Visiting the Monster

smoke_jumper

Piney
Mar 5, 2012
1,661
1,252
Atco, NJ
We made it out there today:)
IMG_3788.jpeg
 

lexuhbooz

New Member
Nov 15, 2025
1
1
Port Republic, NJ
These extraordinarily dry conditions made for a good opportunity to make a trek out to a location that is normally quite difficult to get to.

My brother and I entered at Rockwood yesterday in his well-equipped 4x4 and made it all the way to within a few tenths of a mile of our quarry, without encountering so much as a puddle. The land is parched and the only obstacle right now is deep and soft sand.

Follow the corduroy road...

View attachment 23658

As we approached, the beast slowly emerged from the swamp.
View attachment 23654

View attachment 23661

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It is a thing of beauty. I am glad to see that it remains much the same as in photos I've seen in other posts here from 20 years ago. Remarkably, it still seems to contain at least a little bit of diesel fuel.

It is wild and gorgeous out there. I hope that I will be able to return and explore more of this swamp at some point, but I am not sure when that will be. It is only by virtue of the extreme drought that we were able to get here without heymaking an entire day of it. Perhaps the access situation will improve in the near future. One can hope.

These extraordinarily dry conditions made for a good opportunity to make a trek out to a location that is normally quite difficult to get to.

My brother and I entered at Rockwood yesterday in his well-equipped 4x4 and made it all the way to within a few tenths of a mile of our quarry, without encountering so much as a puddle. The land is parched and the only obstacle right now is deep and soft sand.

Follow the corduroy road...

View attachment 23658

As we approached, the beast slowly emerged from the swamp.
View attachment 23654

View attachment 23661

View attachment 23657

It is a thing of beauty. I am glad to see that it remains much the same as in photos I've seen in other posts here from 20 years ago. Remarkably, it still seems to contain at least a little bit of diesel fuel.

It is wild and gorgeous out there. I hope that I will be able to return and explore more of this swamp at some point, but I am not sure when that will be. It is only by virtue of the extreme drought that we were able to get here without making an entire day of it. Perhaps the access situation will improve in the near future. One can hope.
Hey stiltzkin,
I’ve lurked this forum for about a year now as I’ve done most of my exploring of my own accord and got a little tired of visiting the same locations over and over so I’ve used these forums to find a few awesome places such as Union Clay Works and Van Note Camp (shoutout to the guys that made those threads if you see this!). My next mission is the swamp monster and I have it basically mapped out, and your post stuck out to me as it is most recent and you mentioned Rockwood. I visited Rockwood today and I’m curious if a year ago there was a locked gate back on that trail. Or if there was, is there a trail that shoots off Rockwood that bypasses the gate? We were trying to look for a way but it started to get dark and we turned around. We did however find the remains of this structure that I’m not sure what it is but it was quite interesting (maybe someone on here knows). I’ve attached photos. There’s also a flat foundation on the opposite side of the trail.
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I also know of this old “bridge” that is no longer a bridge (also attached a photo, hopefully I’m doing this right)
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I waded across this water but in September so it was a bit warmer, but I do have muck boots to do it again if this is truly the only way to get to the swamp monster. I will say, I have been to this old bridge site before in 2009, and I had no idea that the swamp monster was nearby at the time. The above photo is from September of this year and it was my first time seeing the location since 2009. It was crazy to see the difference. Here’s the picture of when I was there from 2009.
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Okay I talked enough. Thanks for letting me join this forum and I appreciate any information on getting to the swamp monster! Especially if there’s a workaround on Rockwood.
 
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stiltzkin

Explorer
Feb 8, 2022
560
840
Medford
Hi lexuhbooz,

I ended my first post in this thread hoping that the access situation would improve to reach this area, but sadly the opposite has happened.

You're probably already aware of this if you've been reading this forum for a while: despite public outcry and multiple townships passing resolutions in opposition, in November of last year NJDEP adopted a "visiting vehicle use map" that eliminated legal driving access to more than half of the roads in Wharton. Unless this situation changes, it leaves no good options to visit the Monster and the area around it that don't involve a long day trek.

The several ways to get there that I know of are:

1. Driving in from Rockwood, which it sounds like you tried. There were no gates, plastic whips, or signage in place last year when we made this drive, which was just a few months before the map was adopted. If there is a gate there now, I'm not sure if the state or someone else has put it there - I haven't personally seen it. On the vehicle map Rockwood technically no longer counts as a road after about here. That's more or less in keeping with earlier topo maps that don't show that it actually continues meandering along the edge of the Great Swamp until it eventually meets up with West Mill / Pleasant Mills Road to the southeast.

