All,
Jessica and I returned to Vermont again this week for the second time to visit Chickering Bog. Located near Montpelier it is a "Fen" that was formed 10,000 years ago when the glaciers were receding. It looks so much like a typical pine barren bog that once we left the woods to enter the bog it was as if we were back home here in NJ. Acquired by the Nature Conservency it is now accessible to anyone physically fit enough to walk to it. Many of the same rare plants that we find here in the barrens also grow there. It is a typical quaking bog with vegetation over 35 feet thick.
I was going to put these photos in the "Where is this " thread but decided to not waste anyone's time guessing.
I found this along the trail by the bog as we were leaving.
http://www.nature.org/ourinitiative...ces-preserves/chickering-bog-natural-area.xml
Guy
Jessica and I returned to Vermont again this week for the second time to visit Chickering Bog. Located near Montpelier it is a "Fen" that was formed 10,000 years ago when the glaciers were receding. It looks so much like a typical pine barren bog that once we left the woods to enter the bog it was as if we were back home here in NJ. Acquired by the Nature Conservency it is now accessible to anyone physically fit enough to walk to it. Many of the same rare plants that we find here in the barrens also grow there. It is a typical quaking bog with vegetation over 35 feet thick.
I was going to put these photos in the "Where is this " thread but decided to not waste anyone's time guessing.
I found this along the trail by the bog as we were leaving.
http://www.nature.org/ourinitiative...ces-preserves/chickering-bog-natural-area.xml
Guy
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