Among the tales I heard as a kid of my Dad's wanderings in the pines in the 20s was mention of he and his Toms River friends (Bart Havens and Joe Citta) having come across some stretches of what he called "timbered roads." I can't remember if they were in a Model-T or a Model-A, but the report was that when they'd hit a timbered stretch they had to slow way down or risk immediate vibrational disassembly of their vehicle.
Anyway, Bart's father, Burt Havens (whom I met in '51 or '52 when I was eleven or twelve, respectively, and he was ... ancient ... probably only a decade or so older than I am now...) was considered something of a local history resource and had suggested that the timbered roads my Dad and his friends had found were probably remnants of roads laid down in pre-revolutionary colonial times - especially over or thru spongs or sloughs*. The cedar logs could be expected to last for ages and they stood up well under wagon and cart wheels going into or out of the pines with bog iron, moss, timber, charcoal, or what have you.
It was either that summer ('51) or the next one that my Dad decided he was going to show me some of those "colonial timbered roads". We headed down south of Chatsworth - maybe around Speedwell / Friendship- not real sure. Well, to make a long story short, after repeatedly getting our '41 DeSoto repeatedly stuck in and unstuck from the sand, and much hiking up narrow sandy traces into some boggy, soggy ground, we found not one splinter, much less a log of a timbered road. By day's end Dad was dejected - possibly because we didn't find the timbered roads of his youth, but I think also because I wasn't really into timbered roads and had had a great time anyway learning how to catch fence swifts without causing their tails to fall off. Hey; what's an eleven- or twelve-year old know from colonial timbered roads, much less care, right?
O.K.; so now I remember and am interested, but I still have no first-hand knowledge or evidence of the existance of a timbered road nor of any knowledgable history of such in the pines, but I figure if there are still some remnants or knowledge of them, this is the group to ask about it. Anybody seen 'em or know what I'm talkin' about? Or better yet ... what my Dad was talkin' about?
*which brings up another question: how do a slough and a spong differ from any other sort of boggy wetland? Last time I asked anyone about a "spong" they said there was a Spong who was an ultra- liberal Bishop of the Episcopal church - and looked at me as if everybody knew THAT! No help there...
Dave
Anyway, Bart's father, Burt Havens (whom I met in '51 or '52 when I was eleven or twelve, respectively, and he was ... ancient ... probably only a decade or so older than I am now...) was considered something of a local history resource and had suggested that the timbered roads my Dad and his friends had found were probably remnants of roads laid down in pre-revolutionary colonial times - especially over or thru spongs or sloughs*. The cedar logs could be expected to last for ages and they stood up well under wagon and cart wheels going into or out of the pines with bog iron, moss, timber, charcoal, or what have you.
It was either that summer ('51) or the next one that my Dad decided he was going to show me some of those "colonial timbered roads". We headed down south of Chatsworth - maybe around Speedwell / Friendship- not real sure. Well, to make a long story short, after repeatedly getting our '41 DeSoto repeatedly stuck in and unstuck from the sand, and much hiking up narrow sandy traces into some boggy, soggy ground, we found not one splinter, much less a log of a timbered road. By day's end Dad was dejected - possibly because we didn't find the timbered roads of his youth, but I think also because I wasn't really into timbered roads and had had a great time anyway learning how to catch fence swifts without causing their tails to fall off. Hey; what's an eleven- or twelve-year old know from colonial timbered roads, much less care, right?
O.K.; so now I remember and am interested, but I still have no first-hand knowledge or evidence of the existance of a timbered road nor of any knowledgable history of such in the pines, but I figure if there are still some remnants or knowledge of them, this is the group to ask about it. Anybody seen 'em or know what I'm talkin' about? Or better yet ... what my Dad was talkin' about?
*which brings up another question: how do a slough and a spong differ from any other sort of boggy wetland? Last time I asked anyone about a "spong" they said there was a Spong who was an ultra- liberal Bishop of the Episcopal church - and looked at me as if everybody knew THAT! No help there...
Dave