Category Archives: Haze County

The Hill 02

The miraculous top of The Hill. I didn’t expect *this* at all: some kind of old children’s fort or perhaps a squatter’s former home. Complex and also dilapidated enough that it’s difficult to tell exactly what it once was. I’ll let my overexposed pictures attempt to speak the story for now.

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Angel lying in front of what appears to be a door. Front? Again I can’t really make much heads or tails of the structure.

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Nearby rotting trunk with an old stick of deodorant.

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There’s what appears to be some native rocks in the vicinity as well.

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Back down at The Road.

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And now further down at The House. Is this our yard???

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The Hill in reference to the Blue Mountain Urban Landscape. Technically it is part of that landscape I would assume. ALO on Leola Creek is in the center of the background.

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The Hill 01

The Hill is a marvelous marvelous place in the center of Blue Mountain city. It’s clearly magical and has ways to protect itself from development. But for how long? That has become a key question. A key question indeed. 10 years out — well that’s probably okay. But if it starts to get developed next year then that’s more of a problem. Much more. Of course I’d rather not see it developed *ever* but this is a growing city and The Hill represents an improbable spot of leftover nature. It will be razed. Just a matter of time.

We start nearer the bottom of the hill at The House. The House? Is it our house? It is in a probable reality. More on that soon. The bricks here might become part of a New Monkey City. Have I mentioned Monkey City on this blog? A couple of time, especially in connection with “another” New Monkey City over in Frank park near Whitehead Crossing.

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A pretty straight path goes in a northeast direction up the hill from the road below, reaching a point formerly called The Beach. The Beach on The Hill, ha. I haven’t visited this place in maybe 20 years. Maybe 30. And it’s really changed. I remember it to be covered with moss and lichen, which are nowhere to be seen now.

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Before starting up The Path we detour to a bank (The Bank?) that gives us a nice view of a commercial strip below us and then ol’ Blue Mountain itself rearing up in the background.

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After about the length of Blue Mountain State College’s football field, this path crosses the grassy remains of an old road that runs around the south and west side of the hill. I suppose this becomes, then, The Road. More capitals.

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If you follow the old road northward from here you soon come back into civilization in the form of Blue Mtn. residents’ backyards on a bordering northern street. Here we see faux deer in one of those backyards. Didn’t come when called.

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We jump to the top of The Hill now with this picture, or more specifically, the edge of a pretty steep bank marking its western side. I thought I’d include the photo because of possible light spirits involved. Spirits of The Hill. Probably not, but also probably worth a thought anyway.

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Moss covered rock at the base of a tree passed as we approach the top from the other side.

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Then following The Path *down* from the top soon brings us to The Beach. I suppose I’ll still call it that even though it has nothing of the appearance it did before that gave it a beach-y feel.

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Purple mushroom on The Hill.

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Red leaves on The Hill. Is it Fall already? Jees.

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BL Urban Landscape Again

Picnic table near Point-1 is getting more rickity. Pizza time! Maybe they didn’t like their pizza and pitched a fit there. Put their foot down about it, ha.

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There’s that deer again! And in the same exact spot. LINK I’ve seen quite a number of deer now in the Urban Landscape. Surprising since there’s so relatively little of the woods there. Deers adapt.

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I believe this stringy yellow plant is called Golden Dodder, a parasite.

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I took this picture beneath the Point-0 Bridge and didn’t realize the woman to the right (between columns) was sitting there beside the creek until a minute later. I’m not sure what she was doing, but later I spotted plants arranged on a rock near where she was sitting. Offering to the creek?

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Green. Just green.

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Canine Pool has been filled to the brim with recent rain. We’ve had some downpours lately.

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It’s obvious that during heavy rain Canine Pool spills over into the road, perhaps flooding these apartment houses at times. Not wonderful.

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And this day I was very excited because complementary Molar Pool was also filled with water. It’s shallower still of course. I’m not sure why one manhole cover in front of it is colored blue. Is this symbolic of the pools themselves which it’s positioned between? One blue (with water) and one not usually? Who knows what messages the Urban Landscape taunts in our face to recognize?

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This is a car nearer Point+1 celebrating the life of a famous Blue Mtn. State College football coach. I’m not sure why the car is painted dark brown instead of blue. Oh… blue paint again (!).

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And again! (picnic tables even nearer Point+1)

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BM Urban Landscape 08/02/15

Surprising rock wall on Leola Creek just beyond what I’ve determined is the west end of the Blue Mtn. Urban Landscape. What a find!

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Even closer to Point+1 on our BMUL map is this viewing deck, accessible via a complex, winding staircase from the apt. buildings on the ridge above.

