2011 Halloween on the Outer Banks

My favorite time of year is right around the corner…Halloween!! Got my pumpkins carved and my costume picked out. Everyone has been asking what is going on in the OBX for Halloween so we decided to put a list together of all the great events in the area.

The Roanoke Island Aquarium in Manteo is holding the annual “Trick or Treat Under the Sea” event Thursday October 27th from 6:00-8:30 pm. This year’s event will feature a scream contest, individual and family costume contests, vendors from our community with lots of treats and much more. Make sure you get tickets before the event because they will not have any available at the door.

Nags Head Church will be hosting their annual “Trunk or Treat” event from 6-8 pm on October 31st.

Spook House in the OBX Vacations building opposite the Harley Davidson store in Point Harbor on 158. Event will be a fundraiser for Relay for Life. Advertised in the Coastland Times.

The Island Farm in Manteo will be hosting a Victorian Funeral, an opportunity to visit the graves and ghosts of the graveyard and explore Victorian death rituals. Spooky! Scheduled for October 28th 7 & 8:15 pm.

Whalebone Surf Shop will be holding a Halloween Costume contest and huge sale on the 31st including a $100 gift card prize for best costume. Starts at 6pm.

The 10th annual Exotic, Erotic Ball will be held at Outer Banks Brewing Station Halloween night. Sounds risque hug? Well it has been voted the best Halloween party on the beach! Come in costume for a cash prizes.

Port O Call will be hosting the Burlesque Balle Saturday night with a costume contest with cash prizes!

Looks like there are going to be a ton of great events for adults and kids on Halloween night and even some starting tomorrow! Hope everyone has a great Halloween and stay safe. If you have any other events you know of let us know and we will add to the list! Stay spooky OBX.

Time for some Monster Mash!

Outer Banks: Moonlight Legend, Lore & Ghost Tour

Ghost

Ghost

Well, now that it’s officially Fall, I suppose we can start to talk about Halloween. This isn’t really a Halloween post, but it’s a great primer for All Hallow’s Eve, and anything that raises the spook factor this time of year gets me thinking about costumes and candy.  Ready to be scared?

Did you realize the Outer Banks has some funky, or should I say spooky, ghost tales to share. It makes sense, the OBX has a long history full of pirates, shipwrecks, lost colonies, etc. There’s got to be some spookiness that’s survived over the years.

On Thursday, the Whalehead Club is offering up great legends, lore, and ghost tales to help you get in the Halloween spirit. Bring your long sleeves, flashlight, and best horror movie scream.

Moonlight Legend, Lore and Ghost Tour

Thursday September 29, 2011 – Beginning at Dusk

For those who dare, come and take the Moonlight Legends, Lore and Ghost Tour of the Whalehead Club by lantern light!  Walk the steps of pirates, shipwreck victims, and ghosts of Corolla Island!  Which spirit will you see that night?  Tickets are $20 per adult and are available by advance purchase only. Call 252-453-9040 ext 2 early- this tour sells out quickly!

Check out more specialty tours by visiting our website www.whaleheadclub.org .  The Whalehead Club is located in Currituck Heritage Park, just past milepost 11 on Route 12 North in Corolla, NC.


2010 Halloween on the Outer Banks

Outer Banks Halloween

Outer Banks Halloween

All Hallows’ Eve is fast approaching.  The yearly celebration of ghosts, goblins, and all things ghoulish is a short three days away.

The Outer Banks is full of surprises.  So much more than just a beach.  History, fishing, surfing, nature, wild horses.  The list of unique OBX qualities seems endless.  But Halloween?  Is the Outer Banks really a great Halloween destination?

Considering one of the nicknames for the OBX is “Graveyard of the Atlantic,” it probably shouldn’t be too much of a surprise, but yeah, the Outer Banks is full of great spooks and fun Halloween activities.

