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This Is the Perfect Small Mountain Town—And Few Know About It

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This Is the Perfect Small Mountain Town—And Few Know About It


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There isn’t much to Davis, West Virginia (population 581). Its downtown is only a few blocks long. There’s no movie theater, no Starbucks. The entire county has one stoplight. You could feasibly drive through Davis and miss it entirely if you were engrossed in a good podcast.

Davis sits on the northern rim of Canaan Valley, a broad, high-elevation basin roughly 2.5 hours west of Washington, D.C. It’s surrounded by 4,000-foot peaks, most managed as public land, and hubs for hiking, biking, and skiing. But Davis’s best attribute? It’s full of people stoked to be here.

Who wouldn’t want to go sledding here, in Canaan Valley Resort State Park, West Virginia? (Photo: Courtesy West Virginia Department of Tourism)

Why I Love Visiting Davis, West Virginia, Year-Round

Some might be deterred by Davis’s lack of sushi or nightlife or community theater or even a Target. But I’ve been going there for 20 years, and every time I visit I’m mesmerized by the town’s bounty. The few restaurants are great for such a small town, there’s a proud beer scene, and access to outdoor adventure is off the charts.

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Just ask Ian Beckner, a Davis native who moved away for college, then bounced around to other mountain towns before settling back in Davis to open a ski shop.

“There’s just so much here—so many trails, such good skiing,” he says. “People usually have to work two jobs to make ends meet”—there are no large employers or industries in the area—“but they don’t care too much about money. They just want to be here. Once you’re here, you don’t leave. I can’t tell you the last time I drove more than an hour away.”

Canoeing in the fall in Canaan Valley Resort State Park, Tucker County
Canoeing in the fall in Canaan Valley Resort State Park, near Davis, West Virginia (Photo: Courtesy West Virginia Department of Tourism)

The adventure portfolio is exceptionally diverse, considering Davis’s location in the southern Appalachians, a region not renowned for robust winter-sports opportunities. But this particular nook of West Virginia has four distinct seasons. Mountain biking rules the warm months and skiing takes center stage in the winter, thanks to a hefty average snowfall and a trio of ski resorts. And West Virginia gets powder: Lake Effect snow from the Great Lakes on one side, and storms from the Northeast coast on the other. On average, it enjoys more than 150 inches of snow annually. Compare that to the 30 to 40 inches of snow that typically fall on ski resorts in neighboring Virginia.

I can’t decide if I like Davis more when it’s warm or has powder on the ground. I’ve logged countless miles on the valley’s notoriously rocky and rooty singletrack and celebrated epic rides with friends by passing around jars of moonshine. I’ve also floated through knee-deep powder in both lift-served and backcountry glades. Ditto with sharing the moonshine then, too.

The Great Mountain-Biking-Versus-Skiing Debate

mountain biker on the hellbender trail near Davis, West Virginia
Harper Brown of Davis, West Virginia, shreds the Hellbender Trail in the Little Canaan Wildlife Management Area. (Photo: Courtesy Blackwater Bikes)

So which is better? The mountain biking or the skiing? This is something debated by locals.

On the one hand, hundreds of miles of singletrack wind through adjacent state-park, national-forest, and national-wildlife-refuge land. Remember the hardcore 24-hour mountain-bike races that were so popular in the ’90s and early 2000s? They began here, with the 24 Hours of Canaan.

On the other hand, you can be at either of the downhill ski resorts, the 95-acre Canaan Valley and 100-acre Timberline, in about 10 minutes. Each offers more than 1,000 vertical feet of skiing, as well as a touring center that pulls in hundreds of cross-country junkies daily when there’s fresh snow.

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“The skiing is what attracted me first,” says Todd Romero, who moved to Davis in 2011, switching jobs from the tech industry to the public-school system and taking a huge pay cut in the process. “When there’s a solid base of snow, and you can ski the trees. It’s amazing. But the mountain biking is like nowhere else. I’ve been to other bike towns, but you have to drive to the trailhead. Here in town you’re at the trailhead.”

