Great video, red maple is really amazing, here in East central KY it’s definitely getting to be more common, once you start looking it’s everywhere lol. It’s colors have really been beautiful down here this year, I was very surprised with the drought we have had
Thanks for watching Bobby...Red Maple is by far the most common tree in most of the forests I have visited. It does become less common in forests with deep shade like the coves in the Southern Appalachians. We had exceptional colors last year after a very dry summer. I saw great colors in the Adirondacks earlier this month but most other areas have been below average after a very wet summer. We have had an exceptional nut and cone crop in 2023 to the point that the hundreds of acorns make for difficult footing on hillsides. Have a great November!
@@barkinuptherighttree4698 thank you, we have had a bumper year also on the nut crops, black walnut and especially chestnut oak acorns like you said to the point of being difficult to walk, it’s like walking on marbles
Tobey bog which is in this video is accessible via a 1 1/2 mile hike from the east entrance of Yale Universities Great Mountain Forest. The Tobey bog trail is shown on the map of the forest. I also visited a bog with an extensive boardwalk when recording Black Spruce for this channel in 2021. The Boreal Life trail at the Paul Smiths College Visitors Interpretive Center (near Lake Placid NY) crossed this boardwalk. Hawley Bog in the Berkshire Hills of Massachusetts has a modest boardwalk near the parking area for that preserve. Cranesville Swamp in Northern West Virginia is actually a bog with a nice boardwalk. I am sure there are many more out there but these are a few I have visited myself. Good luck in your search!
All GOOD! I 'm from eastern Connecticut and was just back the week after you did the Pawcatuck river, I hiked Pachaug and Meshomasic state forests. Starting my own curse tree ID as its a perishable skill. @@barkinuptherighttree4698
Love your videos sir. I’ve learned a ton.
Great and thanks for watching!
Beautiful video
Thank you for watching Jona!
Great video, red maple is really amazing, here in East central KY it’s definitely getting to be more common, once you start looking it’s everywhere lol. It’s colors have really been beautiful down here this year, I was very surprised with the drought we have had
Thanks for watching Bobby...Red Maple is by far the most common tree in most of the forests I have visited. It does become less common in forests with deep shade like the coves in the Southern Appalachians. We had exceptional colors last year after a very dry summer. I saw great colors in the Adirondacks earlier this month but most other areas have been below average after a very wet summer. We have had an exceptional nut and cone crop in 2023 to the point that the hundreds of acorns make for difficult footing on hillsides. Have a great November!
@@barkinuptherighttree4698 thank you, we have had a bumper year also on the nut crops, black walnut and especially chestnut oak acorns like you said to the point of being difficult to walk, it’s like walking on marbles
This is great. Thank you. I'm very interested in finding as many bogs as possible in the northeast with wooden boardwalks
Tobey bog which is in this video is accessible via a 1 1/2 mile hike from the east entrance of Yale Universities Great Mountain Forest. The Tobey bog trail is shown on the map of the forest. I also visited a bog with an extensive boardwalk when recording Black Spruce for this channel in 2021. The Boreal Life trail at the Paul Smiths College Visitors Interpretive Center (near Lake Placid NY) crossed this boardwalk. Hawley Bog in the Berkshire Hills of Massachusetts has a modest boardwalk near the parking area for that preserve. Cranesville Swamp in Northern West Virginia is actually a bog with a nice boardwalk. I am sure there are many more out there but these are a few I have visited myself. Good luck in your search!
All GOOD! I 'm from eastern Connecticut and was just back the week after you did the Pawcatuck river, I hiked Pachaug and Meshomasic state forests. Starting my own curse tree ID as its a perishable skill. @@barkinuptherighttree4698