Here’s a smorgasbord of Halloween OBX style…

  • For starts, did you know the Outer Banks has a Ghost Tour?!  For real.  A tour dedicated to nothing but ghostly goodness on the OBX.
  • Here’s a link to a recent article in the Charlotte Observer that discusses a creepy road in Manteo that the OBX Ghost Tour frequents.  Here’s what the article has to say…
    • “Mother Vineyard Road, in Manteo. I’ve experienced a temperature change there, almost like going into another world. There are numerous stories from the area, of Civil War soldiers parading and the presence of a ghostly sea captain. It’s also where hoo-doos have been spotted; they’re 3-foot-tall creatures that wear black hoods. The houses along the road are beautiful. In one of them, a hoo-doo ran across the room and disappeared into the fireplace.  There’s tremendous orb activity on Mother Vineyard Road – indicating the presence of paranormal activity – and the orbs are almost the size of full moons. … It’s that intense.”
  • In an earlier post, I spun the tale of the Outer Banks Witch, Cora.  Super creepy!  Well worth the read.

Now on to some great Halloween activities:

  • About a month ago, I had a post about a haunted house on Roanoke Island that is supposed to be off-the-chain scary, Quarantine Island.  Rather than reposting all of the details, I’ll let you head over to that link, but what I will say is that from everything I’ve heard about this haunted house, it is not for the faint of heart or children.  It is legit scary.  You’ve been warned.
  • Always a blast for kids and parents alike, Trick or Treat Under the Sea at the Outer Banks Aquarium is a Halloween staple on the OBX.  A little late notice on this one considering it is tonight, but I did post it at the beginning of October…hint, hint, subscribe in the top right corner, and you’ll get all my posts emailed to you.  :)
  • Black Pelican’s Haunted House is tonight through Saturday. Hours are 6 to 8:30 p.m. and their fee is $5 for adults and $2 for children (to benefit Relay for Life.)
  • On Saturday, the Elizabethan Gardens has its Harvest Hay Day with hayrides, a hay bale maze, music, crafts, games, a bake sale and more. It’s from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Kids younger than 12 get in free with a paying adult. Call (252) 473-3234.
  • The Red Wolf Coalition is holding a special free Howl-O-Ween Wolf Howling on Saturday at 6 p.m. at Alligator River NWR. Call (252) 796-5600 to register.
  • On Sunday, Nags Head Church has its huge Trunk or Treat event from 6 to 8 p.m. It’s a one-stop Trick or Treating event with free candy, hot dogs, drinks, games and more, and up to 3,000 people are expected. Call (252) 441-7548.
  • Nightmares in Rodanthe” – clever name, don’t ya think?  A fun, and delicious, Halloween masquerade dinner at Good Winds restaurant in Rodanthe.

I think that should cover it.  Whew, I’m tired just thinking about all that fun.

Get on out and enjoy!

PS:  Got your costume ready?  Blackbeard the Pirate would be great!…the deader the better.

Just in Time for Halloween – The Legend of the Outer Banks Witch

Outer Banks Witch Legend - Cora Tree

Outer Banks Witch Legend - Cora Tree

The Outer Banks has a wide variety of history, lore, and legend.  Of course we should expect some of the rich tales to offer just the right amount of spookiness for the Halloween season.

Are you a lover of the Outer Banks?  Does the name Cora mean anything to you?

I’ll admit that I am indeed a lover of everything OBX, but I had no idea there is a long-standing legend of a witch on Hatteras Island!  Such a great (and spoooooooky) surprise.

Rather than trying to recreate the story, I’m going to borrow the synopsis from the Brigands’ Bay website.  Brigands’ Bay is a subdivision on Hatteras where the climax of the legend takes place.

Outer Banks Witch Legend - Cora Tree

Outer Banks Witch Legend - Cora Tree

Turn down the lights and put on some creepy music.  Here we go….

