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ebinmaine

One of our better hikes.... Pic heavy!

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ebinmaine

Here's the videos. 

 

Volume UP for these. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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lynnmor

There are some of those double stone walls in my area of PA, my thought is that it may be for driving sheep place to place and they are found in very rocky areas..  While the odd tree you found may not be an Indian Marker Tree, it is something to look for.

 

My laptop wants you to stand closer to the microphone, on maximum settings I hear very little.

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Mows4three

I still say Trina found a 6’ 4” HooDoo on the loose.   One of the knuckle dragging variety…….

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Mows4three

But, really nice pictures!

 

Dave

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ebinmaine
7 hours ago, Mows4three said:

I still say Trina found a 6’ 4” HooDoo on the loose.   One of the knuckle dragging variety…….

Agreed. 

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Stormin

 I tend to agree with Lynnmor about the walls. We have similar over here in places. Old drovers roads used for moving live stock.

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ebinmaine

There's definitely a fair amount of logic to that considering a lot of Southern Maine and large portions of New England were sheep country for about four decades in the early 19th century. Cattle of course have been here the whole time.

Also of note headed towards that reasoning, Trina noticed that the walls in some sections are higher than normal.

Most stone walls in this area are only about waistline, maybe belly button height.

Some areas of these were a foot or more taller.

 

 

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Burnerman

Nice hike! I gotta take a ride up to Maine. 
Got out this weekend myself. Hiked the hill up behind the house. EE6FF674-A392-45D5-96F8-B8D2AF372955.jpeg.504fcf1c2354032204bf164ae17009d1.jpeg9C354BF5-60D3-4726-891B-878AA66949B4.jpeg.18f9bd0eab0c4e1a83451af3602d976d.jpeg1E296771-9524-4CF4-B39D-319BCD2AC6F0.jpeg.6a34c5480e42670a0d32f55c76210bcb.jpeg

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ebinmaine
57 minutes ago, Burnerman said:

Nice hike! I gotta take a ride up to Maine

You stop on up. BBT and I will show you our local mountains. 

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ebinmaine
22 hours ago, lynnmor said:

My laptop wants you to stand closer to the microphone, on maximum settings I hear very little.

Meant to mention earlier Lyn. 

That's the first time we've recorded a video like that at any distance.  

Both of us figured it would pick up better. Obviously not so much.  

Trina was also quite surprised by how LOUD 🔊 the leaf crunching was considering she is well known for VERY light foot steps. 

 

Lessons learned...

 

Your comment is appreciated so we know what others hear and see.  

 

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Chestnut

Very cool hike. My wife and I just joined the local trails committee and will be working on a local trail. It's owned by the wildflower trust and the wildflower ladies are put off by the grass closing in on the legs. We understand. Sharon was one of the 160 unlucky people in Maine to get Babesiosis this year. Took a while to get the test back so she got treated for Lyme for a week. Babesiosis requires a different drug.

Those are cool Hemlock Reishi (Ganoderman Tsugae) https://eattheplanet.org/hemlock-reishi-the-mushroom-of-immortality/ mushrooms. Not edible but have been used in oriental medicine for a long time. Western medicine research is just catching up/catching on. I love October hikes. Found half a dozen varieties of edible mushrooms one weekend this year. If you're around one of those ancient oaks in October, especially one that's in decline, look around the base for hen of the woods (Grifola Frondosa) https://www.marylandbiodiversity.com/view/15516. It was the first wild mushroom I ever ID's and ate, and it got me hooked. Haven't found any in a couple of years and that tree where I found the first one is back in NH and part of the trail is posted now anyway. 

Whenever I see one of those old monster oaks in October I always check around the base. 

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ebinmaine
5 hours ago, Chestnut said:

Very cool hike.

Thank you sir!

 

I'll share your thread with Trina. She'll get a kick out of that mushroom information.

 

Next time you're down this way if you want to go for a walk in our forest let us know.

 

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Chestnut
20 hours ago, ebinmaine said:

She'll get a kick out of that mushroom information.

 

Next time you're down this way

I got hooked on looking for/at mushrooms about 12-13 years ago. I don't have my other computer with me right now but I could tell the exact date. We were hiking up Mt Garfield working on "the list" and I made the same comment "what an interesting mushroom"! On the way down I saw it again. Another hiker was carrying it out for the cook pot. Bought a book when we got home and found out it was Lions Mane, (Hericium Erinaceus) https://www.healthline.com/nutrition/lions-mane-mushroom

 

Got a beginner's guidebook when we got home and found our first edible, a chicken of the woods a week later and was hooked.

 

I also like looking for mushrooms because it forces you to look around and see the forest. Specific mushrooms prefer to associate with specific trees, so you need to be able to be aware of and ID the trees around you, often by bark. I'm getting better.

 

I'd love to get out in your woods. Probably wait until spring and it may only be me. One of us has to be around to make sure the MIL eats every meal.

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