The More Some Things Change…

panoramic view from a hiking trail in the Dolly Sods Wilderness Area
A beautiful panorama from a hiking trail in the Dolly Sods Wilderness Area, in the Monongahela National Forest (Photo: Courtesy West Virginia Department of Tourism)

As a Davis outsider, I’d say the town hasn’t changed much in two decades. The mountains surrounding town keep it relatively isolated, as do the serpentine roads between it and larger burgs. Locals say housing prices have skyrocketed and those in the service industry say they have a hard time making rent. It’s tough to find rental data on a town of this size, but housing prices in general have climbed almost 4 percent each year since the pandemic. And it’s only getting pricier; according to Zillow, home prices in Davis jumped 10 percent in the last year alone, with the average home value sitting at just under $330K. Davis is suffering from the second-home crunch that has impacted just about every mountain town I know of in the past decade. The same thing is happening in my hometown of Asheville, North Carolina.

Beckner says there are now more restaurants to accommodate increasing numbers of visitors (the amount of money the county collects via hotel tax has almost doubled in the last decade, according to the Tucker County CVB), and the downhill resorts are more crowded on weekends. But the Davis of today still feels like the Davis from his childhood, he says.

Blackwater Falls State Park
Davis sits adjacent to Blackwater Falls State Park, where an easy hike leads to the overlook. (Photo: Courtesy West Virginia Department of Tourism)

“We’re still a small town. It’s not commercialized,” Beckner says. “We have all these miles of trail, but still only one bike shop. We might have more of an influx of people trying to enjoy the vibe that we all live with, that’s true, but the core value is still what it was when I was a kid. People are here to get outdoors.”

Beckner tells me that his favorite weekly event is the weekly mountain-bike group ride, the epicenter of Davis’s social scene.

“If it’s Thursday night, you know where everyone will be. It feels like the whole town rides together, and then we all go get burritos together, and then we all go to the brewery together,” he says. “You’re mingling with your doctor and your accountant and your kid’s teacher. It’s loud, and it’s always a party. It doesn’t matter what you wear, what bike you’re on, everyone is out enjoying what we have.”

Without further ado, here’s the best of Davis and the surrounding Canaan Valley.

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What’s Cool About the Winter in Davis, West Virginia

Skiing and Snowboarding

Snowboarder in powder in West Virginia
Snowboarder rips it at Canaan Valley Resort. People are often surprised to learn how much powder the resorts in West Virginia receive, thanks to the lake effect. (Photo: Courtesy West Virginia Department of Tourism)

Two downhill resorts are minutes apart from each other. Canaan Valley, part of Canaan Valley State Park, has loads of blue and green terrain, perfect for families and beginners. More advanced skiers can head for the fun, mellow glades off the black-diamond Dark Side of the Moon, from the top.

aerial view of Timberline Mountain
Aerial view of Timberline Mountain ski area in the thick, and we do mean thick, of winter (Photo: Courtesy West Virginia Department of Tourism)

Timberline Resort has steeper terrain and better tree skiing. It also has a high-speed six chair that gets you to the summit in under five minutes, so you can knock out laps until your quads quake. Pearly Glades, closer to the base area, offers steep pitches with comfortable space between trees, but mainly you’ll find tight tree runs all over this mountain, so you’ll need to focus. Driftland Ski and Sport, downtown, has all the gear you need.

two skiers play some après ping pong at the White Grass Ski Touring Center
Two skiers play some après pong at the White Grass Ski Touring Center, which also has firepits for the end of the day and a nice cafe with delish vegetarian chili. (Photo: Graham Averill)

As great as the downhill skiing is, to me, the Whitegrass Ski Touring Center is what makes winter in Davis truly special. It offers more than 25 kilometers of groomed cross-country trails and more than 60 kilometers of ungroomed trails that climb and descend some 1,200 vertical feet. This isn’t flat-road skiing but backcountry fun). A dozen warming huts are scattered throughout the system, most stocked with pieces of chocolate. The Whitegrass café and gear shop welcomes skiers with a warm après scene that includes multiple firepits, and Chip Chase, the center’s owner and a local legend, often mills around, sharing stories and his personal stash of whiskey.

