All,
You may want to very quickly read over the posts in this thread first to refresh yourself.
Yesterday, I visited the two spungs that Jeff previously photographed, and I have taken the liberty of adding Jeff's photo's to my post for comparison. Here is the round spung when he was there, and yesterday when i was there.
Jeff's previous photo.
And mine from yesterday from a slightly different location.
Nearby there is a "sunglass" shaped one and here is Jeff's photo of it.
Mine from yesterday. Significantly less water.
Looking the other direction.
And straight ahead where it is at it's thinnest.
An ATV tested the "water" and was going to try to travel in it.
This bird was there and did not seem to mind we had arrived. What kind is it?
With those two out of the way I turned my sights on the spung that started this thread. Mudboy Dave had noticed it on aerial and mentioned it was near where he grew up, and he was going to visit there with his dad. I mentioned to him in a PM that I was waiting for him to go, and he assured me that it was fine for me to visit before he did. So today I decided to do just that.
I did a little homework and figured out where the best place to start from to make the trip as easy as possible. Fortunately, I picked the perfect entrance location and worked my way directly to it. It was completely dry.
These poles were in the middle of it. Usually, they are water testing equipment but these are different. They even had some sort of string tied on them, almost like a sign. Maybe a former PBX rest stop
A fire break went right through it! That seems ridiculous.
A panoramic.
http://teegate.njpinebarrens.com/09052010/pan.jpg
From there I traveled to the 1/4 mile area. I wanted to run my GPS through it's paces and see what was going on there. I know of a well hidden parking area and from there started through the woods to arrive unseen. Using the map I picked the location and flawlessly made it directly to the spot. The place was empty so I turned around and headed back a different way. I had marked my car and made my way easily back to it. The GPS worked very well and the maps actually were nice. I now need to try it in a cedar swamp.
Along the way I found what I believe is the old road that was used maybe even by me in the 70's.
The other direction.
A few other views.
And this was most likely an old sawmill that I saw on my travels.
Guy