boberic wrote:
Local pathways N.E. Ct
I like 1 and the gate in 2.
KYShop713 wrote:
There's a nice wooded walking trail around a business park that I worked at a few years ago. I loved to go there on my lunch break to de-stress. It worked!
Lovely path and season to de-stress.
DWU2 wrote:
Here's a slightly chillier path, taken in Blacklick Woods in Central Ohio.
Boots needed that day. Nice one.
More to share: Rocky River Reservation
creativ simon wrote:
P4 A path i would like to venture down Rr
Especially before the tourists wake up, LOL simon
boberic wrote:
A combination of Maple and Oak. All secondary growth. Most of the trees in the entire N.E. Ct were cut , for pasture or charcoal. That's why all the stone walls. It has been said the the biggest crop here is rocksl
And copperheads, Bob. The stone walls are quite a history. Funny that you mention this because at the age of 13 I was helping my father and uncle clearing wood in Easton to make a field Thanks for the memory
photophile wrote:
I love to follow paths and would enjoy seeing your paths, too!
Good start here, Karen.
Paths that lead to any slot canyon in northern AZ or UT would be my compulsion if I could spend more time there.
I love these challenges and thank you all for the kind compliments!
photophile wrote:
I love to follow paths and would enjoy seeing your paths, too!
This first image is McKittrick Canyon in Guadalupe Mountains National Park. The park is one of just a small number of locations in Texas that produce this degree of fall colors.
The second is one has a funny story and a vocabulary word: Pareidolia. Pareidolia is the tendency for the human brain to assign a meaning or association to visual stimuli, like seeing animals in cloud formations or maybe, after a couple of hours alone on a trail, imagining a large cat is looking your way.
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