depot with one of the most impressive model railroad layouts in America.

Just like their heroes who, bit by bit, laid railroad tracks from the Atlantic to the Pacific, the members of the Apple Valley club continually added more and more track inside the depot until they achieved a replica of the entire railroad system in the mountains of Western North Carolina, complete with depots in places like Hickory, Marion, Asheville, Saluda and yes, Hendersonville.

The depot is open, with free admission, every Wednesday and Saturday and has become a popular spot for rail fans of all ages.

“There are a lot of great layouts around the country, and this is one of the larger ones,” says Larry Morton, former president of the Apple Valley Model Railroad Club. “The public is very complimentary. They tell us this is one of the best model railroad clubs they’ve seen anywhere in the country, and I seriously believe we are in the top 10 percent.”

Billy and Benny McCrary, World's Largest Twins

Together, They Held the Record as the World’s Largest Twins

Identical twins Benny and Billy McCrary, born in Hendersonville in 1946, contracted measles at age 4, which damaged their pituitary glands and contributed to excessive weight gain. By age 10, then weighed 200 pounds each and eventually reached a combined weight of 1,598 pounds.

A photographer for Life magazine snapped a photo of them riding minibikes one year during the N.C. Apple Festival parade in Hendersonville. This was a common occurrence as they often rode their minibikes locally in parades and other events. Someone with the Guiness Book of World Records saw the photo and that’s how they became world record holders as the heaviest twins.

During the peak of their fame in 1970s, the McCrary twins rode their Honda minibikes from New York to Los Angeles to appear on the “Tonight Show” with Johnny Carson. They became pro wrestlers, using the name the McGuire Twins, wrestling in the U.S. and overseas.

Billy died in 1979 during a minibike stunt at Niagara Falls. Benny continued with other wrestling partners, including Andre the Giant, before easing into a life focused on golf and evangelism before passing away in 2001.

Their fame continues after their deaths, including scenes in the popular TV animation shows “The Simpsons” and “Family Guy.”

They lived their entire lives in Hendersonville and are remembered with a three-ton, 13-foot-wide memorial at Crab Creek Baptist Church Cemetery that is believed to be the world’s largest gravestone, featuring two minibikes and “THE WORLD’S LARGEST TWINS” in capital letters.

A national magazine included the twins’ gravesite in a 2005 article titled, “Hit the Road,” which featured 25 unusual tourist destinations across the United States.

hidden-trails-coffeehouse

Ukrainian Mosaic on Hendersonville’s Main Street

An interesting tie to Ukraine can be found at 318 North Main Street, at least for those willing to look up.

High on the façade of the Hands On! Children’s Museum building is an intricate and colorful tile mosaic. Titled “Nature in North Carolina,” the 18-foot square mosaic was created in 1993 by Ukrainian artists Vasily and Julia Polevoy, who fled Vasily’s homeland after being displaced in Ukraine by the Chernobyl nuclear plant meltdown and suffering years of Soviet persecution for their religious and anti-Communist beliefs.

The Polevoys, who lived in Hendersonville for quite some time before relocating to South Carolina, hand-placed 250,000 small glass tiles to create the beautiful design, which depicts mountains, rivers and other aspects of nature.

The glass in the tiles is known as “smalti,” a traditional mosaic material ordered in 116 colors for the project. At the time, the building was known as Rosdon Mall and the artwork was commissioned by the building’s owners, Rose and Don Gladieux.

The building eventually became home to the Hands On! Children’s Museum, Black Bear Coffee Co. and High Country Style.

There was a brief uproar in 2018 when the museum released a rendering of its major expansion plans, and that rendering showed the Hands On! logo in place of the mosaic. However, locals were quickly relieved to learn the logo was placed in the rendering as an oversight and the mosaic was always intended to remain on the façade.

boy watching model trains

In addition to these interesting and quirky attractions, Hendersonville visitors find our town to be a wonderful melting pot of culture, arts, history, outdoor adventure and craft beverages. Click below to learn about all the fun things to do.

Brightening the Season: Exploring Enchanting Holiday Light Displays

Brightening the Season: Exploring Enchanting Holiday Light Displays

Brightening the Season: Exploring Enchanting Holiday Light Displays

As the holiday season descends upon us, make Hendersonville your homebase to see the many festive sights the Western North Carolina region has to offer.

