Outer Banks Lands on Yahoo Travel’s List of Top 10 Places to Take the Kids Before They Grow Up

Roanoke Island & The Lost Colony

Roanoke Island & The Lost Colony

Working from suggestions in the book 500 Places to Take Your Kids Before They Grow Up, Yahoo Travel just released their list of Top 10 Places to Take Your Kids Before They Grow Up, and the Outer Banks made the list…Roanoke Island to be specific.

Here’s what they had to say about the land of the mysterious Lost Colony…

Roanoke Island

In 1587, on Roanoke Island, between the Outer Banks and the North Carolina mainland, 120 men, women, and children landed to settle England’s first permanent New World colony. Virginia Dare — granddaughter of their governor, John White — was born that year, the first child of English parents born in America. When White sailed back to England, he intended to return within the year.

But a war with Spain kept White away from Roanoke for three years; what he found on his return in 1590 was a mystery. The rudimentary houses that he had helped build were dismantled, the entire area enclosed by a high fortlike palisade. No trace of the “Lost Colony” was ever found.

The visitor center at the Fort Raleigh National Historic Site tells the colony’s baffling story in exhibits and film; outdoors, all that’s left of the fort is a silent mound of dirt, preserving the site’s sense of mystery. You’ll also want to flesh out the story by visiting the more commercial Roanoke Island Festival Park, mid-island in Manteo. A 69-foot-long three-masted bark, the Elizabeth II, lies moored across from the waterfront — a composite 16th-century ship built for the 400th anniversary of Sir Walter Raleigh’s first exploratory voyage to Roanoke in 1584.

 

Outer Banks On List of Top Ten Weekends on the Water

Outer Banks Sunset

Outer Banks Sunset

Away.com recently compiled their list of Top Ten Weekends on the Water, and the Outer Banks came in at #2.

Away.com’s OBX description covers a wide variety of the amazing qualities the Outer Banks has to offer

  • Wide beaches
  • Temperate weather
  • Great opportunities for fishing, boating, swimming, and parasailing
  • A chance to glimpse herds of wild horses at play
  • Also famous for Jockey’s Ridge, the largest natural live dune on the East Coast
  • Historic attractions include the site of the first American colony on Roanoke Island
  • Check out vestiges of that age at the Elizabethan Gardens and the Fort Raleigh National Historic Site
  • It was also in the Outer Banks that the Wright Brothers conducted their first experiments, which eventually led to the first powered flight in their airplane.
  • In addition to the stunning landscape, there are plenty of great places to eat and drink on the Outer Banks.

Outer Banks Named in List Top 10 Secluded Beaches

Outer Banks Wild Horses

Outer Banks Wild Horses

Yahoo Travel and Sherman Travel teamed up to create a list of the Top 10 Secluded Beaches, and the Outer Banks made the list.

Here’s what they had to say about the OBX:

Carova Beach, North Carolina - This barrier beach covers the upper stretches of the Outer Banks, North Carolina, and is the most undeveloped of an already spartan beach chain. Part of what keeps the region mellow is the lack of paved roads, with Highway 12 stopping north of Corolla. Four-wheel drive is a must, as the only route to these secluded U.S. beaches is a ride on the sand or a primitive system of dirt roads connecting vacation homes in the wooded interior. Drive slowly to see the wild horses (some are descendants of shipwrecked Spanish mustangs) that roam the protected dunes.