Biking

Cyclists don’t have to give up riding just because it’s winter. A local trail builder, Zach Adams, has started grooming more than eight miles of fat-bike trails at Canaan Valley State Park. The place is even a stop on an annual fat-bike race series that hits the valley and a few other spots in West Virginia and Maryland.

Ultimate Sledding

If you have kids, hit up the sled run at Blackwater Falls State Park, which has a magic carpet and a hot-chocolate hut.

How to Maximize the Warm Months in Davis 

Hike, Fish, and (Much) More

hikers at the Bear Rocks overlook in the Dolly Sods Wilderness
Two hikers enjoy the vista from Bear Rocks, in the Dolly Sods Wilderness (Photo: Courtesy West Virginia Department of Tourism)

Dolly Sods Wilderness, a small but spectacular 17,000-acre roadless area known for its high-elevation bogs and rocky outcroppings, is the destination for hiking and backpacking. Hit Red Creek Trailhead for fly-fishing, creek stomping (wading and exploring), and hiking on paths that range from easy three-mile out-and-backs to multiday 20-mile loops.

Canaan Valley Resort State Park golf course
Is the author dying to play this course at the Canaan Valley Resort State Park when foliage pops in the fall? You bet. (Photo: Courtesy West Virginia Department of Tourism)

I have never yet played the golf course at Canaan Valley State Park, but I would love to.

Biking

But if you’re coming to Davis, you’re bringing mountain bikes. The singletrack is notoriously difficult and, at least in my opinion, all uphill. That’s part of the charm.

mountain biker in race in Davis, WV
Revenge of the Rattlesnake is an epic cross-country bike race that starts and finishes in Davis; 2024 was its 41st year. The rider is on a section, which drops from Canaan Loop Road into Canaan Valley State Park, of the iconic Allegheny Trail. (Photo: Victoria Weeks)

If you agree that rocks are fun, start with Plantation Trail, which forms the backbone of the singletrack within Canaan Valley. Many offshoots and well-worn social trails branch off this eight-mile point-to-point route, and I guarantee you’ll get off your bike at least once during particularly spicy sections, so give it twice as much time as you think you’ll need.


Plantation Trail

Don’t fret if that sounds like more torture than fun; some new, machine-groomed flow trails have been built for us mere mortals. Hit Promised Land, a six-mile swoopy loop in Canaan Valley State Park. Blackwater Bikes has beta, rentals, and gear.

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Promised Land

Where to Eat and Drink in Davis, West Virginia

Davis and the Canaan Valley only have a few restaurants, but those have everything I crave when I’m there.

Hellbender Burritos and Sirianni’s, serving pizza, are staples. But my favorite place to eat is at Whitegrass, whose café caters to a more elevated palate; its great vegetarian chili hits just right on a cold afternoon. Sometimes there’s live music, and the specials change daily, but there’s always a crowd of rosy-nosed cross-country skiers, fresh off the trails and hungry, clustered in a handful of tables in the middle of the gear and rental shop. The place is cozy, loud on a busy afternoon, and really fun. When it’s time for a beer, head to Stumptown Ales, the locals’ favorite drinking hole.

Where To Stay in Davis

You’ll find Airbnbs throughout the valley, including a two-bedroom option attached to the bike shop. The lovely Canaan Valley State Park has lodge rooms and cabins fresh off a renovation (from $178.50), as well as campsites with electricity. I’ve camped in my 4Runner here in the winter, running a space heater from the outlet. Searching for something a bit more sophisticated? Book a night at the ten-room Billy Motel and Bar, and enjoy its mid-century vibe (from $100).

Find Airbnbs in Davis

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Book flights to Elkins, West Virginia

Graham Averill of Asheville, North Carolina, is Outside Online’s national-parks columnist. He’s hoping to bring his wife and kids to Davis this winter to ski at White Grass and sled on the hill in Blackwater Falls State Park. He recently wrote about the most beautiful towns in the Southeast and the best ways to get outside in West Virginia, as well as an on-the-ground account of what it was like to survive Hurricane Helene in Asheville, and why he rues not visiting Capitol Reef National Park sooner.

author photo graham averill
Graham Averill, author (Photo: Liz Averill)



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Four Wheeling residents sentenced for selling fentanyl, heroin and meth in West Virginia

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Four Wheeling residents sentenced for selling fentanyl, heroin and meth in West Virginia


Four Wheeling residents were sentenced in federal court today for selling fentanyl and other drugs in West Virginia’s Northern Panhandle.