2. Driving in by entering at West Mill Road off of 206 used to be perfectly legal. However, in 2017 a private citizen who does not own the road was able to get the town of Hammonton to grant him an exclusive license to gate it off to everyone but himself and his friends, effectively making it a private road. The state is aware that this happened but decided not to take any action on it. This situation has been discussed in other threads on this forum. Additionally, this entire road is now not shown on the new vehicle map. It was shown on preliminary versions completed after gathering public feedback, and then removed in the final version. I have not heard any reason why.

3. You can walk in from Pleasant Mills using the road behind the church, but it's a pretty long walk from here, about 8 miles round trip through soft sand and some rough terrain. You also used to be able to enter with a vehicle from here until sometime around 2000, when the bridge failed (it can still be traversed on foot). This bridge seems unlikely to ever be repaired, with the church not wanting through traffic and especially now with the whole road stricken from the access map.

4. You could park around here and then hike to the former bridge across the Nesco Creek which you posted photos of. Since even the planks are gone now, you would have to wade the creek, which may not be advisable. It does cut the distance roughly in half, if you can get across. It would be nice if this crossing could get rebuilt at some point for access on foot.

You can find accounts of other site members here that have done all of the above to get there.

As far as the photos of the old cellar holes you posted, if it is the cluster of buildings here, then I believe those are what is left of the small settlement of cranberry pickers from the days when Rockwood was a functioning bog. The sandstone foundations are likely older than the concrete. I'm sure others here can fill in much more information than that, or correct me if I am wrong.
 

Teegate

Administrator
Site Administrator
Sep 17, 2002
26,662
9,696
The bridge behind the church has recently collapsed even more so before you go that route you should walk back there and see if you can make it across. If you can’t, the best way in from that area is to park at the triangle parking area at Batsto just past the church and walk the road along the fence to the path on the left. Take that across the foot bridge and that comes out on the other side of the damaged bridge on the other side of the church. Your trip will be about 8 miles so be prepared for that.

Btw, the ruins you visited are private property and the owners are hunters or let hunters use it. You don’t want to go there at all, especially this time of year. They usually block it off with caution tape.

So if you can't get across at the church take this road and once across the stream go left and you will come out at the road behind the bridge on the proper side of the stream.

 
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Boyd

Administrator
Staff member
Site Administrator
Jul 31, 2004
10,466
3,434
Ben's Branch, Stephen Creek
Welcome to the site - great first post!

(also attached a photo, hopefully I’m doing this right)

Please re-size photos before posting here, Ben has limited space on the NJPB server and most of your pix are around 4MB at 4052x3024. There's really no reason to post an image this large, the forum software will just shrink it anyway. I suggest a width of around 800 pixels, maybe 1000 depending on the shot.

There's some discussion of ways to accomplish here this if you don't already know how. Thanks!
 

Teegate

Administrator
Site Administrator
Sep 17, 2002
26,662
9,696
I just looked at our 3/14/2004 photos of the day PBX was there and here are our tracks for that day. We went other places so the 8 miles I mention is incorrect if you just go to the monster and back. It may be more like 6 miles.

This shows us walking and entering at the church bridge at the bottom of the photo, visiting the monster and then traveling further to another location, and then to the bridge across the Nescochague and then back to the church. I would highly suggest you go this route to the monster and back except you may need to cross the footbridge mentioned in my previous post and not the church bridge if you can't cross there. Rockwood with the gate makes the Rockwood route not advisable.

Don't give the parties responsible for the Rockwood gate the satisfaction that you had to park your car at the gate when you should be able to drive further. However, they actually will know because of the camera they placed nearby if it is still there. Don't give them the satisfaction that you even had to WALK Rockwood road because of the gate. No satisfaction for them is satisfaction for me.

Topo_Track (8.5 miles).jpg
 

Boyd

Administrator
Staff member
Site Administrator
Jul 31, 2004
10,466
3,434
Ben's Branch, Stephen Creek
Driving in by entering at West Mill Road off of 206

Not to get too far off topic, but I'm curious why you chose OpenTopoMap here. In my experience, it's arguably the worst topo map of the Pines. Low resolution (level 15) with many missing roads and other features. The hydro data is especially terrible, it only has minimal, low-resolution features and very few of them at that. Just look at what is missing when you compare to the USGS 24k topo or my own, which uses contemporary USGS data.

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It's been awhile since I've been in that area, so perhaps there's something about OpenTopoMap that makes it a better choice here? Also, since this is Atlantic County, we have a nice set of aerials for the 1940's, 50's and 60's that aren't available for the other counties. The 1957 aerials show some standing buildings at Rockwood pretty well, for example.

The street maps have the most clear definition of private property vs. public openspace (which is shaded green). There are absolutely no guarantees as to their accuracy, so use them at your own risk, but I did my best within the limits of available open geodata. Use the XT app for even more detail.
 
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