Cancel

Open app

Search

Emerald Village

3.6 (19 reviews)
Closed 10:00 am - 5:00 pm

Emerald Village Photos

Recommended Reviews - Emerald Village

Your trust is our priority, so businesses can't pay to alter or remove their reviews. Learn more about reviews.
Yelp app icon
Browse more easily on the app
Review Feed Illustration

Reviews With Photos

Amanda E.

We booked back a few months ago for the black light tour, we had the idea that we would be going into a mining cave and seeing all these different glowing lights. Sadly it wasn't anything like that. It was fun for the most part, aside from it being so windy and cold. What little bit of the show we got wasn't particularly worth the amount of money we all spent as a family. It is an experience though. I definitely wouldn't recommend for children under the age of 5 due to how cold it can get in the mountains, since it is an outside activity. I do highly recommend the store side of things. They have some beautiful crystals you can purchase as well as mining kits for the children! I spent quite a bit of money buying so many crystals to take home with me. I would love to come back and visit the museums they had on site!

Tony R.

Interesting history, interesting pictures, neat cave-like area. Nice opportunity for pictures, but can be expensive for large family at $7 each for the tour. Gem mining is for entertainment value and cool looking rocks ONLY! Think about it. If there were still precious minerals, do you think they would open mine to public? They try and hook you into the expense of cutting and setting of stones but it's not worth the value of stones, so be entertained and don't expect the big windfall. The bucket sizes start at $10 and go up to $1000.00, the bigger the bucket the bigger the stones, which tells me they place the stones in the bucket.

Charissa H.

My husband and I had the BEST TIME!!! Not only is the area itself just stunning, the staff at Emerald Village were awesome as well! We had great chats with the woman in the Mine gift shop and with Walter down at the gem panning area! Both were so full of knowledge and willing to share fun facts and information that we just ate up! The gem panning experience was really cool as well. We split the 3lb bucket and I highly recommend that for 2 people, we found some great pieces! Can't wait to bring family back one day!

Norma Jean L.

Was a fun day visiting the local mine and loved the sites! Great for a bigger group and Groupon was a great deal! Staff was very helpful and shared education about the sites!

Gem Mining was actually fun!

See all

8 months ago

Helpful 3
Thanks 2
Love this 4
Oh no 0

3 years ago

Helpful 2
Thanks 0
Love this 0
Oh no 1

5 years ago

Helpful 0
Thanks 0
Love this 0
Oh no 0

5 years ago

Helpful 0
Thanks 0
Love this 0
Oh no 0
Photo of Tony R.
154
840
2777

11 years ago

Helpful 3
Thanks 0
Love this 0
Oh no 0

9 years ago

Helpful 0
Thanks 0
Love this 0
Oh no 0

7 years ago

Helpful 0
Thanks 0
Love this 0
Oh no 0
Photo of Ryan N.
11
5
13

16 years ago

Helpful 0
Thanks 0
Love this 0
Oh no 0

9 years ago

Helpful 4
Thanks 0
Love this 16
Oh no 0

11 years ago

Helpful 2
Thanks 0
Love this 0
Oh no 0

7 years ago

Helpful 1
Thanks 0
Love this 0
Oh no 0
Photo of Beth R.
57
128
25

9 years ago

Helpful 1
Thanks 0
Love this 0
Oh no 0
Photo of Jt D.
61
12
0

8 years ago

Helpful 3
Thanks 0
Love this 0
Oh no 0

8 years ago

Helpful 1
Thanks 0
Love this 0
Oh no 0

9 years ago

Helpful 0
Thanks 0
Love this 0
Oh no 0

11 years ago

Helpful 0
Thanks 0
Love this 0
Oh no 0

11 years ago

Helpful 0
Thanks 0
Love this 0
Oh no 0

14 years ago

Helpful 10
Thanks 0
Love this 1
Oh no 0

11 years ago

Helpful 0
Thanks 0
Love this 0
Oh no 0

Ask the Community - Emerald Village

Yelp said this was temporarily closed. For how long? We're coming in late July. Will it be open by then?

It was open this last weekend. June 9th for certain

Don’t See Your Question? Ask Away!

Review Highlights - Emerald Village

I did the gem bucket from McKinney Mine.

Mentioned in 2 reviews

Read more highlights

The Orchard At Altapass

The Orchard At Altapass

(37 reviews)

Absolute five-star experience. Definitely a little bit out there but we went on a Saturday early…read moreSeptember and it wasn't too bad. They do apple picking on the hour most days. It's all listed online and very user-friendly. We showed up around 1130 and wandered around. Picked apples at noon. Then had some live music at one. Very well planned and I'm proud of the way we did it. If you're driving from Asheville, old fort is a great stopping point. We got cinnamon rolls on the way there and Hillman on the way back. It did look like this Orchard had some very affordable barbecue on site. Tons of snacks in the gift shop too. The parking lot was pretty big and they have extra parking. The staff was super kind. I love that it's a nonprofit and there's tons of educational pieces. You will find a bunch of maps and other displays. They have a bee and caterpillar to stay for kids and adults alike. The gift shop. Also both a lot of local crafts like candles, ciders, and honey. No drinking on site. The apple picking is around back. You can get a little bag or two sizes of a basket. We opted for the bag because there is no reason for us to keep a basket around. For eight dollars it's all very affordable. It got us about 12 big apples. The trees are well marked. For picking. It is lots of space for wandering. Definitely not in the shade so it's pretty hot. For me, I really like the extra things that this place had. Cornhole, checkers, Jenga... They usually have bands on the weekend too.

