Showing posts with label Fairy Stone State Park. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fairy Stone State Park. Show all posts

Friday, January 23, 2015

Recovery From Exploitation

Stuarts Knob is a minor summit even in the relatively low-profile hills around it. The only reason I even noticed it is that it's obvious from the lakeside below the cabin where my wife and I stayed in Fairy Stone State Park this month.

It's an attractive enough little mountain, but at less than 1400 feet above sea level it's really just an Appalachian foothill to the much higher summits just a few miles to the west. But I got out the park trail map and noted that there were a couple of trails that take you almost to the top and decided to hike up there and see what it was like.

What I found was a series of well maintained trails that were dotted with historical markers and discovered that the area had been ecologically raped and exploited in the recent past. Go back less than 100 years and you'd hardly have recognized the profile of this little mountaintop. It underwent a long period (in human terms) of exploitation that denuded it of trees and forest cover and then was heavily mined for the rich iron deposits that lay actually on its flanks and then below its surface. By the late 1800s the forests were utterly gone, and by 1920 the iron deposits had played out. Even the town that once lay at its foot vanished once the capitalists and industrialists had had their way with the place.

By the 1930s the land had been allowed to lay as the humans had left it. Enter the Civilian Conservation Corps who chose it as a spot to begin the effort at rehabilitation and the site of a new state park of Virginia. Erosion was mitigated, mines were sealed up, trails were laid down, trees were encouraged to regenerate.

Today, walking the slopes of this hill you would be hard pressed to understand the extent of the destruction that had once laid waste to its environs. Beneath the canopy of a vast hardwood forest you can find places where colliers had once felled and carbonized the trees to make charcoal. One can spot the massive grooves where the earth was moved in vast amounts in the practice of surface mining to get at the iron almost at the top of the ground. And there are sealed mine entrances to mark the places where men and machines once combined to shear out the guts of the little mountain.

Mother Nature can recover if she is allowed to heal. But only if.


Stuarts Knob as it appeared from the lakeside below our cabin.

This was the location of a collier site. Where men would take the trees they'd felled and slowly bake them, transforming the wood into charcoal which would be sold for 5 cents per bushel.
The mountain was covered in these deep "grooves", the result of early surface mining where the readily available iron ore was taken from the hill. When this played out the traditional shaft mining began.


A GoPro video I made at the summit of Stuarts Knob.

The entrance to one of the mine shafts, now sealed.

Sun rising over the summit.

The nice system of trails. Thanks, Civilian Conservation Corps!

Tuesday, January 20, 2015

More Brief Notes

I had a very rough day at work. I'm sick, so just some more brief notes and photos from Fairy Stone State Park and nearby locations.

The den and dining area. In the evenings we kept a nice fire roaring in the fireplace. One very nice touch about the cabin were the historical photographs on the walls of Virginia's state parks--most dating back to the 1930s and 1940s.

The master bedroom.

The second bedroom.

The kitchen area.

The screened porch which we did not use because it was COLD out there!

The nearby Philpott dam. We drove over to visit the dam and lake after we settled in to the cabin.

A nice view of the impressive Philpott Lake from an overlook.

Monday, January 19, 2015

Fairy Stone State Park

I've returned from a short trip to Fairy Stone State Park in Virginia. I'll post details about the park and its environment after we've rested. For now, just a few photographs.

Our cabin (#12).
We kept a nice fire roaring every evening.
The view of Stuart Knob from the shoreline below our cabin.

Thursday, January 08, 2015

Next Trip

Carole and I have planned our next short excursion to another park where we've never been. This time we're going to stay in a cabin at Fairy Stone State Park in Virginia. It's located just at the edge of the Blue Ridge Mountains so I'll get a chance to do a little hiking while we're there.

One of the features of the park, and its namesake, are the "fairy stones" that can be found there. Fairy stones are rough crystals actually called staurolites. I knew a bit about these formations as a kid because they can be picked up commonly in Fannin County in the north Georgia mountains where I went to high school. Christians like to find them because sometimes they form as little crosses, but are more often found as "X" shapes.

The park has some decent trails, it seems, so I'll try to explore some of those. Also, we plan to hit a couple of wineries in that part of the state and I want to climb Buffalo Mountain which is located about an hour from the park. Buffalo has been on my bag list for a number of years. I once tried to hike it but could not locate the trailhead. This time I will find it and climb to the summit, which I've been told is a pretty cool place.

We're hoping the weather will be cold, as we want to use the cabin fireplace while we're there. Carole and I enjoy visiting the high country in the winter. Usually, it's our only chance to experience real cold weather and to see some snow (on occasion).

Cabin at Fairy Stone State Park.

Summit of Buffalo Mountain, Virginia.