Showing posts with label Tree. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tree. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 28, 2018

Fox Creek Trail

This post is based on a project I did for my middle school forestry class in the seventh grade in the spring of 1995. The Fox Creek Trail is located behind the former Rainier Elementary School (now the Riverside Community Church) in Rainier, Oregon, and is maintained by the Friends of Fox Creek. The numbered map on this page was drawn by Friends of Fox Creek founder (and my 4th grade teacher) Darrel K. Whipple. I drew the bird at the end, probably to fulfill a requirement of the assignment. My original text follows with the photographs, even though the information is not entirely correct any more.

A NATURE TRAIL

There is a nature trail located behind the downtown elementary school in Rainier, Oregon, on the corner of West C Street and West 3rd Street. There is direct car access to the trail as it is located near the school parking lot. The trail is used for educational purposes and the trail is numbered to show points of interest. There is a trail by the creek that could be used for a picnic area. There are birds and squirrels in the forest and salmon in the creek.

KEY POINTS

  1. LOCATION
  2. RECREATIONAL VALUE
  3. HABITATS
MAP

Fox Creek Trail Map

Rainier Elementary School
Rainier Elementary School

Entrance gate
Entrance gate

1. Gateway Alder
1. Gateway Alder






Photo Missing







View from #2

3. Crooked Douglas Fir
3. Crooked Douglas Fir

4. Wetland
4. Wetland

5. Wetland
5. Wetland

6. Beaver's cottonwood in wetland
6. Beaver's cottonwood in wetland

7. Octopus tree
7. Octopus tree

12. "J" tree
12. "J" tree

Woodpecker tree, just after #12
Woodpecker tree, just after #12

View from #15
View from #15

Saturday, March 3, 2018

1992 California Trip: Trees of Mystery

Trees of Mystery in Klamath, California, on March 19, 1992

Our family's last stop on our 1992 California trip was Trees of Mystery in Klamath, California, on March 19, 1992. Trees of Mystery features a trail among a number of unusual trees. It also features chainsaw carvings and a museum of Native American artifacts.


Paul Bunyan & Babe at Trees of Mystery on March 19, 1992

One of the most impressive displays at Trees of Mystery is located at the parking lot. Massive statues of Paul Bunyan and Babe, his blue ox, greet visitors as they arrive.


Paul Bunyan at Trees of Mystery on March 19, 1992

The statue of Paul Bunyan weighs 30,000 pounds, and its concrete base weighs 800,000 pounds. It is 49 feet 2 inches tall, with a waist 52 feet around and a chest 66 feet around. The axe is 27 feet long and the boots are 10 feet high. It was designed by Ann Cooper and built by Ward Berg.


Babe at Trees of Mystery on March 19, 1992

The statue of Babe is 35 feet high from the ground to the tips of the horns, and weighs 30,000 pounds.


Paul Bunyan & Babe at Trees of Mystery on March 19, 1992
Photo by Cliff West

Trees of Mystery first opened in 1946, and the first statue of Paul Bunyan was erected there that year, but it was promptly destroyed by the rain that winter. The current Paul Bunyan statue was built in 1961 and Babe was built in 1952.

Paul Bunyan & Babe at Trees of Mystery on March 19, 1992
Photo by Cliff West

The statues are constructed primarily of wood, chicken wire, and stucco. Paul Bunyan can wave his hand, turn his head, and wink. Before the statues were relocated to their current position in 1983, Babe could nod and blow smoke out of his nostrils.

Family Tree at Trees of Mystery on March 19, 1992
Photo by Cliff West

One of the first trees encountered at Trees of Mystery is the Family Tree. Twelve Sitka spruce trees grow from one trunk 32 feet around. The additional trees grow out of the branches of the main tree.

Trilliums at Trees of Mystery on March 19, 1992
Photo by Cliff West

Here are a group of trilliums that were growing along the trail.

Upside-Down Tree at Trees of Mystery on March 19, 1992
Photo by Cliff West

This is the "Upside Down" Tree, though it is not really upside-down. It is really more sideways, with a horizontal trunk growing out of a vertical trunk. The horizontal trunk curves wildly and even crosses over the trail.

Upside-Down Tree at Trees of Mystery on March 19, 1992
Photo by Cliff West

The "Upside Down" Tree has two trunks and two root structures. One tree grows horizontally and the other growing vertically through the horizontal trunk. The horizontal tree is always seeking sunlight.

Octopus Tree at Trees of Mystery on March 19, 1992
Photo by Cliff West

This is the Octopus Tree. It gets its name from it's tangled web of exposed roots that look like tentacles. These roots also create an open space under the Octopus Tree called Nature's Underpass that children can crawl through.

Octopus Tree at Trees of Mystery on March 19, 1992
Photo by Cliff West

The Octopus Tree also features a sign that reads "These are the trees you have seen in Ripley's Believe It or Not."

Trees at Trees of Mystery on March 19, 1992
Photo by Cliff West

I don't know the name of this tree formation. There is a sign on it but it is not readable in the photograph; I think it says "SUN _". These trees are twisted around one another, as they each try to get as much sun as possible.

Lightning Tree at Trees of Mystery on March 19, 1992
Photo by Cliff West

In this picture is the Lightning Tree, named for the jagged shape of its trunk which makes it look like a bolt of lightning.

Cathedral Tree at Trees of Mystery on March 19, 1992
Photo by Cliff West

I think this is the Cathedral Tree, a group of nine trees growing together in a semicircle around the root structure of a dead tree that has since rotted away. Weddings and Easter services have been conducted here.

This was the last stop on our family's 1992 California trip. After leaving Trees of Mystery we headed north towards home.