The Legend of the Cora Tree was first reported in Charles Harry Whedbee’s book “Blackbeard’s Cup and Stories of the Outer Banks.” This large tree is located in Brigands’ Bay on Snug Harbor Drive.  According to the legend, in the early 1700s, a strange woman named Cora showed up and began living in a crude hut in the forest not far from the Cora Tree.  Cora lived alone with no one for company but a baby whom she carried with her everywhere.  Folks were suspicious of strangers, but left Cora to her own.  At some time, they noticed that Cora was usually in the neighborhood just before misfortune struck.  A cow she touched went dry, a little boy who mocked her baby got sick and nearly died and fishermen stopped catching fish, but Cora always seemed to have an abundance of fresh fish.

At the same time, the brig Susan G., captained by Eli Blood, who was a longtime resident of Salem, MA, floundered in local waters and Captain Blood and his crew of former slaves from Barbados set up housekeeping and settled in to await word from the owner of the ship.  During this period of idleness, Captain Eli determined to find out if the strange woman the islanders described to him was really a witch.  There was no tangible proof that Cora was a witch, but then a dead body washed up on a local beach.  The body belonged to a local young man and was said to have an expression of “utmost horror” on his face and “his hands were clasped in an attitude of supplication.”  The digits 666 were burned into his forehead.  Small footprints, like those of a woman, were found leading away from the body and into the local woods.

This event is reported to have “set Captain Blood’s resolution on fire” and he captured Cora and her child and tested her to determine if she was a witch.  Cora was bound and thrown into the sound where she floated in the shallows, face down.  After removing Cora from the water, Captain Blood tried to cut her hair, but said he failed to do so because her hair “was tougher than wire rope.”  The facts that Cora floated rather than sank and that her hair could not be cut were characteristics of a witch.  As a final test, he and his crew members pricked their fingers and put droplets of blood into a bowl of water which was stirred until it frothed.  Captain Eli then proceeded to read the liquid in the bowl and pronounced that Cora was, indeed, a witch.

Cora was then tied to a large, live oak tree with her baby in her arms and a large pile of dry branches were spread about her feet.  At this time, a Captain Tom Smith told Captain Blood that he would not allow the execution of Cora and her child.  He would see that civil courts on the mainland handle Cora.  Before Captain Blood could reply, the Cora child turned into a huge tawny cat with green eyes and a red mouth and fled into the woods.  Too stunned to speak, Captain Blood approached the tree to light fire to the wood when the sky, previously clear and sunny, was covered by a great cloud.  A loud clap of thunder sounded and “there flashed a blinding bolt of lightning.”  The lightning struck the tree to which Cora was tied and a great amount of smoke was created.

“When the smoke cleared, there was no sign of Cora.  The ropes were still there around the tree and the dry kindling was still piled, untouched, about its base, but of Cora, no sign.  No sign, that is except the split tree and four distinct letters, CORA, freshly burned deep into the heart of the tree.”

Even today, if you visit the tree, you can still clearly see those four letters, CORA.

Haunted House on the Outer Banks

I know, it’s hard to believe we’re already talking about Halloween, but we’re getting pretty close to the costume and candy fest, and this OBX haunted house looks pretty cool…and it’s for a good cause.

Haunted House on the Outer Banks

Haunted House on the Outer Banks

For advance tickets or information call 252-473-2127 x223 or visit http://thelostcolony.org/index.htm .

EMERGENCY UPDATE – EMERGENCY UPDATE – EMERGENCY UPDATE

Uh oh, here’s an Emergency Update about the haunted house…well, not really, but it does build the suspense.

QUARANTINE OF FISHING VILLAGE TO BE TEMPORARILY LIFTED

(Roanoke Island, NC, September, 2010) – A team of super-scientists, mathematicians, and adventurers is now being assembled to investigate the unusual rumors surrounding “Quarantine Island”.

The U.S. Government and the Department of Unexplained Phenomena have lifted the ban on Quarantine Island for groups of adventurers for three nights—and three nights only—Thursday-Saturday, October 28-30 from 7:30 PM to 10:00 PM. Groups will leave under military escort from a staging area that has been set up in Fort Raleigh’s Waterside Theatre in Manteo, NC. If you believe you have what it takes to unlock the mysteries of Quarantine Island, visit www.thelostcolony.org and sign up today.

