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  1. Spung-Man

    And so it begins....

    An EIA-Related Land-Use Planning-Change Scenario In the publicly funded Buena Vista News (June-July 2009), the Township Mayor wrote an article entitled “The Richland Village Project – Grants, Improvements and Myths…” Within is stated, “Richland is not going to have sewers.” Yet, it appears that...
  2. Spung-Man

    And so it begins....

    Redevelopment and Smart Growth Yes, the (mis)use of Redevelopment and Smart Growth will have an effect upon all facets of Pinelands stewardship. For example, wetland-rule considerations: Pinelands Comprehensive Management Plan Wetlands management Proposed Amendments: N.J.A.C...
  3. Spung-Man

    And so it begins....

    Redevelopment and Smart Growth sorry, it posted twice. For some reason different browsers are giving different results. I'm a Mac, so Bob's post above looks fine to me but is broken on other formatted displays. These issues seem to be relicts related to cut-and-paste.
  4. Spung-Man

    And so it begins....

    Final Report Department of Environmental Protection Transition From the report: "Accordingly, DEP must take the following actions to address this situation: Permitting Reinvention Delegate land use permitting to the Meadowlands, Highlands, and Pinelands Commissions for the areas within...
  5. Spung-Man

    ætna furnace, Tuckahoe

    Only the inner firebrick lining remains intact in the postcard photo, and the outer ironstone "pyramid-shaped" structure has been pilfered since the sketch was imaged. The sketch date may be spurious, indicating the date drawn but its "whole" image was copied from an older photograph...
  6. Spung-Man

    ætna furnace, Tuckahoe

    Encyclopaedia - encyclopedia I still have that cursed battle today with wind-action’s Latin dipthong Æ ! Aeolian – Eolian
  7. Spung-Man

    ætna furnace, Tuckahoe

    A Blast from the Past... Jeseryman, This is an interesting view of (A)Etna. At first glance I thought the post card mislabeled. The edifice looks nothing like the classic hearth-view of Etna (see below). Then it clicked. Your photo may have been taken from the ramp-side, which is looking...
  8. Spung-Man

    A new fight over how to save the Pinelands

    Referred to Assembly Environment and Solid Waste Committee Hmm, I wonder what this is all about? Spung-Man New Jersey State Legislature 2010-2011 A501 Prohibits Pinelands Commission from altering pinelands management area boundaries. Environment and Solid Waste Last Session Bill Number...
  9. Spung-Man

    Chigger Bites...! ouch!

    Old-timey Cures The local farmer’s cure for both poison ivy and chigger bites is buckhorn plantain (Plantago lanceolata), a “white-man’s footprint” weed that escaped Europe. First, pick a fistful of fresh leaves, clasp hands, and roll the vegetation into a little green wet mass. Then lift the...
  10. Spung-Man

    "Driverless" ATV seen on Route 18

    Here's to you, Joe Sapia, the Spotswoods' champion! Ben, I'm a proponent of Pine Barrens outliers, detached islands of sandy, pine-tree dominated terrain that exist beyond what is customarily considered "The Pines," even to Sayreville. Their plant-material component may not exactly match the...
  11. Spung-Man

    Pine Barrens Beer

    Pray tell, what brew pairs with this menu? Down-to-the-Carrot… Ah, does anyone remember this local eatery (in Pomona, next to the bar once endearingly called Quigley Mansion)? I was cleaning files and found this relict of Stockton State College primeval. My acquaintance with the...
  12. Spung-Man

    Pine Barrens Beer

    Jimmie crack corn… Eric, Early on I understood this minstrel’s message; the protagonist was preparing a mash to make moonshine! Grain cracking for grist is a necessary step to convert starch to fermentable sugars by enzymatic conversion. On occasion farm hands enlisted me into collecting...
  13. Spung-Man

    Pine Barrens Beer

    Ethnic Archipelago Eric, For authenticity, search out a copy of Weiss (1963: The Early Breweries of New Jersey, 98 pp.). Harry B. Weiss authored a magnificent series of monographs on a suite of vocational topics for the New Jersey Agricultural Society. Within are a few local brew recipes...
  14. Spung-Man

    The Pine Barrens and some South Jersey Communities in 1868

    Upon Jerseyman's Suggestion... I've been asked to clarify this point. Spung appellatives 1-16 provided above were collected from South Jersey vernacular and specifically used to collectively describe Pinelands enclosed basins. Similar shallow depressions are found within several hundred...
  15. Spung-Man

    Check your basement

    A Brief Return to Historical Shallow Groundwater Levels Water-table levels might seem excessive during the winter of 2009/2010, but I suggest even higher levels were once the norm here. Locals, who have long-term memory of their surroundings, widely accept in their collective knowledge that the...
  16. Spung-Man

    Cycling through the Pine Barrens in 1895

    The Bicycle, the Trolley, and the Telephone Jerseyman, Thanks for reminding us about this once all-important conveyance. We forget the formidable influence cycling had upon South Jersey’s transportation history as a prelude to the auto era. Wheelman considered the bicycle to be superior...
  17. Spung-Man

    The Pine Barrens and some South Jersey Communities in 1868

    Beloved Spungs Jerseyman, I wish to thank you again for your delightful posts! This reference to South Jersey’s enclosed basins (i.e., spungs) escaped my attention – especially the appellative “slush.” Slush, according to the Oxford English Dictionary, means “liquid mud or mire,” which is...
  18. Spung-Man

    A new fight over how to save the Pinelands

    A Revisit to Richland Village “Buena Vista Township Mayor Chuck Chiarello said Ashmun was fair and thoughtful when he appeared before the commission over projects such as the redevelopment of the railroad town Richland Village.” http://forums.njpinebarrens.com/showthread.php?t=7161 I...
  19. Spung-Man

    A Description of the Pine Barrens, 1908

    Pining-Away on a Sunday Afternoon! Bobpbx, You’ve piqued my curiosity about the genetic potential for pine-tree heights, so here’s what I found out. Farjon (1984: 99, Pines: Drawings and Descriptions of the Genus Pinus), a real stickler for facts, indicates that Sugar Pine (Pinus...
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