SWANNANOA, N.C. — Fire risks throughout North Carolina have increased as a drought conditions continue to affect the region causing a state wide burn ban to continue for nearly a month.
With those risks and the burn ban camping experiences may be impacted.
“A lot more people are coming out. And everybody who camps loves to have a campfire. They want to sit at their sites and enjoy stories in the evening and just have a campfire on a cool night. And right now, we can’t do that,” said Douglas Wisz, the General Manager with Asheville East KOA…