Christmas Time is Here, Happiness and Cheer

Each December, Hendersonville turns into a winter wonderland, and a festive spot to start your exploration of the region. From the serene landscapes of the North Carolina Arboretum to the festive ambiance of downtown tree lighting ceremonies, each location offers a unique and enchanting experience for visitors of all ages.

Hendersonville offers a wide variety of lodging options at all price points, so you are sure to find something that will fit your travel personality and your wallet.

Keep reading to discover the best spits in and around Hendersonville to see festive light displays.

inside of biltmore house at christmas

1) Downtown Tree Lighting Ceremony: November 24

The heart of any festive community celebration is the traditional downtown tree lighting ceremony. The air is filled with holiday cheer, and the glow of the lights casts a warm and inviting ambiance. Enjoy Christmas songs, hot drinks and delicious treats from Black Bear Coffee, shopping and a countdown as Santa arrives to light up Main Street. Festivities kick off at 5pm, which includes live music, free visits with Santa and free carriage rides, in addition to the tree lighting itself.

If you miss the event itself, the tree and all of downtown Hendersonville remains festively lit all December long!

 

Christmas Tree Lighting Ceremony Hendersonville NC

2) Henderson County Light Trail: December 1-26

This year, homes and businesses across the county are festively decorated, and welcome visitors to view their holiday displays. Follow the trail for a fun evening with your loved ones, driving to view the best lights the area has to offer. There is no competition here, just a bunch of people who love this time of year! This self-guided tour is free, a suggested route will be available here on December 1st

3) The North Carolina Arboretum: November 17 - December 31

Nestled in the heart of the Blue Ridge Mountains, the North Carolina Arboretum provides a picturesque setting for a holiday lights extravaganza. As daylight fades, the gardens come alive with a breathtaking display of lights, illuminating the trees, trails, and sculptures. Visitors can stroll through the Winter Lights exhibit, marveling at the synchronized light displays that create a whimsical atmosphere. The Arboretum’s commitment to sustainability is evident, as many of the lights are energy-efficient LEDs, adding an eco-friendly touch to the festivities.

mother and daughter walking through christmas light display

4) Marked Tree Vineyard: November 25 – December 31

The month-long event kicks off each year on the day after Thanksgiving with the lighting of OTTO, rumored to Western NC’s largest Oak Tree! Otto was dressed in 2022 with over 6K lights! As you drive up to the tasting room, where Otto is located, you will be treated to a modern lit holiday landscape, where more than 50,000 twinkling lights adorn the property! Daily during December, guests can drive or hike around the property enjoying lighted vignettes around the landscape – in the meadow, the pines, the winery shed, Otto, and the Ghost House — and pick up a few bottles of their award-winning wine to gift your friends, family and self.

5) Shadrack's Light Show: November 17 - January 1

For a truly immersive experience, Shadrack’s Christmas Wonderland offers a one-of-a-kind drive-through light show. Located in Tryon, NC this synchronized spectacle dazzles spectators with an impressive array of lights choreographed to festive music. From dancing snowflakes to animated Christmas characters, Shadrack’s Light Show is a sensory delight, enchanting audiences of all ages. The convenience of enjoying this display from the warmth of your car adds an extra layer of comfort to the holiday experience.

Shadrack's Christmas Wonderland

6) The Biltmore Estate: November 3 - January 7

What trip to Western NC would be complete without a stop at America’s Largest Home, the Biltmore Estate? Be transported to a truly magical day as you take in the majestic Norway spruce inside the home, countless Christmas trees, thousands of lights, and miles of ribbons and garland that adorn the 8,000 acres. In the evenings, take in the soft glow of candles, fireplaces, and twinkle lights. 

Family – Weekend Itinerary

Family – Weekend Itinerary

Family – Weekend Itinerary

For families looking to spend a weekend in Hendersonville, you are sure to find something to suit every family member’s tastes. You will enjoy everything from ice cream to burgers, hiking to model trains, and picking apples to a show at the Flat Rock Playhouse.

Friday Night

Kick off your weekend with dinner at The Flat Rock Wood Room in the quaint Village of Flat Rock. This local favorite is known for its award-winning barbecue and wood-fired pizzas. This cozy spot offers a laid-back atmosphere perfect for families, with a menu featuring slow-smoked brisket, fall-off-the-bone ribs, and handcrafted pizzas straight from the wood oven.

