MarkBNJ,
Thanks, I was just looking for clarification and explanation not confrontation. Sorry if you took it the wrong way.
So, has any human group ever had anything to "do" with the Pines in your opinion?
Slag heap here we come baby!
Let be so bold as to opine.
Every (somewhat local) human group throughout history has had something to do with the pines.
For the early indian inhabitants the pines were essentially an obstacle between the various life sustaining water bodies in the pines and the Atlantic Ocean. The pines themselves were a poor source of sustenance otherwise.
For the early industrialists, the pines were viewed as a source of fuel and a fair source of iron bearing materials and supported a substantial economy based on them.
One industrialist, Joseph Wharton, would have sucked all the water he could suck out of here if he could have.
For earlier and present day agricultural entrepreneurs, the low ph and the well drained soil has been utilized for berry agriculture wherever possible and where alteration through liming and fertilizing has been performed, other types of agriculture.
Berry operations are now under strict control by the "Commission" because of their dependency on a high water table, ipso facto, wetlands .
For those that enjoy the pines for the warm and fuzzy feeling of hugging a tree, poking a frog with a stick, trodding through swamps, shooting a deer, driving a truck through the woods, participating in an enduro or watching a bird preen, you have to realize and accept that those are much more recent phenomenon and a reflection of the luxury of leisure time that we are able to enjoy.
We all happen to be part of a generation that is only 75 or so years removed from those who had to break their ass trying to make a substandard living and stay alive in these barren woods.
The early inhabitants didn't have the time to sit back and enjoy all of the esoteric things that these woods provide.
We have to be tolerant of all users of the pines and the few organized and permitted enduros that are run each year are hardly an infringement on our overall enjoyment of the woods.
I don't like my dog eating horseshit from the middle of a dirt road but I don't plan on grandstanding against horseback riders in the woods.
Scott