Exactly why this small island off the coast of North Carolina was cut off from civilization a year ago is still the cause of much debate but there seem to be a few facts:

1)    The island’s once overflowing cemeteries are suddenly empty. But why?

2)    The local population appears to have vanished…or at least they haven’t called for help in a long, long time.

What really happened on Quarantine Island? Help us answer these questions. Join our daring expedition today! And as they say, what’s a little fun without a little risk?

CONFIDENTIAL FILES – U.S. DEPARTMENT OF UNEXPLAINED PHENOMENA

CODENAME: QUARANTINE ISLAND

News reports will be posted at the website below and will provide participants in the October 28-30 Reconnaissance Mission with an overview of the final days of Quarantine Island.

Read at your own risk.

http://www.facebook.com/home.php?#!/pages/Quarantine-Island/101311379930706?ref=ts

Halloween on the Outer Banks – 2009 Activities

Halloween Pumpkin

It’s that time of year again.  Here are some OBX Halloween happenings:

Haunted Albemarle
Past local residents of Elizabeth City, aka Jr. Docents as costumed interpreters, tell their stories. Hear from Blackbeard, Anne Bonny, a Civil War soldier, an Albemarle suffragette, Nell Cropsy, a past North Carolina governor, and other notorious Albemarle residents. Take a map and explore the cemetery on your own afterwards. For more information please call 252-335-1453.

Trick or Treat Under The Sea
North Carolina Aquarium on Roanoke Island. 6 p.m. – 8:30 p.m. Ghosts and strange aquatic creatures will greet children as they enjoy this “spooktacular” event. Hosting the event is Count Sharkula who always scares up lots of ghoulish fun. Crazy costume contests, creepy crafts, spine-tingling scream contests and yummy munchies are just a few of the things to howl about. Tickets are limited. Ticket sales begin October 1st and will be sold at the Aquarium. Admission. All children must be accompanied by an adult. (252) 473-3494, (800) 832-3474 or www.ncaquariums.com.

Outer Banks Spooktacular 5k
The Outer Banks Running Club in training and planning a marathon tune-up 5K race, which will couple as a Halloween race, to be held within the Martin’s Point neighborhood on Oct. 25th. There will be a children’s costume fun run!

Haunted Corolla Village
October 30th from 6:30pm – 9:00pm. Come join us in Currituck Heritage Park for a ghoulishly good time. Jump on board the Haunted Hayride through Historic Corolla Village to hear ghostly stories of yesteryear. And then if you dare, walk the spooky park grounds, and be prepared to be scared. $6.00 per person. Meet at the Outer Banks Center for Wildlife Education for Programs presented in the lobby & auditorium! Seasonal snacks available from local vendors! Enter our Carved Pumpkin Contest. Bring your own flashlight. For more information please call 252.453.0221or visit www.WhaleHeadClub.org.

CARVED PUMPKIN CONTEST
Thursday, October 29th, 2009.  Cash Prizes: 1st Place $50, 2nd Place $25, 3rd Place $10.  Contest Details: Bring Jack-O-Lantern to Outer Banks Center for Wildlife Education in Corolla on Thursday from 12 pm – 5 pm; Pumpkin must have luminaries (not candles); Judging will take place on Thursday at 6 pm; Pumpkins will be displayed at Haunted Corolla Village on Friday October 30th, 2009; Pumpkins may be collected after 9pm on Friday or donated for compost.  For more information, please call 252-453-0221 EXT 8

Halloween on the Outer Banks – Carved Pumpkin Contest

Carved Pumpkin Contest

CARVED PUMPKIN CONTEST

Thursday

October 29th, 2009

Cash Prizes

  • 1st Place $50
  • 2nd Place $25
  • 3rd Place $10
  • Contest Details:

