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  1. Spung-Man

    Goshen in Camden or Burlington?

    I have not seen evidence another mill pond upstream from Old Goshen (Goshon, Goshion). The Cook-Vermeule map has a cranberry bog complex established on the old mill pond remains. Is it possible that the existing timber ruins are cranberry bog infrastructure...
  2. Spung-Man

    Goshen in Camden or Burlington?

    Bob, I document how cattle were raised in Pine Barrens savannah in an upcoming work. There were cattle drives to other areas with the winter rise in the groundwater table. For example, I grew up by Calfs Head on Calf Pasture Branch in Buckhorn (above the Old Tomlin Place). The farm was above...
  3. Spung-Man

    Goshen in Camden or Burlington?

    There is a small pond where the "new?" Goshen Pond resides.
  4. Spung-Man

    Goshen in Camden or Burlington?

    This post on Old Goshen caught my interest because of its association with meadow or savannah habitat that was once likely present by the Atsiunk River. According to a 1758 deed to Abraham Leeds (West Jersey Loose Records #60711) there are two unnamed cripples “near ye head of a Saw Mill pond...
  5. Spung-Man

    Richland Ruins

    Manumuskin, You do get around! 'Bet you didn't know that you were on Hance Bridge Road at its intersection with the Old Lmmis Road. The former trail connects the Union House with Smith's Little Mill above Weymouth. The latter trail connects Mays Landing's Lummis Causeway over Lummis Run with...
  6. Spung-Man

    Meteors! (was: René-Levasseur Island)

    Hey all, Sorry for the slow response. I find the land-surface of the Pine Barrens intriguing. That includes the terrain here by Bennetts Mill, which is very old and full of lore. I’ve written about the spungs (dark spots below) in the new book manuscript, which are collectively called the...
  7. Spung-Man

    Dams on Buckshutem Creek

    Bob, I've been by that location on Casino a hundred times to visit dear friends a mile up the road and had no idea that the hill was there, relict plateau composed of Beacon Hill Gravel facies of the Cohansey Formation. Many thanks!
  8. Spung-Man

    Dams on Buckshutem Creek

    Awesome thread… There was a Buckshutem Branch in Monmouth County by Wykoff Mills, now called Bannen Meadow Branch (Brook), so that name is not unique to Cumberland County (Buckshootem Bridge in Beekman 1915: 116–117). It is in what is now Howell Township, named in honor of Governor Richard...
  9. Spung-Man

    Tar Kiln Locations?

    Pine Tar Cordial, great for dyspepsia! I don't recall anything out of the ordinary about Pettit's oatmeal preferences. Simple. I'm amazed at how the lidar imagery has renewed interest in charcoal pits and tar kilns. Great stuff, nice to catch up. Going back to paperwork but should be back...
  10. Spung-Man

    Tar Kiln Locations?

    Yes, that too was a portable sawmill above Hunters Mill. Carl Farrel at Hamilton Township Historical Society did some work on that one.
  11. Spung-Man

    Tar Kiln Locations?

    Years back on occasion I used to breakfast at the now long-gone Pine Grove Restaurant on Delsea Drive near Dorchester. Specifically, the visit timed to meet up with an old woodsman by the name of Russ Pettit (if memory serves) who lived across the highway. His favorite dish was oatmeal, which...
  12. Spung-Man

    Tar Kiln Locations?

    Boyd, about the high ground by you... The hill east of the Steelman sawmill site is Stony Hill and the one west of that mill site is Skunk Hill, presumably for the coaling going on there. Charcoal camps were often called skunktowns because of their acrid smoke. I believe that structure on the...
  13. Spung-Man

    Tar Kiln Locations?

    There are tar kiln dripping pans near tributary heads all along the Manumuskin. The pair at Cedar Branch, tributary of the Manumuskin, are just above the intersection of Mattox Road and the trail to Canute Neck or Parsontown below Bennetts Mill. The "runnels" identified by Bob are in the right...
  14. Spung-Man

    Various From Today

    That would be great, Guy! The spung name a little further east across Drivers Branch provides a window to the original landscape—Desolation Pond! Today's Hammonton Branch was once called Long Meadow Branch, attested by the "meadow land" on the Clement survey. I envision this to have been...
  15. Spung-Man

    Various From Today

    Guy, That's the repaired Cedar Branch bridge of Old Forks Road, in extant by 1761. The white stone building in the background is by ~1800 a tavern owned by Shoemaker, although it is potentially older. There was another tavern (Cains) about 5 miles to the SW on this road where it crossed today's...
  16. Spung-Man

    Storm

    Guy, Your tree looks like a callery pear, maybe even a Bradford. That tree-type (esp. Bradford) has an inherent branch defect that cause them to self-destruct after 20 or 30 years. Branches arise in tightly packed pairs or clusters, and so are poorly joined to the trunk in co-dominance. Two...
  17. Spung-Man

    Exploring Today

    It sure looks like Phragmites to me too, which arrived here in western Atlantic County over the last decade. The foothold seems to be power-line right-of-ways where service roads are crossed. My hunch is that seeds might be hitch-hiking on maintenance equipment. Twenty years ago Phragmites...
  18. Spung-Man

    Garden 2020

    Gotta have squash latkes (pancakes)! Levari's Farm Market still has large tobacco plants. Jimmie might even know the cultivar name. The old farmhouse (c. 1817) there is timber-framed, and once served as a charcoal station by the Abbotts. That stretch of US Route 40 was laid out in 1817, and the...
  19. Spung-Man

    Garden 2020

    Here's eight weeks of progress on the sandpile: It’s been a pretty good year for cool-season crops. Broccoli Raab is finished, as are the first crops of lettuce, parsley, radish, choy sum, and cilantro. Pine voles got three romaine heads, and Blue (the duck) gobbled two butterheads before I...
  20. Spung-Man

    Garden 2020

    Wow, those are tiny seedlings. Will Brightleaf or Burley make a serviceable ornamental? I remember seeing tobacco used as a large bedding plant at comfort centers Down South. Their piercingly sweet evening blooms were downright narcotic.
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