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Then directly opposite it is what can only be described as a rather large scale rock art installation, centered by a long walk created directly beside the creek. To give some location reference, you can spot the bridge at Point+1 in the background glare if you look closely.

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The installation, as I’m dubbing it, includes a considerable number of internal features such as this small bridge.

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The main building of the property exhibits this primitive art painting in a window… reminds me strongly of a Howard Finster picture. Are the painting and the rock path created by the same person?

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Interesting chair overlooking Leola Creek on an adjacent lot.

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With its several levels of meaning, this area obviously acts as an important western extension of the Blue Mtn. Urban Landscape. I shall return here soon!

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Carr. Chat

(joined in progress)

bmul01

Carr.:

The Sphere tells all. Speak to The Sphere. One under, one over. A bit. Bite. Bite it.

bb:

Amazing that you can even see that sphere or ball on the map, Carrcassonnee. This would of course be the one partially above water. High albedo effect here… like Venus. Maybe that’s why it’s hard to take a good picture of it.

Finding the [second] submerged Sphere while wading up the creek kind of shocked me. For one, I didn’t know I was so near to the first. Who could have put them there?

Carr.:

Earthlings.

[delete 4 exchanges]

bb:

The effect of the interview with Karl is wearing off, Carrcassonnee, and I’ve lost my capital B’s.

Carr.:

They will returrn.

bb:

Thanks again. So, this Blue Mountain Urban Landscape. Can you talk to me more about it?

Carr.:

You sit beside me in Collagesity, asking questions. I answer.

bb:

I want to show you a[nother] map. It’s of what I call ALO near the center of the Blue Mountain Urban Landscape.

Carr.:

Best to always say that as a full phrase[ so I can understand].

bmul02

bb:

I thought the center was where I marked it on this map. Now I’m thinking different. The 2nd yellow pin, unnamed, appears to be a center of toy activity.

Carr.:

Corr. ect.

bb:

But it’s on restricted ground. *Don’t* want to f* with the owners.

Carr.:

Nah. Stick to the stream. They’ll understand. Peanuts all.

stonethrow10

Remove Peanut from The Hole.

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bb:

Wonderful. The Hole in the very center of the animated tetraptych I recently completed. The most complex collage I’ve yet created, Carrcassonnee. The center of that?

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Carr.:

UM. Yes. Yeah. Yea!

bb:

You play around with language sometimes like you’re not from around here.

Carr.:

You know I ain’t already.

bb:

Alien, then.

Carr:

Allen, yeah. Yep. Yup.

bb:

Do you *live* in that spot on the creek I’ve highlighted?

Carr.:

High Albedo. Me.

bb:

*You’re* The Sphere.

Carr.:

Talking to ya. Biting back. Bite the hand. Feed me. Venus. Uranus. Submerged. Neptune and Uranus. *Or* Venus and Earth. You pick. You choose. Your choice.

bb:

I think the totally submerged sphere, then, would be Neptune. Totally out of sight. Totally hidden beneath the waves. Uranus — can be seen with the naked eye sometimes if you know right where to look on a clear night. So that’s the one that pokes out from the stream. Or… maybe it is Earth.

Carr.:

I need a home on Earth. I will be therre.

bmul01
baker b. shortly determined that it’s probably Uranus still and not Earth. Thus its faint appearance on this map. Signal.

Soo…

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Neptune.

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Uranus.

bmul01
Uranus.

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BM Urban Landscape 08/01/15 02

More shots from Blue Mountain Creek, just upstream from its mouth.

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Flag of a local car dealership poking up from the creekside vegetation. Land that I love.

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The large culvert I mentioned before where I turned around in my Blue Mtn. Creek wading. The pool in front of it is pretty deep for the creek’s size, and may have reached my upper torso in spots.

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Metal pipe at the confluence of Blue Mountain Creek and Leola Creek once more.

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So reaching this conjunction again I then wade up Leola Creek for quite a ways. Actually, about a third of a mile as I’m checking GoogleEarth now. Shortly beyond the meeting with Blue Mtn. Creek I passed under this bridge decorated with more interesting graffiti. Not sure exactly what this is suppose to be, and I’ll have to return here to take a better shot for more scrutiny. Add it to the list.

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Then probably a couple 100 yards further up the creek brings us to the second sphere, a rather shocking find. Subsequent chatting with Carrcassonnee brought me to the conclusion that this represents the planet Neptune, as the similarly sized sphere behind the town mall equates with the similarly sized planet Uranus. More on all that here.

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BM Urban Landscape 08/01/15 01

Wading day! Yes, this was the afternoon I literally decided to dive in and complete a project I’d had in mind several weeks: the wading of Leola Creek through a considerable chunk of the Blue Mountain Urban Landscape.

