Cross Another One Off the Bucket List: Hartwick Pines State Park, Michigan

Green is the color of the day
Green is the color of the day

Hartwick Pines has been on my list of things to do since I heard about it at a meeting of the Michigan Geographic Alliance back in the ’90s. Imagine a stand of virgin forest that somehow escaped the logging industry that put Michigan on the map.

Hartwick Pines was named after Edward E. Hartwick, who died of illness in France in 1918. His wife, Karen, donated a section of unlogged forest to preserve his memory.

forest

Canopy

The forest is in good shape and it is doing what forests do. As the trees reach the ends of their lifespans, they die.

A standing dead tree is called a snag.
A standing dead tree is called a snag.

They serve as homes for birds, bugs and small mammals. Eventually, they fall.

Returning to the earth
Returning to the earth

The nutrients return to the earth. New trees start to grow. Sometimes new species of trees take root. The forest continues.

Along the trail, there is a museum dedicated to logging. One thing I learned that never occurred to me was that much of the logging took place in the winter. The snow made it easier to move the logs. I suppose the lack of mosquitoes didn’t hurt, either.

Big Wheel
Big Wheel

When they would need to move the heavy logs about and they didn’t have snow to assist them, they used an implement called a Big Wheel to help them.

Big Wheel

There is also a chapel along the trail. oddly enough, it was so overcast that day that I could barely see inside it, in spite of the windows.

Chapel
Chapel

I  had a lovely campsite at the park. I got it backed in on the first pass!

Flo through the trees
Flo through the trees

The morning I was getting hitched up to head to the Upper Peninsula, the sun finally broke out.

The view from my door
The view from my door

Wildflowers

Wildflowers 2

Ferns

It was a green and glorious day!