Friday, February 6, 2026
18.5 F
Beckley
More

    Inside Appalachian Escapes: Themed rentals, escape rooms, and a love letter to West Virginia

    FAYETTEVILLE, W.Va. โ€” What began as a search for an affordable retirement option has turned into one of southern West Virginiaโ€™s most imaginative tourism ventures.

    Nate Adams and his wife, Rachel Adkins, are the founders of Appalachian Escapes, a growing collection of themed vacation rentals near the New River Gorge that combine art, storytelling, and Appalachian culture.

    Want a break from being a muggle? Make some memories and get sorted in the tiny great hall, camp out at the cup, sleep in a common room, head for the magical candy shop, and solve the puzzles in the herbology themed escape room.
    Get sorted in the Wizard House, and solve the puzzles in its herbology-themed escape room. (Photo courtesy Appalachian Escapes)

    โ€œWe didnโ€™t set out to move to West Virginiaโ€”or to create a bunch of immersive vacation rentals,โ€ Adams said. โ€œBut thatโ€™s exactly what happened.โ€

    Adkinsโ€™ family roots in West Virginia and eastern Kentucky made the region familiar, but it was a broader search around 2015 that first put the state on the coupleโ€™s radar.

    โ€œWe explored where the least expensive place to retire in the western world would be,โ€ Adams said. โ€œIt turned out to be West Virginia. The low cost of housing really helps, plus itโ€™s a bartering culture.โ€

    The couple spent years vacationing throughout the Mountain State, weighing options from Morgantown to the New River Gorge. โ€œWe fell in love with Pocahontas County, too,โ€ Adams said, โ€œbut itโ€™s just too tough to fly from there.โ€

    Advertisement

    Escape to West Virginia

    The turning point came during the COVID-19 pandemic, when cabin fever pushed the couple into a cross-country camping experiment.

    A cryptid-themed vacation rental, Mothmanor, includes a whole-house escape room. (Photo courtesy Appalachian Escapes)
    A cryptid-themed vacation rental, Mothmanor, includes a whole-house escape room. (Photo courtesy Appalachian Escapes)

    โ€œLike everyone, we got stir crazy and took a trial tent-camping trip to Yellowstoneโ€”to see if weโ€™d kill each other,โ€ Adams said, laughing. โ€œWe came back intact.โ€

    The experiment expanded into a months-long road trip in 2020, funded in part by renting out their Ohio home on Airbnb. โ€œThat trip taught us that the house did alright as a short-term rental,โ€ Adams said.

    โ€œSo when we sadly lost Rachelโ€™s grandma, and the cabin she kept in West Virginia, we thought, maybe we could find one of our own.โ€

    They then set their sights on a single idea: find a home within 15 minutes of the New River Gorge Bridge. In January 2021, Adkins spotted a prospect on Facebook Marketplace.

    โ€œWe called, set up a time, and drove down on a snowy January day,โ€ Adams said. โ€œThe owner walked us around, and, in a move that surprised me, we made an offer right there. I wrote it on a page of my Moleskine notebook, signed it, and handed it to him.โ€

    On the drive home, doubt set in. โ€œWe questioned ourselves and freaked out a bit,โ€ he admitted. โ€œBut we could buy a house and four acres in cash that was 15 minutes from the bridge and 10 minutes from downtown Fayetteville. It was exactly what we were looking for.โ€

    Advertisement

    Two days later, the deal closed while the couple was traveling again in their camper, and by May 2021, they were renovating the property and preparing it for short-term rental use. What surprised them most was the community's reception.

    The 48 is a totally renovated 1948 Spartan camper, which predates Airstream.Make some coffee and enjoy it between the mountains before headed out for hiking, rafting, or climbing.
    The 48 is a fully renovated 1948 Spartan camper that predates Airstream. (Photo courtesy Appalachian Escapes)

    โ€œWe expected to be looked at with some mistrust as outsiders,โ€ Adams said. โ€œInstead, we were embraced. The friendliness of our neighbors and everyone we met was overwhelming.โ€

    On one return trip from Ohio, the realization became clear. โ€œWe crossed the Ohio River in Parkersburg and looked at each other and said, โ€˜I think we just moved,โ€™โ€ Adams said. โ€œWe changed our driverโ€™s licenses shortly after.โ€

    The origins of Appalachian Escapes

    The creative heart of Appalachian Escapes emerged in Oak Hill, where the couple purchased two long-neglected houses on the same property. โ€œThe basement of one had water flowing out the door,โ€ Adams said. โ€œI joked it looked like A River Runs Through It, but without Brad Pitt.โ€

    The Lucky Penny Camper includes a heat pump, which keeps it cozy even in zero degree temps.
    The Lucky Penny Camper includes a heat pump, which keeps it cozy even in zero degree temps. (Photo courtesy Appalachian Escapes)

    The houses required so much work that long-term rentals no longer made sense financially. โ€œThatโ€™s when my wifeโ€™s ever-flowing spring of creativity came into play,โ€ Adams said. โ€œWe didnโ€™t want another basic rental that looked like Joanna Gaines had just left. Itโ€™s nice, but itโ€™s played out.โ€

    Instead, they leaned fully into themed design. The first unit was built around board games and early video games. โ€œThe light switches look like Nintendo controllers,โ€ Adams said. โ€œThe kitchen counter has a game on it. The driveway is a giant Monopoly board where humans are the pieces.โ€

    They added a simple escape room with a hidden prize chest, and the gamble paid off. โ€œHosting groups told us it was a bad idea,โ€ Adams said. โ€œThankfully, they were wrong. It took off.โ€

    Advertisement

    From there, the themes escalated: a candy-themed house that later became a wizard-themed โ€œmini Hogwarts,โ€ a Mothman house, an 1980s-inspired house completed in 2025, and now a steampunk-themed property featuring what Adams believes may be the only vacation-rental time machine in the country.

