One of the Last Old Growth Forests in the Midwest

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  • Опубликовано: 22 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 48

  • @tobygoodguy4032
    @tobygoodguy4032 Год назад +11

    Cleveland was once nicked 'Forest City'.🤠

  • @artycat0811
    @artycat0811 Год назад +7

    Thank You, that's an incredibly beautiful and historic place....traveling thru the swamp and woods must have been incredibly difficult and time consuming.

  • @WILD__THINGS
    @WILD__THINGS 7 месяцев назад +1

    Incredible place! Thanks for taking us there.

  • @blueridgepics
    @blueridgepics 8 месяцев назад +3

    This is an enjoyable video; wish it was longer and more in-depth.

  • @Easttndude
    @Easttndude 4 месяца назад +1

    Looks awesome

  • @adamsmith583
    @adamsmith583 Год назад +2

    Awesome video. Few preserved places near toledo I love to go to.

  • @herschelwright4663
    @herschelwright4663 Год назад +3

    Great informative video.👍 I didn’t know that Ohio had a swamp.

  • @holdenackerman8783
    @holdenackerman8783 Год назад +1

    Great video, keep covering rural places - they’re nice additions to the towns and cities

  • @scottprather5645
    @scottprather5645 3 месяца назад +1

    Would have been nice if you told us what kind of trees we were looking at

  • @principalmcvicker6530
    @principalmcvicker6530 Год назад +1

    Your "on location" vids are the best

    • @forgottenplaces9780
      @forgottenplaces9780  Год назад

      Many of the photos in my Cleveland then and now vid were also shot on location.

  • @ShavinMcCrotch
    @ShavinMcCrotch 11 месяцев назад +2

    Imagine a couple hundred years from now, the trees planted in subdivisions in the 60s, 70s, 80s, 90s,… will look like these, LOOMING over neighborhoods, shading several houses at a time.😍

    • @forgottenplaces9780
      @forgottenplaces9780  11 месяцев назад +10

      No cuz theyll just cut them down when they get too big

  • @hamelconsultancyllc
    @hamelconsultancyllc Год назад +3

    Fun fact: there are 70 acres of old growth inside the city of Detroit in Palmer Park.

  • @punkinn5610
    @punkinn5610 4 месяца назад

    i loooove goll woods, i go there a lot, they actually tore the house down- and its apparently haunted too

  • @glps6167
    @glps6167 2 месяца назад +1

    A missed opportunity. Tree species not mentioned. The impact of swamp drainage on the species composition of the forest not discussed. The overall ecological impact (CO2 sequestration) not discussed.

  • @johnfody4025
    @johnfody4025 8 месяцев назад +2

    The presence of pines suggests that Goll Wood is not entirely virgin (i. e., the pines were planted). Regardless, it looks like a nice place.

    • @adammackerel4993
      @adammackerel4993 6 месяцев назад +1

      Correct. Virgin timber stands are nearly non-existent, at least in this part of the U.S. The terminology for types of old growth are often bandied about.

  • @ryankutcher8781
    @ryankutcher8781 Год назад

    You should take a trip to Belmont county. Dysart Woods is a old growth forest about 9 miles south of St. Clairsville. I live right next to it. Beautiful forest, was owned by Ohio University until here recently.

  • @MrThecroatian
    @MrThecroatian Год назад

    That part of Ohio where the Black Swamp is was once covered by a larger version of Lake Erie during the Ice Age. So that whole area was under water.

  • @ippolit4262
    @ippolit4262 Год назад

    I know it's not really a forgotten place but you should visit the Adirondack Park in New York!!! So much history and beauty there..

  • @pahwraith
    @pahwraith Год назад

    Really cool video. Gives me an idea of what pre-European Chicago musta looked like.
    Theres forest preserves that look similar but with smaller trees.

  • @7viewerlogic670
    @7viewerlogic670 Год назад

    Great video!

  • @krispykremes2482
    @krispykremes2482 Год назад

    Unexpected but cool video.

