Various railroad photos from Wharton to Cape May over the past year
Pan, I don't know if the wreck photos were taken long ago, but the pines look awfully small and sort of sparse. I haven't walked that section of track but from Carranza and Tuckerton the pines now seem larger. I may have to hunt that down, but I imagine the wreck is largely gone.Sep 22, 1971. Train wreck by Carranza Memorial.
I had been thinking for some time that the barrens look and smell (to my completely untrained eye and nose) generally unhealthy. Lots of rot, overgrown brush, and moss. Pan's photos show the wrecked train in what looks like a pine tree nursery. I wonder if that's why there are so many chiggers. I lived in Absecon in 1962-64 and although my friends and I ran in the woods all the time, I do not ever remember getting bitten by a chigger.The pines were all like that back then. What you see today is because of not letting them burn.
I couldn't agree with you more.The pines were all like that back then. What you see today is because of not letting them burn.
Pan, I don't know if the wreck photos were taken long ago, but the pines look awfully small and sort of sparse. I haven't walked that section of track but from Carranza and Tuckerton the pines now seem larger. I may have to hunt that down, but I imagine the wreck is largely gone.
Sep 22, 1971. Train wreck by Carranza Memorial.
bobpbx post: 136036 said:Pan, are you absolutely positive that was near Carranza Memorial?
I knew of one by Pine Crest, and there was a box car door there the last time I went, but I never heard of one near Carranza. I also saw what appeared to be rail car pieces here.
http://maps.njpinebarrens.com/#lat=39.746523846867966&lng=-74.70171946685792&z=15&type=nj1995&gpx=
I knew of one by Pine Crest, and there was a box car door there the last time I went, but I never heard of one near Carranza. I also saw what appeared to be rail car pieces here.
http://maps.njpinebarrens.com/#lat=39.746523846867966&lng=-74.70171946685792&z=15&type=nj1995&gpx=