    Try out the Battleship themed escape room with treasure chest at the end, play life sized Operation and Monopoly, drop the Mousetrap on our toy mouse, have fun with the Nintendo Switch, play Chutes and Ladders or Candyland on playable blankets, and more!
    Try out the Battleship-themed escape room at the Game House and play life-sized Operation and Monopoly. (Photo courtesy Appalachian Escapes)

    โ€œAll of them have escape rooms,โ€ Adams said. โ€œGame and Wizard have simple ones. The other three are whole-house escape rooms, and there are only a few dozen like that in the entire country.โ€

    The couple also experimented with themed โ€œglamping,โ€ including a renovated camper. โ€œThat camper paid itself off in one year,โ€ Adams said. โ€œThatโ€™s 100 percent ROI, which blew our minds.โ€

    Beyond profitability, Adams says the project has allowed them to rescue properties that might otherwise be lost. โ€œWeโ€™re taking houses that were nearing teardown and giving them new life,โ€ he said.

    Remember Grandma's living room, getting movies at the video store, & personal pan pizzas at Pizza Hut? It doesn't have to live in your dreams anymore, relive the 80s/early 90s here!Tons of details like a salad bar, arcade games, console TV & VCR, tons of toys you used to have all make it an immersive experience.
    Relive the 80s with arcade games, a console TV & VCR, and tons of toys you used to play with. (Photo courtesy Appalachian Escapes)

    Four years in, Adams says West Virginia has exceeded every expectation. โ€œWeโ€™ve been to over 20 countries, and this is our favorite culture,โ€ he said. โ€œI saw a Tudorโ€™s Biscuit World sign that said โ€˜Be nice and work hard,โ€™ and that fits perfectly.โ€

    Life, he said, simply feels different. โ€œThings function like a village here,โ€ Adams said. โ€œKids are outside more. You know your neighbors. And itโ€™s all gorgeousโ€”the only state entirely in the Appalachian Mountains.โ€

    Looking ahead, Appalachian Escapes continues to grow, with new themed projects already planned. โ€œWeโ€™ve found something magical,โ€ Adams said. โ€œArt thatโ€™s fun, profitable, and pays for the next round of art.โ€

    Advertisement

    For those considering a similar leap, his advice is simple. โ€œIf remote work is an option and you like a slower-paced place,โ€ Adams said, โ€œI canโ€™t recommend West Virginia enough. We still canโ€™t believe we moved, but the people, the culture, and the natural beauty sucked us in.โ€

    West Virginia famous: Parachutists leap from the span of the New River Gorge on Bridge Day.
    Parachutists leap from the span of the New River Gorge on Bridge Day. (Photo courtesy W.Va. Department of Tourism)

    More information about Appalachian Escapes is available at AppalachianEscapes.net.


    Sign up to receive a FREE copy of West Virginia Explorer Magazine in your email weekly. Sign me up!
    David Sibray
    David Sibray
    Historian, real estate agent, and proponent of inventive economic development in West Virginia, David Sibray is the founder and publisher of West Virginia Explorer Magazine. For more information, he may be reached at 304-575-7390.

    LEAVE A REPLY

    Please enter your comment!
    Please enter your name here

    Hot this week

    West Virginia State Parks Foundation launches online merchandise store

    HURRICANE, W.Va. โ€” The West Virginia State Parks Foundation...

    West Virginia Travel Safety: What it means for residents and visitors in 2026

    CHARLESTON, W.Va. โ€” Travel safety in West Virginia is...

    Did Abraham Lincoln and Jefferson Davis secretly meet in West Virginia?

    PHILIPPI, W.Va. โ€” Did Abraham Lincoln and Jefferson Davis...

    Study finds WVU and its health system account for 17% of West Virginiaโ€™s economy

    MORGANTOWN, W.Va. โ€” West Virginia University and the WVU...

    Black bear harvest remained steady in West Virginia in 2025 as predicted

    CHARLESTON, W.Va. โ€” West Virginia hunters harvested 2,469 black...

    Topics

    West Virginia State Parks Foundation launches online merchandise store

    HURRICANE, W.Va. โ€” The West Virginia State Parks Foundation...

    Did Abraham Lincoln and Jefferson Davis secretly meet in West Virginia?

    PHILIPPI, W.Va. โ€” Did Abraham Lincoln and Jefferson Davis...

    Black bear harvest remained steady in West Virginia in 2025 as predicted

    CHARLESTON, W.Va. โ€” West Virginia hunters harvested 2,469 black...

    Spring arrives by sound and bloom in the hills of West Virginia

    FAYETTEVILLE, W.Va. โ€” In West Virginia, spring doesn't begin...

    Related Articles