I was having a conversation with a fellow Piney the other day about ways to navigate naturally without compass or gps and we discussed solar or shadow navigation for awhile and then the subject of vegetation came up. When it's cloudy the sun,moon and stars will not help but plants and trees can.Many smaller plants can be seen to follow the sun with their tips,they usually lag about and hour or so behind the sun because a plant can't move that fast unless it's a venus flytrap of course but they will follow the sun even when it's cloudy but these types of plants die off in winter and are no help then so this leaves us mostly with trees in the Barrens. Now most trees especially Pine and Oak which accounts for almost every tree there is in large areas of the barrens send out their straightest (most horizontal) and thickest limbs on their south to east (most often southeast) sides.On their northern sides the limbs tend to be smaller and point more upwards like their reaching for the sun their not getting.You have to use trees that are one, either in the middle of the woods .(not along a field edge or a roadside) or in the Middle of a field where the tree gets equal access to sunlight from all directions.If your tree is growing along the edge of a sunlit area weather road or field it will naturally throw it's best branches into the sun and give you a false reading. Here are some bing photos I have found to illustrate.This first tree http://binged.it/1m6CA5J is a large oak about a mile from my house in a WMA field.The image is facing east so the biggest limbs should stretch about 45 degrees to your right and it appears they do. This second tree was saved from destruction by hue and cry from the Wawa property it sets on when they built this Wawa back in the 80's this is looking west.again the branches stretch to your left this time and toward you a little,SE. http://binged.it/1m6E3ZL and this third tree no longer stands.It was probably the biggest tree in Millville but a couple years ago they cut it down.Why? I don't know.Had a couple dead limbs but was very much alive.You can still see the massive stump and the trunk sectioned up laying on the ground.I used to play under it as a kid while Mom did laundry.It is so big no one has been able to take the sections. once again facing west http://binged.it/1m6Enb8 .These are all oaks but the same principle works just as well on pine.Maples in a swamp are very hard to use.Their a wild shaped tree that does it's own thing.Young cedars that you can see the tips of work well.Their tips usually point to the sun,once again lagging somewhat and if you know the time of day you should know where the sun will be.Oh by the way moss does not grow only on the north sides of trees but it does generally grow thicker there and sometimes higher up the trunk due to the moist shaded microclimate.
When I was in Saudi Arabia I was there in winter and the wind constantly blew out of the NW so every pebble or shriveled up shrub had a pile of sand (dust really) in the lee of the object pointing SE so even in cloudy weather (didn't have much of that) you could drive in a straight line across the desert(I drove 5 ton) and never have to check the compass,this also helped at night when we were allowed to use our lights because it was awful hard to drive and crane your neck out the window looking for the North Star.
Any other suggestions out there for Natural Navigation?
When I was in Saudi Arabia I was there in winter and the wind constantly blew out of the NW so every pebble or shriveled up shrub had a pile of sand (dust really) in the lee of the object pointing SE so even in cloudy weather (didn't have much of that) you could drive in a straight line across the desert(I drove 5 ton) and never have to check the compass,this also helped at night when we were allowed to use our lights because it was awful hard to drive and crane your neck out the window looking for the North Star.
Any other suggestions out there for Natural Navigation?