Walk to an evening show at the Flat Rock Playhouse. The State Theatre of North Carolina specializes in musicals, comedies and shows for young audiences. The professional theater merges top talent with an approachable, laid-back vibe for a bit of Broadway in the Blue Ridge Mountains.

Allow everyone in the family to unplug at Kanuga, a sprawling campus that includes public accommodations, a Conference and Retreat Center, bike park, children’s summer camp and more. Located on 1,400 acres, the resort encourages outdoor exploration and quality time with loved ones. Book a hotel-style room in the main inn, or choose from multi-bedroom historic cottages and guesthouses with various amenities, such as fireplaces, screened porches and kitchens.

Saturday

If you’re in Hendersonville from August through October, spend Saturday morning at an apple orchard. Set in the Blue Ridge Mountains, Hendersonville leads Western North Carolina in apple production, and many orchards invite visitors to pick their own fruit straight from the trees. Beyond apple picking, enjoy hayrides, apple cannons, corn mazes, pumpkin patches and farm bakeries serving up fresh apple treats. If apples aren’t in season, explore Dupont State Recreational Forest, where miles of hiking and biking trails lead to breathtaking waterfalls, lush forests and scenic mountain views.

 

Spend the afternoon in the Seventh Avenue Historic District. The Apple Valley Model Railroad Club is located in the former train depot. The museum has a working HO-scale model train that depicts Western North Carolina circa the 1950s. A larger, all-weather G-scale display runs outside with plants and water features.

 

On Saturday evening, take a short drive to Auction House Food Hall in Fletcher, a lively gathering spot with live music, lawn games and a variety of local food vendors. Whether you’re in the mood for barbecue, burgers or international flavors, there’s something for everyone to enjoy. After dinner, stop by Baabals Ice Cream Shoppe & Family Grill, a charming retro-inspired spot and a featured stop on Hendersonville Ice Cream Trail. Serving hand-dipped ice cream, sundaes and milkshakes, it’s the perfect way to end the night on a sweet note

 

Sunday Morning

After checking out on Sunday, take one final stroll around the Kanuga campus, pausing to meditate by the lake or walk the labyrinth before heading to Holmes Educational State Forest, which opens at 11 a.m. on Sundays. Explore the Talking Trees Trail, a half-mile, easy loop that winds through a lush cove forest, home to a diverse array of plants and wildlife. Along the way, stop at seven “talking trees,” which share fun facts about their unique characteristics and uses. After your walk, enjoy a scenic picnic surrounded by nature.

 

 

 

 

Great Spots for Pumpkin Picking

Great Spots for Pumpkin Picking

Great Spots for Pumpkin Picking

Hendersonville is known for its apples and wine grapes, but truly, just about any fruit or vegetable grows well in this climate. Each fall, you can find your ideal pumpkin-picking-spot right at one of Hendersonville’s farms.

Pumpkin Spice & Everything Nice

Summer’s warmth has given way to fall, and the mornings now bring a crisp, smooth, coolness to the air, fog often clinging to the mountain peaks, adding a surreal feeling to the already breathtaking landscape. As you break out your flannel shirts and fall boots, and begin day dreaming about the picture-perfect fall day, there is no better time to start immersing yourself in the quintessential fall farm activities.

In Hendersonville, we are known for apples, wine grapes and mountain cabbages, all of which ripen this time of year, but we are also lucky enough to be a great spot to grow pumpkins. And because of this, there are lot of wonderful places to make memories and pick pumpkins.

Keep reading below for 3 great locations in Hendersonville to purchase or pick your own pumpkins, as well as a list of places where you can find locally grown pre-picked pumpkins.

Families enjoy picking pumpkins at Nix Pumpkin Patch in Hendersonville, NC

1) The Nix Pumpkin Patch

The Nix Pumpkin Patch is a one-of-a-kind farm stand that offers U-pick pumpkins and winter squashes, as well as u-pick flowers and sells a wide variety of local produce, local meats and dairy, handcrafted gift items, coffee, baked goods and so much more in the farm store. You will also find a great selection of pre-picked pumpkins in all shapes, sizes and colors.

