Back on Labor Day of '08 I visited an Ore Pond deep in Wharton State forest. While there I discovered slag in, near by, Deep Run and an old cord road. Believeing the cord road lead to the nearby Batsto river where the bog iron was loaded on barges to be shipped down to Batsto furnance, I tried locating the load in port by kayak along the batsto at a later date, unsure of my success. Here is that old report; http://forums.njpinebarrens.com/get...r-ore-pond-something-else.html?highlight=pond
Today, with my PBX brethren, we attempted to locate the load in spot, check out the mystery slag in deep run, and explore the ancient ore pond. Attending were, myself, Bob, Guy, Jess, Tom, Gabe and Ed
We met at Atsion Ranger station at 9am and then off to deep run. Sadly, the water levels were significantly higher than my previous visit making it impossible to locate a single piece of slag. Some began to doubt my original claims but I swore to be vindicted some day when the water levels dropped again. The original pics of the elusive slag:
There was also this unusal piece of iron? between two downed trees
We followed deep run for a bit before turning towared the ore pond
Gabe along deep run
Enormous sweet gum lined the banks. Some of them rotting near the base of the trunk
Guy and Jess near the southern base of the ore pond
A section of the ore pond today
how it appeared in '08
The higher water levels took the edge off the orange a bit. We located the cord road, only a short section and had to estimate the direction to the batsto river. an aerial photo provided some guideline and we reached the batsto with little evidence except for one lone post still remaining in the water. A dock perhaps? 200+ years ago. Probably!
At the Batsto, Guy demonstrated birth control methods used by iron era bargemen. The downside is the effects tend to be permanent.
From there we traveled to the skit to investigate a clearing I have been curious about for more than 12 years. My camera was acting up and I didn't get much photos. we found lots of disturbance but little hard evidence of historical human presence. An outhouse pit or well was located and based off of some observations I had from aerial photos we located a causeway/dam which was pretty impressive.
the beautiful skit
A great day to out in the wood with perfect weather.
Jeff
Today, with my PBX brethren, we attempted to locate the load in spot, check out the mystery slag in deep run, and explore the ancient ore pond. Attending were, myself, Bob, Guy, Jess, Tom, Gabe and Ed
We met at Atsion Ranger station at 9am and then off to deep run. Sadly, the water levels were significantly higher than my previous visit making it impossible to locate a single piece of slag. Some began to doubt my original claims but I swore to be vindicted some day when the water levels dropped again. The original pics of the elusive slag:
There was also this unusal piece of iron? between two downed trees
We followed deep run for a bit before turning towared the ore pond
Gabe along deep run
Enormous sweet gum lined the banks. Some of them rotting near the base of the trunk
Guy and Jess near the southern base of the ore pond
A section of the ore pond today
how it appeared in '08
The higher water levels took the edge off the orange a bit. We located the cord road, only a short section and had to estimate the direction to the batsto river. an aerial photo provided some guideline and we reached the batsto with little evidence except for one lone post still remaining in the water. A dock perhaps? 200+ years ago. Probably!
At the Batsto, Guy demonstrated birth control methods used by iron era bargemen. The downside is the effects tend to be permanent.
From there we traveled to the skit to investigate a clearing I have been curious about for more than 12 years. My camera was acting up and I didn't get much photos. we found lots of disturbance but little hard evidence of historical human presence. An outhouse pit or well was located and based off of some observations I had from aerial photos we located a causeway/dam which was pretty impressive.
the beautiful skit
A great day to out in the wood with perfect weather.
Jeff