Finding a trip-worthy coffee shop was part of a day trip during our early October trip to the Great Smoky Mountains.
The government shut-down had closed our favorite national
park. As an alternative to visiting our usual haunts, we made Gatlinburg,
Tennessee, home base for four nights and explored mountain towns and scenery
outside the park.
Husband Walter had taken us on a scenic and narrow, winding, steep,
backwoods mountain road. It eventually intersected with a major highway. We
made our way to Waynesville, North Carolina, a mountain town where we had
visited a local art association’s gallery and had taken in some of the town’s
whimsical public art on a previous trip.
But on this visit, coffee for him and hot tea for me in “just
the right” coffee shop was the objective. Finding an interesting coffee shop
that fits his idea of comfy, cozy and with hometown appeal qualifies as
sightseeing in Hubby’s travel plans.
In Waynesville he checked out two coffee shops on Main
Street. They were attractive but not his cup of tea, uh, coffee.
To my surprise, a love of coffee shops had turned my reserved
spouse into a chatty traveler. He did not hesitate to accost individuals for
recommendations about the coffee shop choice of locals.
Thanks to a Waynesville pair, who both happened to be non-coffee drinkers, we wound up at Panacea Coffee House Cafe and Roastery.
Thanks to a Waynesville pair, who both happened to be non-coffee drinkers, we wound up at Panacea Coffee House Cafe and Roastery.
It was ju-u-u-st
right! Staffed by friendly, conscientious baristas and at home in one-half of
an old warehouse, Panacea invited patrons to linger, enjoy, and become part of
the Panacea community.
The warehouse was in what had been the commuity’s industrial district from the late 1880s until the late 1940s. The
building’s industrial origins welcomed us at the entry with a historical plaque
outside, commercial coffee roaster just inside the door and coffee beans in burlap sacks
deposited around inside near the roaster, ready for roasting.
Old brick walls,
concrete floors and a rustic wooden ceiling with exposed beams contributed to
the distinctive atmosphere. The establishment’s Web site said the owners did
their best to preserve as many historical features as possible. It appeared that their efforts had paid off.
The addition of a deck in the back
ratcheted our coffee shop experience over the top. It offered a pleasantly cool
temperature, a canopy of trees and a view and sounds of the creek just a
few yards away. We settled on the deck and enjoyed our hot drinks.
Mission accomplished.
Hubby had his fix.
* * * * *
A couple more treats awaited us on our return trip to Gatlinburg. We pulled off near the national park’s Ocunaluftee Visitor Center to indulge in a little elk-watching.
We admired the huge antlers of the males in the adjacent meadow then pulled back onto Newfound Gap Road. By the time we passed Newfound Gap, the setting sun prompted us to pull off the highway at the Morrow overlook.
i am now wondering if your hubby and i are long lost cousins. i tried on 27 cars before i bought and he had to try on Coffee Shoppes... it looks perfect to me and I love the table the cup is on and the deck the table is on and the view. wow...
ReplyDeleteSuch beautiful country and full of artsy folks. Ah the smell of roasting coffee beans, the elixir of life. Glad you found your fix. Dianne
ReplyDeleteA nice place to relax! It looks so much like one of our coffee houses, The Mud House.
ReplyDeleteDavid and I never drink coffee at Starbucks or any other coffee shop. I guess we prefer home brew because it is less expensive. Lol. Your narrative and photos are quite attractive, though.
ReplyDeleteHow delightful, Linda. I love those special trips where discoveries are part of the adventure.
ReplyDeleteHubby and I had the worst Chai tea lattes we have ever had at a local Peet's coffee place.
Now I'm hankering for some "good stuff".
The smell in that coffee shop must have been heavenly.
ReplyDeleteSounds like you had a very good day.
Wow all that for a perfect coffee. I love the pic of the sun setting. All is so green there. Here trees and shrubs are bare now and snow has arrived
ReplyDelete