2) Linda's Plants & Shrubs

Just outside the greenhouse doors, you will find a sprawling pumpkin patch, with pumpkins of all shapes and sizes waiting to be picked. Be sure to stop inside for the indoor hay maze, apples, seasonal décor, fall plants and house plants.

3) Grandad's Apples N Such

One of the area’s best-known apple orchards, Grandad’s Apples N Such offers wide variety of fall activities, including pick your own pumpkins. Like all of the apple orchards in Hendersonville, this orchard is family-owned and operated, and when you are here, you will feel like part of the family. Be sure to check out the corn maze and the bakery, where you just have to try the apple pie a-la-mode.
Grandad's Apples and Such

Great farms & Markets for pre-picked Pumpkins

Many of the apple orchards and farms in Hendersonville grow pumpkins and bring them to a central area for you to choose your favorite. Local farmers grow different varieties, in all shapes and sizes, so you are sure to find something you love.

 

Grandad's Apples and Such

Family – One Day Itinerary

Family – One Day Itinerary

Family – One Day Itinerary

For families looking to spend a day in Hendersonville, downtown is the best bet. The pedestrian-friendly Main Street lined with shops, galleries, restaurants and attractions is ideal for parking the car and walking to a variety of destinations.

Morning

Start the day at Hands On! Children’s Museum. The custom kids’ play place encourages children to use their imaginations as they explore 20 different interactive exhibits, each mimicking a real Hendersonville business or landmark. Kids can try out occupations, such as a dentist, doctor, firefighter, apple grower or ice cream shop worker.

Other features include a water table, mini stage and an indoor mountain to climb. Don’t miss the lifelike honeybee mural on the backside of the building, which is part of a worldwide initiative to raise awareness about pollinators.

The center of town is not typically a place for gem mining, but families can enjoy panning for gemstones at Pisgah Forest Gem Mine on Hendersonville’s Main Street. Open year round, Pisgah Forest has a large area for sifting for treasures, and a gift shop to get your gemstones cut and made into jewelry or a keepsake.

As you navigate downtown, participate in the Apple Quest scavenger hunt. Designed by a local Girl Scouts troop, the search involves a dozen brass apples hidden at landmark locations. A brochure with clues is available for download online, or you can pick up a printed copy at the Welcome Center on Main Street.

Pisgah Forest Gem Mine on Hendersonville's Main Street.

Afternoon

Take a lunchtime break at Mike’s On Main. The 1950s-style soda fountain serves sandwiches, soups and salads. You can’t go wrong with a burger (beef or veggie) and fresh-squeezed lemonade. For dessert, order a sundae or banana split with lots of spoons.

At the Appalachian Pinball Museum, visitors of all ages enjoy playing 85 pinball machines and vintage video games. Parents and grandparents are as excited as the kids when they enter the arcade-like museum with flashing lights and sounds of flippers flipping furiously. Play all day for one fee, and once you have wrist bands, the family can come and go as you please.

An unexpected find is the Aquarium & Shark Lab by Team ECCO. North Carolina’s first inland aquarium transports visitors to the coast with more than 275 fish, invertebrates, reptiles and salamanders. Every afternoon, staff members conduct public feedings of sharks and sting rays in the 2,000-gallon tank.

The family always appreciates a sweet treat, so be sure to stop by McFarlan Bakery. A downtown institution since 1930, the shop is famous for doughnuts, bear claws, giant cookies and, really, any type of baked confection.

A hidden “gem” on Main Street is the Mineral and Lapidary Museum of Henderson County, when visitors learn about the beauty and diversity of the world beneath our feet. One of the popular displays is a booth with fluorescent minerals under black light.

Evening

Mezzaluna is an easy crowd pleaser for dinner. Parents choose from 50 draft beer options and a menu of wood-fired pizzas and homemade pasta dishes. Kids have their own Italian selections, including fettuccine alfredo, ravioli, and spaghetti and meatballs.

Where to stay

While you are in town, make a whole weekend of it! There are plenty of things do do and just as many options for where to stay. Whether you prefer vacation rentals that fit the whole family, a hotel with adjoining rooms and an indoor pool, a resort that has it all, or even an RV Park where you can bring your own home on wheels, Hendersonville is sure to have exactly what your family needs. 

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