Into the Woods. Again.
Snail Shell Harbor
Big Sable Light House
Lower Tahquamenon Falls
Along the Trail
Roots
Excellent Color
Gillette Visitor Center
Stump Field
Stump
Hey, it's Joan!
Snail Shell Harbor
Downtown Fayette
Store
Town Hall
Pilings
Pilings
Snail Shell Harbor
Sky, Holland State Park, with kites
Snags
Frog, Cheboygan State Park
Chapel in the Pines
Pond on Cheboygan Point
Structures on the Beach
14 Foot Shoal Light
Details
Grape Vine
Leaves Along the Trail
The Upper Falls at Tahquamenon
Roots
The Upper Falls of the Tahquamenon River
The Upper Falls of the Tahquamenon River
The Upper Falls of the Tahquamenon River
The Upper Falls of the Tahquamenon River
The Upper Falls of the Tahquamenon River
The Upper Falls of the Tahquamenon River
The Upper Falls of the Tahquamenon River
Joan
The Upper Falls of the Tahquamenon River
Fayette
Fayette Company Store, 1981
A Magnificent Ruin
Fayette Company Office
Some Notes on Fayette Brown
A Side View of Fayette's Furnace
Saltboxes
Clark Lake Trail Ferns
Near Paradise
Roots
At the Trail Head
The Rest Room
Birches
Location
Keywords
Old Growth
Hartwick Pines State Park, Grayling, Michigan. Hartwick Pines has the largest stand of old growth timber in Michigan, a fifty-acre grove which was deliberately preserved when the area was logged in the 1920s. The preserved stand was originally 87 acres, but has shrunk as the trees aged and died. It is, of course, still shrinking. The pine grove is a small, albeit treasured, part of an enormous, 9,600 acre, wilderness park.
Pennsylvania also has a "tall pines" state park, called Cook Forest, which Joan and I visited in 1999. The Pennsylvania park, which is similar in size but has much more old growth, seemed then to view its old pines as a doomed treasure. Michigan's park emphasizes rebirth, growth, and cycles in nature. A better perspective, methinks.
Both are very impressive places, and worth a visit.
Pennsylvania also has a "tall pines" state park, called Cook Forest, which Joan and I visited in 1999. The Pennsylvania park, which is similar in size but has much more old growth, seemed then to view its old pines as a doomed treasure. Michigan's park emphasizes rebirth, growth, and cycles in nature. A better perspective, methinks.
Both are very impressive places, and worth a visit.
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