I started at the ALO community garden area where there’s easy access to the creek. My goal was to hike west on the creek toward the town mall. Mission accomplished (!).

As it turns out, probably the most interesting spot on the creek that I visited this day was fairly close to the start, or just past the central ALO region. Its design is that of a wider strip of land between creek and commercial buildings to the north, enough to generate a type of internal microcosm, let’s say, at least in my eyes.

I don’t have a name yet for this microcosm, but I know it’s owned by what we can call Peanuts. Or perhaps just one particular Peanut pictured here. I won’t divulge the reasons for this association, but it’s a one-to-one matching. Peanut(s) owns this land.*

I plan to revisit this place very soon, perhaps using a more direct route from across the creek. I’ll attempt to make a map the next time. But for now, the below, overexposed pictures will have to serve. Certainly one of the more interesting aspects of this area is the higher cliff pictured below, topped with a number of rocks that are unfortunately dotted with poison oak plants. However, that’s about the only poison oak or ivy I saw in the immediate area. Kind of surprising. As I’ve stated before in this blog, such plants are not as common in the Blue Mountain environment as they are in, say, the lower Mythopolis of the piedmont region or even Middletown, another mountain berg but of lower elevation and more southern position. Chalk that advantage up to Blue Mountain over the others, then. And, parallel to this, give Blue Mtn. the advantage for having cooler summer temperatures, which certainly makes it a more pleasant place to live through much of July and August. But again that pendulumic downside: the harsher winters. Yeck!

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The above cliff top is maybe 30-40 feet above the creek. Between it and Leola Creek is a strip of flat land which contains, among a number of other interesting features, this splayed cluster of large trees. I’ll have to determine a species later on.

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And then there’s the pipes dangling over the cliffs to the north and west of the one pictured above. I didn’t get a chance to examine them closely this day. They also clearly show up on GoogleEarth.

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A nice long stretch of rocky beach lies near the beginning of this strip, and seems to represent the part most protected from prying eyes.

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Another very interesting tree lies on the north side of the strip, just past the numerous pipes.

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Moving beyond this wider swath of land between stream and civilization, we quickly encounter a series of apt. buildings, the first of which can be quite clearly seen from the creek. People within the apts. can also see me, and one did while tossing refuge in a pile at the top of the creek bank near me as I waded by. He seemed appropriately puzzled about what I was doing. But then he moved on, perhaps thinking I was fishing for trout, although I had no rod in hand. Or perhaps he just didn’t care and had more important things to consider at the time, like what to cook for supper.

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Beyond the row of apts. in continuing to head upstream, we come again to that important confluence first spoke about here. To the right is the mouth of Blue Mountain Creek. To the left is the continuation of Leola Creek upstream to the mall and beyond. But since they’re both of about equal volume, the name situation could have been reversed. Or at least Blue Mountain Creek could have instead become the namesake continuation of Leola Creek.

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Monarch butterflies on a sandbar (well, mudbar) near the stream conjunction.

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An old motor found in Blue Mountain Creek just upstream from its mouth. I followed this creek for maybe 100-150 yards to a deeper pool fronting a wide culvert underneath a highway, but decided not to go any further in that direction.

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Instead I went back to the conjunction and kept on following Leola Creek upstream. Wading quickly turned trickier in this smaller flow, as the creek bottom became rockier and more uneven. I had to take it slow and easy to avoid loosing my balance on the slippery stones.

Piles of small rocks like this were encountered all along my journey up Leola Creek. I do not yet know or understand their meaning.

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—–

* On perhaps a related note, check here:

https://schulzmuseum.org/about-the-man/frequently-asked-questions/

Why is the comic strip named Peanuts?

Originally, Charles Schulz named his strip Li’l Folks, but when it became syndicated in 1950 by United Feature Syndicate, there was concern about possible copyright infringement with a cartoon called Little Folks by Tack Knight that had been published in the 1930s. Schulz suggested Charlie Brown or Good Ol’ Charlie Brown, but the syndicate decided upon Peanuts. The name Peanuts was likely chosen because it was a well-known term for children at the time, popularized by the television program The Howdy Doody Show, which debuted in 1947 and featured audience section for children called the “Peanut Gallery.”

“I don’t like the name of my strip at all. I wanted to call it Good Old Charlie Brown, but the person at the syndicate who selected Peanuts just picked it at random from a list of possible titles he jotted down. He hadn’t even looked at the strip when he named it. The syndicate compromised on Sunday, though. Once I rebelled and sent it in without any title. We finally agreed to put Peanuts at the top and include Charlie Brown and His Gang in the sub-title on Sunday.”
– Charles M. Schulz, 1969

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BM Urban Landscape 07/31/15 02

Leany telephone poles near the western edge of the ALO region.