Tyshaun Johnson, 30, was sentenced to 115 months in prison. Johnson sold fentanyl near Jensen Playground in Wheeling, and investigators also determined he was selling cocaine base in the area. Johnson has prior convictions for fraud, assault, domestic battery, malicious assault and theft.

Harold Wayne Nice, 42, was sentenced to 60 months in prison today. Nice was responsible for selling more than 30 grams of methamphetamine, along with nearly 2 grams of fentanyl and one gram of cocaine base. Nice has previously been convicted for domestic battery, destruction of property, assault, breaking and entering and drug crimes.

Cephus Andrews, 33, was sentenced to 18 months in prison for conspiring with others to sell fentanyl, heroin and cocaine in Ohio County. Andrews, one of nine defendants in a drug conspiracy, allowed his residence to serve as a stash house for the drugs. Investigators seized 7.5 grams of a fentanyl/heroin mixture and 3.35 grams of cocaine, along with drug paraphernalia and $1,095. The other eight defendants are awaiting trial currently scheduled to occur in April 2026.

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Alyssa Marie Abrigg, 34, was sentenced to 30 months in federal prison. Abrigg sold nearly a gram of fentanyl and half a gram of methamphetamine in the Warwood section of Wheeling. She has prior drug convictions.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Clayton Reid is prosecuting the cases on behalf of the government. Investigative agencies include the Ohio Valley Drug Task Force, a HIDTA-funded initiative; the Drug Enforcement Administration; and the Wheeling Police Department.



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Kentucky takes down West Virginia, will face Texas in Sweet 16

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Kentucky takes down West Virginia, will face Texas in Sweet 16


West Virginia is a team that Kentucky was designed to beat, but that doesn’t always happen.

The Mountaineers are small, ferocious, and force turnovers at an elite rate. Kentucky needed to counter that with the size West Virginia just doesn’t have.

Early on, they did just that.

1st half showcases the size difference

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West Virginia’s average height is 5’9, and they love to press. Kentucky should be able to just find Strack or Key and allow runners to come off them. The Cats opened up handling the pressure pretty well. Amelia Hassett hit two first-quarter 3’s, and Clara Strack had 4 and 4. But West Virginia was also handling the Cats’ size pretty well.

6’1 Kierra Wheeler had 4 points and 4 rebounds herself as she battled down low in the opening frame. Teonni Key was a monster in the opening half. The senior had 11 points and 5 rebounds, but as the half wore on, the pressure started to get to Kentucky.

After the Cats stretched the lead to double figures, West Virginia would force a 10-second violation as Kentucky struggled to find Clara Strack in the middle of the press. When they did a couple of possessions later, it was a double dribble, and those are the simple kind of unforced turnovers that Kentucky can not have in a game like this.

A 13-2 run from West Virginia sent the two teams to halftime tied at 36. Kentucky shot 48% percent from the floor but had 7 turnovers, 3 from Key and 1 from Strack. West Virginia was led by 13 from Gia Cooke and 10 from Wheeler.

If Kentucky was going to get to its first Sweet 16 in a decade, it would come from Strack and Key.

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2nd half started with a Kentucky streak

The Cats started the 3rd with a big flurry, a 13-2 run saw Kentucky extend back to an 11-point lead. It was kind of identical to how the 2nd quarter played out, with Kentucky handling the pressure and using its height to convert easy baskets.

West Virginia really struggled down low against Kentucky’s size. They converted just 13-of-32 from 2-point range.

Kentucky would have a 12-point lead heading to the 4th, just 10 minutes away from a first Sweet 16 appearance since 2015-16.

It started with a bang as West Virginia would throw a haymaker. The Mountaineers would go on a 12-2 run to start the 4th, and Kentucky did look rattled. But to their credit, they slowed it back down and went down low to Key and Strack. The two stars on the day for Kentucky would answer and get back up 8 behind a beautiful post move from Strack.

