Sunday, April 17, 2016

Apr 16 Sunset Hike at Pilot Mountain


The Friends of Sauratown Mountains met for a covered dish supper near the summit of Pilot Mountain. After supper and fellowship, we heard some comments from President Jay Young. He mentioned our group may be close to receiving approval to operate Vade Mecum on an interim basis. He also mentioned we had received a $2500 grant (coupled with $1500 from FSM) from the Friends of State Parks to build a walkway in the Lake picnic area at Hanging Rock. 

Pilot Mountain superintendent, Matt Windsor then updated us on his park. He was happy to report a 70 acre addition to the park, referred to as Pilot Creek access. The kids' fishing derby will be moved to this property. It also will have a milkweed field for the benefit of Monarch butterflies. It appears another addition to the park will provide Ararat and Yadkin river frontage, making it possible to have another paddle access to the Yadkin. There are some projects planned by local colleges and universities. Surry Community College will conduct a dendrochronology study of trees to determine historically, how frequent fires were in the park. Wake Forest will put 20 motion detecting cameras throughout the park for a year to document all the wildlife passing by. They also will fly a drone overhead with infrared detection to count the deer population after the rut.

Finally, the long wait for a Pilot Mountain Visitors Center may be coming to an end. The project is a priority among all the State Park projects listed in the recent bond referendum. The design is supposed to be completed this year and bid out next year. Matt commented, that would be a land speed record but we could endure a bit more. Of course that is exciting news. Matt added, although the Visitors Center is needed, of equal importance is a transportation system. If I could interject my greenmon observation here: A Visitors Center will increase traffic as will the new interstate adjacent to the park. Pilot Mountain's visitation is growing without those factors and looks to continue to ramp up in the future.  The current traffic situation is a result of the popularity of the summit area and its limited parking. On many weekends, park staff is relegated to traffic control all day. In my opinion, that is a terrible waste of resources. Pilot Mountain Park Rangers are highly trained and knowledgeable in so many areas. Having them direct traffic keeps them from enhancing the visitor experience. Visitors must endure a long wait or park outside the park and walk up, making the road a walkway, something it was not designed for. I am dismayed when I visit the park and see this situation. It can be improved.

Getting back to Matt's comments. He feels this is the best and maybe only, time to get a shuttle system funded and operational. If it is not done along with the construction of the Visitors Center, it may possibly be years more of traffic duty. Matt has investigated other shuttle systems, like the one at Kennesaw Mountain. These systems work well. The short ride to the top of Pilot Mountain on a shuttle with either canned or live commentary, would orient the visitor to the park better. Everyone would have an opportunity to get to the top, something not happening now. Matt feels very strongly this system needs to be in place to serve the public on their visits to Pilot Mountain for the next half century. I fully support this.


Another project at the park involves propagating Bear Oak and transplanting them in the park. Right now only about 100 are in the park and about 500 are needed to make it a sustainable population. 


What a clear and gorgeous night it was for a sunset hike around the big pinnacle. The sun had just set as we set out. The clarity of the western mountains was as good as I have ever them it.

Grandfather Mountain in the evening sky


Matt explains how the rock was formed. It is metamorphic rock created by pressure when the area was 2000 feet undersea. Some spots have black layers which would have been black sand congregating together, heavier than other sand. He also mentioned some rock became superheated due to pressure. Those areas formed quartz. Often they would not be a horizontal layer of sediment but diagonal lines.

The lights of the surrounding countries were all on. Matt calls it the Mercury Vaper phenomenon.

I have done this sunset hike 3 times and always enjoy it. Matt can be so informative and incorporates his wonderful style of humor into the commentary.


Apr 6 Little River State Park


Little River State Park is located just outside Waterbury, Vermont. It is April and I thought it would be a nice time to hike in Vermont. I started out in 16 degree weather by the frozen Waterbury Reservoir. The early morning sun was glistening off the ice and warming it just enough to cause it to crack. To me it sounds as if the ice is crying or moaning. The cracks last a moment or 3 to 4 seconds as they travel through the ice.


My route follows the Stevenson Brook. It is frozen in many spots. I'm glad to see bridges because that water looks cold. The route I've chosen goes by a number of old homesites, a couple cemeteries, a sawmill and school. This area was first settled in the late 1700s. It was logged and farmed and Maple sap was collected for over a hundred years. At that point the land had been over worked and many of the farms began to fail. That coincided with end of subsistence farming as industrial jobs in other areas were luring the folks away.


At one time this was a thriving community. There were a couple very large dairy farms, a church, school and many homes.


Remnants of that era are seen everywhere. I have no idea what this was. Farm equipment?


This appears to be a steam boiler, possibly to operate the sawmill located here.


Glass from a former homesite sits on the stone foundation for a barn.



Here is the foundation for a very large barn. It looks like it had a sizable crawl space under the first floor.

Saturday, April 16, 2016

Apr 2 Smallpox Cemetery Guilford Connecticut


The smallpox cemetery located off Tanner Marsh Road in Guilford had its origin in 1760. It was in March of that year, the General Assembly of the Connecticut Colony raised troops to fight in what is now referred to as the French and Indian Wars. The Connecticut troops from Guilford were led by Captain Ichabod Scranton. He began with 79 men. The Connecticut boys were used as logistical support for the professional British army. Although they saw little fighting, Capt Scranton returned with only 57. They were discharged in Albany on Nov 22, 1760. It was there, they were exposed to smallpox. The men marched toward home but upon arrival, they were ordered to stay in a quarantined area of Guilford. In May of that year, the town had purchased 9 acres of land remote enough to serve as a quarantine area. Several years later a house was built but Capt Scranton and his men (29 of them were from Guilford and subject to the quarantine), camping in the open was what they had to endure.  


Family could only see them or leave food and supplies from a great distance. In December, 3 of the men died and were buried in the "pock lot". Presumably, the others survived. Often the survivors would have terrible pocks on their bodies.

In 1765 a house was built on the lot to house people with smallpox until they either died or survived. It is thought that just a few died and were buried on the lot. Perhaps as many as 9 were buried there.

The cemetery was not defined back in the 1700's. That was done in the 1920's when some folks decided it just didn't look like a decent cemetery. They had a stone wall enclosure built. Worse, they took what few original gravestones and put them in the enclosure along with a number of other flat fieldstones, turned up like grave sites. 


Here, Capt Scranton gives us a history lesson on the war. After he spoke, historian, Joel Helander gave a talk on smallpox and the history of the cemetery.


The original pest house still exists with a few additions. It was dragged up from the pock lot by some oxen to the point at which it now stands. Later this year a tree ring dendrochonology study will be done on some of the original timbers.


March 29 Skunk Cabbage


I grew up with skunk cabbage. It was always nearby in a boggy area. Connecticut has many boggy areas. We'd have fun ripping it up and smelling it. However, I never paid attention to its bloom. In early spring, it has a blossom, often when snow is on the ground.


The blossom looks like a rattle inside a shell. The shell is a spathe like a jack in the pulpit has. This is a mottled purple spathe and an equally colorful blossom inside. 


The plant generates heat which puts it in a category of plants with thermogenesis capability. Often, snow around the plant has melted due to the heat it generates. Carrion feeding insects are attracted to the blossom and the heated spathe which must be entered to get to the blossom.

Nov 19 Quechee Gorge

  At 165 feet deep, Quechee Gorge is the deepest gorge in Vermont. The Ottauquechee River flows through it. The name is derived from a Natic...