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Show and tell about places in nature that were, or are, important to you. Big majestic places, or everyday places.
Who: Ron
Where: Adirondack Park, NY
Why: I love being in unlogged woods, especially the North Woods of
spruce, balsam fir, hemlocks, sugar maples, yellow birch...
A few years ago, I finally fulfilled a promise to myself to spend some
time in the Adirondacks. I read up a bit, and found out about a
seldom-traveled dirt road south of Piseco Lake that runs through a
'virgin' spruce grove. I remember getting out of the car and looking up at
the impossibly tangled and steep side of East Notch Mountain and thinking
I'd like to climb it. So I did, crazy as it now seems to me.
Incredibly
thick mats of green moss grow in between long yellow birch roots,
obscuring 6-foot deep fissures in the ledges. Gnarled red spruce spike up
to the sky, with impenetrable tangles of balsam fir below. As I climbed, I
could peer through the dark tangle of needles at West Notch Mountain, also
covered in untouched old growth. "Now this is wild!" I thought. It was
like climbing a vertical thicket, surrounded by spruce swamps, black flies
and deep woods. Untamed and totally free. A forgotten land.
I return there once a year, just to bask in the aura of the dark, cool
woods. It's not a particularly 'pretty' place, nor does it hold grand and
majestic views. But it's much like it was thousands of years ago, and that
makes it special to me. Regular old woods, almost exactly like they always
were. That makes me happy.
Photo: The view from the Powley-Piseco Road looking south
to East Notch Mountain.
Tell us about your Special Place!
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