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Gia Cooke, as she did all day, answered. She hit a huge 3 to stem the Cats’ momentum and bring West Virginia back to within 5. The guard would finish with 23.

Tonie Morgan would rise up with 2 minutes to go; she missed the jumper, but a huge hustle play from Clara Strack would give Kentucky another chance to build on its 4-point lead.

Strack would then convert, but like she did all afternoon, Sydney Shaw hit a clutch 3 from the corner, her 6th, to bring West Virginia to within 3 with just 90 seconds to play.

Clara Strack’s turnover issues would play big as she tried to back down, and Jordan Harrison would swipe her 4th steal of the night. Two free throws later, and it was just a 1-point game.

Tonie Morgan hadn’t hit a lot of shots, just 2-for-8. But the point guard hit a massive free-throw line jumper to get Kentucky back up 3 with 55 seconds to go.

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West Virginia would hit 2 more clutch free throws, and with 8 seconds to go, Hassett had a wide-open 3. It clanged off the rim, and the Mountaineers would have the last shot.

The Mountaineers had not led since early in the 4th quarter. Gia Cooke shook Teonni Key and had an open jumper that rimmed out. Key would secure the rebound, and Kentucky called a timeout.

On the inbound play, the ball would be hit off Morgan’s shoe. West Virginia would get a chance for a tip-in with .2 left.

West Virginia couldn’t get a shot off, and the Cats will be heading to the Sweet 16 for the first time since 2016. And they did it on the road.

Up next is (1) Texas, which the Cats lost to by 11 earlier this year. That game was a lot closer than the final score, as the Cats were actually within 1 with just over 5 to go.

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The game will be in Fort Worth, so it will be another road game. But we should all enjoy this Sweet victory.



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WVFF Begins Opioid Needs Assessment – West Virginia Public Broadcasting

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WVFF Begins Opioid Needs Assessment – West Virginia Public Broadcasting


The West Virginia First Foundation (WVFF) was created by the state Legislature in 2023 to distribute nearly $1 billion in opioid settlement monies over the next 17 years.  

The organization has chosen the Health Affairs Institute (HAI), in partnership with the Institute for Policy Research and Public Affairs and Data Driven WV, to perform a statewide needs assessment.  

“This is a critical investment in carrying out what WVFF was created to do, as our founding documents specifically call for statewide coordination that helps connect resources, information and systems of care across West Virginia,” said Jonathan Board, WVFF executive director. “As WVFF continues to scale its impact, having a shared, data-driven understanding of where needs are greatest, where resources already exist, and where gaps remain will help inform future decisions. The WVU team brings both the technical expertise and statewide perspective needed to support that effort.” 

The study itself is expected to cost $1.5 million and take 18 months to complete. A statement from the First Foundation said the study is designed to provide a clearer understanding of needs, gaps and opportunities. 

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A year ago, the First Foundation asked for proposals. They said they received more than 20 proposals from organizations nationwide. 

Key objectives include 

  • Establishing a common metric to measure burden of addiction at local and state levels. 
  • Mapping current funding and service availability to ensure equitable distribution. 
  • Identifying critical gaps in prevention and treatment services. 
  • Creating a user-friendly, public dashboard for transparency and data accessibility. 
  • Defining a standardized Health Return on Investment (HROI) for addiction-related services. 
  • Participating in the development of a statewide interoperable network. 

“This partnership reflects HAI’s commitment to applied research that directly improves the health and well-being of West Virginians,” said Rebecca Gillam, senior research scientist and portfolio director at WVU Health Affairs Institute. “By combining robust data analysis with community-informed insight, this assessment will provide practical tools to support smarter investments and stronger outcomes in addressing the burden of substance use disorder across the state.” 

Since May 2023, the First Foundation said it has distributed nearly $40 million in settlement money. This includes initiatives focused on care such as prevention, treatment, recovery and workforce development.  

The organization handles 72.5% of the state’s settlement money. Cities and counties get 24.5% directly, and the state Attorney General’s office gets 3% for legal representation. 

Results of the Needs Assessment, including the public dashboard, will be released once completed and is expected to inform future funding decisions and statewide planning efforts.  

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To learn more, visit the First Foundation website. 



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