I drove my daughter and her friends up to 4H camp Monday. It is in the very northwest corner of the state, above the Delaware Water Gap in Stokes State Forest. After dropping her off my wife and I drove up to High Point since I had not been there since I was a kid. On the way up through Stokes, the trees were mostly some sort of spruce and white oaks, with little ground cover.
When we got to the top I was surprised to see the ridge dominated by lowbush blueberry, chestnut oak, and a stunted pine they call "ridge pine". In fact, it is a Natual Heritage priority site for these plants. It felt like I was home in the pines only on top of the world. The view was gorgeous, you can see 360 degrees around you into New York and Pennsylvania, with a glimpse of the Delaware River as it winds through Port Jervis. I was really impressed, it was a lot better than I remember as a kid. They have interpretive signs, and one explained how the valley in front of us looking into New Jersey was once a vast glacial lake, and the receeding waters deposited rich organic dirt where there are now huge onion farms.
This was worth the ride.........bob
When we got to the top I was surprised to see the ridge dominated by lowbush blueberry, chestnut oak, and a stunted pine they call "ridge pine". In fact, it is a Natual Heritage priority site for these plants. It felt like I was home in the pines only on top of the world. The view was gorgeous, you can see 360 degrees around you into New York and Pennsylvania, with a glimpse of the Delaware River as it winds through Port Jervis. I was really impressed, it was a lot better than I remember as a kid. They have interpretive signs, and one explained how the valley in front of us looking into New Jersey was once a vast glacial lake, and the receeding waters deposited rich organic dirt where there are now huge onion farms.
This was worth the ride.........bob