Doggin'
Jersey: 10 Cool Things To See When You Hike With Your Dog In
The Garden State
"If your dog is fat," the old
saying goes, "you aren't getting enough exercise."
But walking the dog need not be just about a little exercise.
Here are 10 cool things you can see in New Jersey while out walking
the dog.
GLACIAL ERRATICS
Pyramid Mountain is best known for its glacial erratics
- boulders that were sprinkled across the landscape by retreating
ice sheets from the last Ice Age. The most famous is Tripod Rock,
a boulder various estimated at between 150 and 200 tons, that
is suspended heroically off the ground by three smaller stones.
Nearby notable neighbors include two massive monoliths: Whale
Head Rock and Bear Rock, that with a little imagination does
resemble a recumbent bear. A short detour from the summit of
the Tourne leads to a gravity defying glacial erratic
called Nouse Cradle Balancing Rock. Clarence DeCamp named it
in 1897 when he discovered a mouse nest in a nook in the rock.
The 54-ton boulder is balanced on two points of a ledge rock
and a hidden wedge stone.
PREHISTORIC BONES
At the Ghost Lake parking lot on Shades of Death Road in Jenny
Jump Forest you can take your dog along a short, rocky trail
along the lakeshore to a steep rocky slope. Here you will find
a cave known as Faery Hole. The cave room has a flat floor and
enough headroom for a Great Dane to stand on two legs. The opening
was excavated in the 1930s by state archaeolgoist Dorothy Cross
who recovered thousands of mammal bones, including the tooth
of a long-extinct giant beaver. In Haddonfield, in the north
end of the borough, is the heavily wooded Pennypacker Park
where dinosaur bones were discovered in 1838 in a steep ravine
carved by the Cooper River. When a full excavation was initiated
by William Parker Foulke in 1858 nearly 50 bones of a plant-eating,
duck-billed dinosaur were discovered. Haddonfield was suddenly
famous as the site of the most complete dinosaur skeleton ever
found. A small memorial marks the spot where Hadrosaurus Foulkii
was unearthed at the end of Maple Street.
CAPE MAY DIAMONDS
The beach next door to Higbee Beach WMA is the similarly
dog-friendly Sunset Beach, famous for its Cape May Diamonds.
The "diamonds" are actually pieces of quartz crystals
that have been eroded from the Upper Delaware River and been
polished by a 200-mile journey of churning and jostling that
can last a millennium or two. The stones, that can be cut and
faceted to do a passable imitation of a diamond, are found in
abundance here because the tidal flow bounces off a unique concrete
ship that rests offshore. The Atlantus was built to transport
soldiers during steel-short World War I. The reinforced-concrete
ship worked but the recovery of post-war steel supplies made
her obsolete and the Atlantus was being towed to Cape May to
serve as a ferry slip when an accident dumped her on a sand bar
where she remains today.
REVOLUTIONARY WAR RELICS
The trails at Morristown National Historic Park lead directly
into reconstructed Revolutionary-era huts that you can explore
with your dog. How many dogs do you reckon got the luxury of
staying inside these huts in 1777 when more than a dozen soldiers
huddled inside?
LOST UTOPIAN COMMUNITIES
In 1845, Daniel Felt founded Feltville as a small company village
for workers of his specialty paper business, Stationer's Hall.
Felt's "marbleized" paper was often used for book end
covers. He created his town in the Utopian image of social reform
that was popular in America in the mid-19th century. He constructed
the buildings in a trendy Greek Revival-style. In 1882 Feltville
became a middle class resort called Glenside, and the cottages
were remodeled like rustic Adirondack cabins. By 1916 the resort
was in decline as automobiles carried city vacationers well beyond
the Watchung Mountains. The "Deserted Village" stands
today and will be encountered on the Sierra Trail in Watchung
Reservation.
UNIQUE MEMORIALS
Emilio Carranza Rodriguez was nephew to the founder of the Mexican
Air Force, a war hero and his country's greatest aviator. He
befriended Charles Lindbergh after the American completed the
first solo flight across the Atlantic and then made the second
longest non-stop flight from Washington D.C. to Mexico City.
Plans were hatched in 1928 for a Mexican capital-to- capital
flight. Carranza, then just 22 years old, was selected to make
the attempt, carrying the pride of an entire nation in his plane,
"The Excelsior." Haunted by bad weather Carranza was
forced to navigate by dead reckoning and came down in an emergency
landing in North Carolina. He continued on to Washington and
New York City, where he was feted as a hero for accomplishing
the longest flight ever made by a Mexican aviator. Preparations
for a return flight to Mexico City were continually delayed until
Carranza could wait no longer. On the evening of July 12 he took
off in an electrical storm and was never seen alive again. The
next day his body was found near the wreckage of his plane, "The
Excelsior," in the Pine Barrens where he crashed. Mexican
schoolchildren collected pennies to pay for the stone monument
on the Batona Trail that marks the location of his death.
Post 11 of the American Legion from Mount Holly, whose members
participated in the recovery of the body, still hold a memorial
service every year on the second Saturday of July at 1:00 p.m.
to honor the memory of Captain Emilio Carranza.
CARNIVEROUS PLANTS
The prime attraction of the interior Cedar Trail Loop in Shark
River Park is an Atlantic White Cedar bog where you can chance
to see a carnivorous pitcher plant. The nutrient-challenged bog
doesn't provide enough sustenance for these ewer-shaped plants
so they must lure insects into a deadly trap for consumption
by a cocktail of digestive fluids in the pitcher. Tiny hairs
pointing downward prevent the trapped
insects from crawling out to freedom.
CRANBERRY BOGS
The cranberry is a native American fruit that was harvested naturally
in the Pine Barrens for centuries. Commercial production began
around 1835 in New Jersey and today only Massachusetts and Michigan
grow more cranberries, named because its flower resembles a craning
neck. The restored cranberry sorting and packing house at Double
Trouble Park is the finest of its kind from the 19th century.
The bogs are still producing and if you come in the fall you
can see thousands of the buoyant berries bobbing on the surface;
at other times of the year you will have to make do with looking
at a few harvest escapees washing against the shoreline.
CLASSIC DUTCH ARCHITECTURE
Holmdel Park is an excellent place to study Dutch architecture
from the earliest days of European settlement in central New
Jersey. At Longstreet Farm is the oldest Dutch barn in Monmouth
County. Dating to 1792, the barn is immediately recognized as
Dutch by the high wagon doors placed in each end of the gables
that slope near the ground. Surrounded by the park, but not in
it, the Holmes-Hendrickson House is snuggled in a grove of trees.
Teh red frame house was built in 1754 by william Holmes, who
ignored the fashionable trend of symmetrical Georgian house-building
in favor of his traditional Dutch design.
OLD MINES
The landscape has been churned up form the mining operations
at Mount Hope Historical Park bringing the minerals from
the earth and leaving them on the surface. You can still find
pieces of magnetite iron ore on the trails; look for small black
stones with angular shapes that feel heavier than normal rocks.
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