EPISODE 11: "Judaculla Rock"
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In the mountains of Western North Carolina, there is a stone covered in markings.
Thousands of them.
Carved over centuries into a single surface—shapes, tracks, lines, and symbols whose full meaning is still not completely understood.
Known as Judaculla Rock, it is one of the most significant petroglyph sites in the eastern United States.
But it is more than archaeology.
In Cherokee tradition, the rock is connected to Tsul’kalu—the slant-eyed Master of Game—a figure tied to the land, the animals, and the unseen structure of the mountains themselves.
In this episode of Echoes of the Blue Ridge, Ryan Phillips explores the intersection of history, landscape, and living tradition—where ancient markings, oral stories, and the passage of time meet in one place.
Because in the Blue Ridge…
some stories are not written in words.
They are carved into stone.