Yesterday Jeffery inquired about the stones in the foreground in my deer picture....
Here is some info and some pictures from today's trek these are running all through the woods
and along the trails. I cover 2 miles and below are images of the walls I pass by.
New Hampshire farmers have been building stone walls since the 18th
century, if not earlier. Originally, the stone walls helped to mark
boundaries and rights of way. They also served to separate different
parts of farms, at times keeping livestock out of areas where they were
not wanted. Finally, stone walls served as a place to deposit the many
rocks found in New Hampshire fields. Throughout the 19th century, the
stone walls varied in size and quality. Some were quite formidable.
Today they are an attractive landscape feature and a reminder of New
Hampshire's agricultural roots.
By One Estimate, there were over 250,000 miles of stone walls.....
MORE HISTORICAL INFO HERE
This last one I added my foot to give reference to the size of the stones
Yep, when the land 'grows' rocks, you gotta do something with them...
ReplyDeleteMost of them are left from the ice that covered New England. There is a plaque near the flume gorge near Franconia nh that says the ice was 2 miles thick
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