My husband, our 8 year old daughter and I were excited to head up to the orchard at Alta pass…read moreyesterday! We've been apple picking at a couple of the orchards to the south of Asheville, and wanted to check out this nonprofit orchard near Spruce Pine. When we arrived we were pleasantly surprised to see that the crowd was reasonably sized, and we could walk around without feeling pushed and prodded. But the pleasant surprise ended there. We headed around back where we purchased two buckets for apple picking at $15/each. They were small buckets that could fit, we were told, 4-5 lbs of apples each. Okay, fine. But it was not until after purchasing the buckets that we were placed into a very touristy feeling group, and told that we'd be picking "these small and ugly (..."but delicious!") green apples. Huh? No one is going apple picking for just green apples. Are you kidding? The guide proceeded to inform us that as we walk through the orchard we absolutely, positively, should not pick the red apples because they "aren't ready and will most certainly give you a tummy ache". What?!?! Okay....still on board but feeling a little less excited. Then we start to walk toward the orchard. With a giant group of people. At a veeeerrrryyyy slow pace. And then we have to wait on a few stragglers. Seriously excruciating by this point. Finally, as we get to the orchard, the guide tells us to look for the trees with pink ties on them, an ONLY those trees. In fact, pay no mind to the beautiful red apples surrounding you on all other sides - they are not ready! No matter how they look, do NOT eat those apples! But then we are off and looking for the promised green apples....which I kid you not are almost completely picked over! My 6'5 husband could barely reach the apples, and definitely not me or my eight year old - we can only watch in horror as our husband/father scavenges the tops of the trees for "ugly but delicious green apples" on the trees to our right, while simultaneously trying to ignore the beautiful red apples on the trees to our left. I seriously felt like Eve in the garden of Eden..... And then, we noticed that everyone else in our group was feeling the same way. Then one daring person took a red apple off a tree and took a big, juicy bite from it. Gasp! I thought we'd all be wearing fig leaves and trying to hide from one another in the next instant. But lo and behold....no tummy ache. Just confirmation that the red apples were, in fact, ready to be picked (and further confirmed by the mounds of ripe, red apples also falling from those trees). The whole thing was ridiculous, and by the time we headed out of the orchard it was a big joke. Everyone was picking the red apples and putting them on the bottom of their baskets, and placing a few green apples over the red ones in hopes of looking less guilty. We all concluded that they just wanted to get the ugly but delicious green apples out of the orchard. On the way in/out of the orchard there is a cute little building that is a "cafe". We were excited to try the pulled pork with apple bbq sauce, and some fresh homemade cider! But yet again, when there was an opportunity for this place to shine, it was a huge let down. We ordered an apple cider and a green apple lemonade, which also sounded like it had the potential to be delicious because it MUST be made with ugly but delicious green apples from the orchard! Nope. It was Country Time at best, with a couple shots of Torani Green Apple syrup splashed in the bottom. The pulled pork was gross (though, granted, in this area we have high standards for pulled pork), and not cooked in the bbq sauce but rather placed on the bun and then a little sauce was ladled onto the meat, leaving the bun wet and soggy. The apple cider was apple juice, probably from Ingles. By this point, while we had planned to go purchase some goods inside, we were done. This business has SO MUCH POTENTIAL. The setting is bucolic, and the weather was perfect. I don't know who is running it, but since it's a nonprofit I took a look at their 990 and it seems like they are probably just too dependent on a volunteer board. I don't know, but I think this could be a true gem up in this area. Unfortunately, it just falls short. We'll see how my apple crisp turns out - I'll try to update my review when I find out.

Spruce Pine Mining District - Spruce Pine Mining District Historical Marker

Spruce Pine Mining District

(1 review)

This historical marker is located near the Museum of North Carolina Minerals (raise your hand if…read moreyou've heard of it) at one of the exits from the Blue Ridge Parkway. It reads, "Spruce Pine Mining District. Mica, feldspar, quartz deposits found in region 25 mi. long, 10 mi. wide. Commercial production of mica emerged 1850s." Online, "Geological activity in and around Spruce Pine created pegmatite, made primarily of coarse granite created when lava cooled very slowly creating large crystals. Within the area can be found fifty-seven minerals first mined by Native American including mica, feldspar, quartz, emeralds, and aquamarine. The region known as the Spruce Pine Mining District is twenty-five miles long and ten miles wide and occupies portions of Mitchell, Avery and Yancey counties." "By the 1890's Spruce Pine was a national center of mica mining activity. Descendants of the early operations are still in business in Spruce Pine, generating mica products for the space industry and other uses. The high quality mica, used as an insulator for radio tubes, was one of the strategic minerals during World War II. Another of Spruce Pine's primary products is feldspar, useful in the ceramics industry. By 1917, North Carolina was the leading producer of feldspar--a distinction it still claimed in 2004." I also had no idea that this was mined in North Carolina or the many uses for it in technology. [Review 12711 overall, 23 of 2020.]

Emerald Village - landmarks - Updated May 2026

Loading...
Loading...
Loading...