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Nearby confluence of two similar sized creeks to form Leola Creek. One of the 2 retains the name upstream. This would be the creek to the left in the below photo. The other one is called Blue Mountain Creek. Correspondingly, it flows through the middle of the Blue Mountain downtown region about 2 miles upstream from here. This is truly an important fork: a name decision of some consequence in both physical and psychic realms. The next day I would wade past this confluence several times. More on the wading story in the next several photo posts here.

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A rock with bird feathers on its top lies near the opposite shore: Feather Rock, then. Again, sorry about the overexposed pictures. I usually hike more toward the middle of the day when exploring the Blue Mountain Urban Landscape. Tough to take a decent picture then with my 15 year old camera I’ve lovingly nicknamed “Liquor”.

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Back up from the creek, and on the same property shown in the first photo above: a purple vacuum cleaner with green trash bins.

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BM Urban Landscape 07/31/15 01

Lookout near Point-1 from the other side of Leola Creek. Originally pictured here.

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At the back of the same commercial building with this lookout: a perhaps disrepaired fruit drink vending machine. Well, who needs those anyway when you have cokes and pepsis?

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Another picnic table was found this day, tucked around a corner of a neighboring building.

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Also on this day I explored more of Leola Creek’s mouth, finding some nifty and meaningful things. A nice fishing or wading pool exists on the creek it empties into (unnamed, as stated)…

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… formed by a dam at this power station. The Leola Creek mouth would be just downstream from here.

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Yet another picnic table was found positioned near this mouth, light blue in color. What a nice getaway spot.

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Back in the Urban Landscape proper, this butterfly posed for me on a leaf in bright sunlight. It’s really been nice up here in Blue Mountain for the past couple of days. I even took off Friday to enjoy the weather, and may take half a day tomorrow (Monday) as well. We’ll see if I can wrap up some stuff at work first.

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The word “ALO” found in a bus stop. Admittedly I doctored this photo a tiny bit, erasing two dots within the “L”. I think it is suppose to instead be an “E”. But now it’s not. The bus stop is located on the south edge of what I’m calling ALO, and I think the graffiti could be a synchy resonance anyway, if only for my eyes — and now your eyes, dear reader.

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More “messsages” wtihin the same bus stop.

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BM Urban Landscape 07/25/15 07

I’m going to head back into the Blue Mtn. Urban Landscape today for more picture taking and wanted to make sure I finished the texts for the related posts I had already created. So here goes!…

Actually all of the related photos remaining to be talked about from last week’s photo shoots are from a particular location on Leola Creek, reachable from behind the town mall. The Urban Landscape “trail” basically skirts the creek to the south and west of this mall. Two concrete drainage channels leading off from the back parking lot allow direct access to the two beachy areas involved.

This is the first one, further west and and smaller.

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This is the second. Although I worked at this mall for about a 5 year period during the mid 80’s and explored a lot of the immediate area, I don’t recall this rather large rocky beach. Perhaps it has formed in the meantime. Anyway, the discovery of it this past weekend was quite the pleasant surprise. I immediately felt it to be another psychic center of the BMUL.

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A quite mysterious large sphere is firmed lodged in the creekbed here. I’ll attempt to take a better picture of the object this weekend.

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Looking west toward the first beach pictured above.

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I forgot to include a photo I had of the quite interesting cliff region across the water from the rocky beach, but that’s okay. I’ll take more pictures this weekend, like I said.

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To the left in the below photo is the second drainage channel, counting from west to east. And at about a 45 degree angle relative to it is the first and matching channel to the right.

One additional note for now: Although you can reach second beach from first beach along the creek, it is not an altogether easy walk through some weeds.

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07/26/15:

Now last Sunday’s pictures.

It was hotter than the previous day, and I didn’t take nearly as many snapshots of the BMUL. However, I did get this neat photo from the public garden area near its center: 3 closely placed benches forming an equilateral triangle. More geometry to think about (!).

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And I also got some decent pictures of neighboring ALO, as I’m calling it, including the first picture in this blog of the house I joked to wife Edna about that I wanted to buy there. Add in that the small unassuming structure is also just across the road from a 16 unit student housing building and you can perhaps understand Edna’s total lack of enthusiasm for my idea. But yes, to me it’s still a central place.

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Although you probably can’t make it out, the entrance to the ALO shortcut path already talked several times before is in the vegetation to the right in the above photo. Or actually I think it would be just beyond the right side of that photo, or just to the north that white pine tree.

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At any rate, here’s the path shortly after the beginning, white pine to left. The dead evergreen in both the above and below photo may be a failed attempt at replanting an old Christmas tree.

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Center of ALO and also the ALO path. The mysterious wooden object seen before here has disappeared.

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