    • Bring Jack-O-Lantern to Outer Banks Center for Wildlife Education in Corolla on Thursday from 12 pm – 5 pm
    • Pumpkin must have luminaries (not candles)
    • Judging will take place on Thursday at 6 pm
    • Pumpkins will be displayed at Haunted Corolla Village on Friday October 30th, 2009
    • Pumpkins may be collected after 9pm on Friday or donated for compost

    FOR MORE INFORMATION

    CALL 252-453-0221 EXT 8

    Halloween on the Outer Banks – Haunted Corolla Village

    Haunted Corolla Village - 2009

    HAUNTED COROLLA

    VILLAGE

    October 30th

    6:30pm – 9:00pm

    Come join us in Currituck Heritage Park for a ghoulishly good time.

    Jump on board the Haunted Hayride through Historic Corolla Village to hear

    ghostly stories of yesteryear. And then if you dare, walk the spooky park grounds,

    and be prepared to be scared…

    $6.00 per person. Meet at the

    Outer Banks Center for Wildlife Education

    for Programs presented in the lobby & auditorium!

    Seasonal snacks available from local vendors!

    Enter our Carved Pumpkin Contest.

    Bring your own flashlight.

    For more information please call 252.453.0221

    Or visit www.WhaleHeadClub.org

    Halloween Activities on the Outer Banks

     

      The Outer Banks offers a wide variety of Halloween activities for the entire family.

     

    ·         Trunk or Treat:  The largest Halloween family event on the Outer Banks.  “All your candy in one stop.”  Nags Head Church, MP 13.  October 31, 2008.  6 – 8 p.m.

     

    ·         Haunted Albemarle at the Museum of the Albemarle: (Elizabeth City, NC)Come to the Museum of the Albemarle Saturday, October 25th from 10:00 am to 2:00 pm and experience the Haunted Albemarle! Come and hear ghost stories and legends of the Albemarle region as told by the costumed Junior Docents. Sit around the campfire, enjoy some popcorn, and be sure to keep an eye out for Blackbeard! This event is free and open to the public!

     

    ·         Trick or Treat Under the Sea “Spooktacular”:   October 30, 2008 from 6 p.m. to 8:30 p.m., at the Aquarium.  Advanced tickets are still available at $5 per person, ages 2 and under are free for the 6th annual Trick or Treat Under the Sea and may be purchased at the North Carolina Aquarium on Roanoke Island.  Give an underprivileged child a chance to attend this event by purchasing sponsor tickets to the event.   Come see Count Sharkula, ghosts, strange aquatic creatures. Crazy costume contests, creepy crafts, etc for all to enjoy. Children must be accompanied by an adult. For information about the event or sponsor tickets, call 252-473-3494 or 800-832-3474 or visit www.ncaquariums.com. 

     

    ·         Black Pelican Haunted House:  Haunted House at the Black Pelican Restaurant, Kitty Hawk. October 27 – 31, 5-8:30 pm. Fun for the entire family! (252)261-3171.

     

    ·         Aqua S Haunted Halloween House:  Food and fun! Starting at 4 pm. 1174 Duck Road, Duck. (252)261-9700. Event URL: http://www.aquasrestaurant.com

     

    ·         Annual Halloween Ball VI:  Last performance ever by Biscuits N Grease at the Outer Banks Brewing Station. MP 8.5, Kill Devil Hills. (252)-449-BREW. Event URL: http://www.obbrewing.com

     

    ·         Halloween at Jurassic Putt:  Brings your ghosts and goblins for a safe and spooky night at the park! Wear you costume and get a special Treat or Tick! $10 per person gets you unlimited play 5-10 pm. Milepost 16, Nags Head. (252)599-6409.

     

    ·         Hallowine:  12 to 8 pm at The Cotton Gin, Jarvisburg. Join us for the official release of the New Coastal Collage Red Wine. Free appetizers, live music 4-8 p[m, trick or treats, barrel painting party for the kids. Dress in costume for special discounts.