The following is a blog post from the Pinelands Adventures website that I was asked to post on NJPineBarrens.com. In the interest of presenting facts Read More » Land Use Your Forest Under Attack: Facts About the Road Closings in Wharton State Forest ...
Exploring the NJ Pine Barrens: where to go, what to see, hiking, environmental importance, calendar of events, off-roading guide, dining, lodging, canoeing, self-guided tours, wineries, much much more! Lots of photos.
RegisterLog in Sign up with one click: Facebook Twitter Google Share on Facebook Pine Barrens Encyclopedia Wikipedia (pīn) A coastal plain region of southeast-central and southern New Jersey, noted for its sandy soil and its extensive forests of pitch pine, white cedar, and oak, formerly exp...
Welcome to Pine Barrens Golf Club, a premier private golf club located in the Pinelands of Southern New Jersey, just minutes from the Metedeconk River.
Plants of the NJ Pine Barrens, a photograph album An indexed and searchable species by species photographic catalog of many pine barrens plants, a dynamic "What's Blooming Now" page, and a dynamic Pine Barrens Plant Identification Key tool. ...
But there is no village at Lahaway, not even a highway approaching the place. The survey party had floundered long through a tangle of marsh in the pine barrens when they discovered a single inhabited house on a high dry islet. Here they met the owner, J. Turner Brakeley, graduate of...
Whether it’s a hat, a hut, or a tavern, Ong’s Hat is certainly one of the most infamous of the Pine Barrens ghost towns. Notes: [1] Beck, Henry Charlton.Forgotten Towns of Southern New Jersey.(New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers UP, 1994), 7. ...
The New Jersey Pine Barrens (NJPB) is the largest forested area along the northeastern coast of the United States. The NJPB are dominated by pine (Pinus spp.) and oak (Quercus spp.) stands that are fragmented and subject to frequent disturbance and forest management. Over long time periods...
This article was first published on NJPineBarrens.com in 2006. Notes: 1 Ocean County. Deed Book 17 (Toms River: Ocean County Clerks 1856), 102. 2 Ocean County. Deed Book 23 (Toms River: Ocean County Clerks 1856), 382. 3 Jennifer Lynch. Personal Correspondence. 4 Richard S. Fisher. ...
what this place was. I had nearly forgotten about it until I bought a copy ofChaseworld – Foxhunting and Storytelling in New Jersey’s Pine Barrensby Mary Hufford. Finally, I was able to get some information on who Pomeroy was and why there is a marker for him in the Pine Barrens!