  • @mumbairay
    @mumbairay 10 месяцев назад

    Those planks were called berlae in Europe
    Hence all the berlins, berlyn, berlens, etc in swampy north from the Neherlands to Galicia

  • @xX4estXx
    @xX4estXx 8 месяцев назад

    What kind of trees were some of those? Swamp white oak?

  • @CraigFogus
    @CraigFogus Год назад

    Buckeye here 😁 Love your videos. Thanks for visiting our great state. BTW, we are not in the midwest technically. Ask Oklahoma! 🤣 Second, wish you'd identify the trees. A great app (not mine nor do they sponsor me or whatnot) is PictureThis. Keep up the good work!

    • @forgottenplaces9780
      @forgottenplaces9780  Год назад +2

      I live in Ohio, by almost all official scholarly sources Ohio is considered part of the Midwest US, Oklahoma usually isnt. Even culturally Ohio is midwestern, with the farmlands, industry and great lakes, much more similar to wisc, indiana , and michigan than PA or WV or KY. Thanks for your support.

  • @Gwilfawe
    @Gwilfawe Год назад +3

    There is no old growth ecology in Iowa and it makes me so depressed. Our lust for animal flesh and ethanol has destroyed precious natural beauty and biodiversity.
    Vegan for the forests, and the animals, and the future.

    • @ImSrry4BeingWhite
      @ImSrry4BeingWhite Год назад

      What are you even talking about. I live in Iowa and there are tons of old growth forests in Iowa

    • @Gwilfawe
      @Gwilfawe Год назад

      @@ImSrry4BeingWhite tons you say?
      Please, go on

    • @ImSrry4BeingWhite
      @ImSrry4BeingWhite Год назад

      @@Gwilfawe margo Frankel woods in des moines. Pammel state park in winterset. Some in ames. For cereal

    • @Gwilfawe
      @Gwilfawe Год назад +3

      @@ImSrry4BeingWhite I am not sure what operational definition of 'old growth forest' you are using when referencing those tracts.
      The definition I refer to is something like - "forests old enough that the tree dominants have reached their natural longevity, died of natural causes and been replaced through natural succession"
      By this definition Iowa has no old growth forests.
      If I granted that the entirety of the acreages you mentioned as old growth forests (when in reality, only portions of the named areas you've mentioned [136 & 350 acres, respectively] are forested), those two, together total to 0.019% of Iowa's *existing* forest land as of 2020. That calculation itself uses generous numerical values too, rounded up and down in your favor.
      The fraction would be more minuscule still, if we made the calculation using historical forest metrics of Iowa.
      Does Iowa have 'forests'? sure.
      But it ranks 52nd out of 56 US designations for forested land, just before states like South Dakota, North Dakota, and Nebraska.
      If I have room to be educated on old growth forest ecology, or forests in Iowa that I am missing out on please let me know.

    • @daxmax1681
      @daxmax1681 10 месяцев назад

      The natives of those regions were not vegetarians and yet didn't destroy their forests! Most of the great lakes region is used for corn production! Something that goes into many vegan products!
      Not so black and white as your vegetarian propaganda pamphlets would tell you!

  • @lostlandmarks8305
    @lostlandmarks8305 Год назад +1

    🏕️

  • @katiadasilvacarvalho3843
    @katiadasilvacarvalho3843 Год назад +1

    😍😍😍😍😍🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗🦄🦄🦄🦄🌳🌲🌿
    🕊🌍🕊

  • @leonel5488
    @leonel5488 Год назад

    Promo'SM 🙌

  • @camcam8296
    @camcam8296 4 месяца назад

    Thats not old growth 😂yall need to come to Michigan upper peninsula the old growth is real the trees are as wide as houses

  • @kaprizovtolizardtokaprizov
    @kaprizovtolizardtokaprizov 11 месяцев назад

    Meh. From the midwest but not OH. Those are not very big.

    • @blueridgepics
      @blueridgepics 8 месяцев назад

      Though the trees can be huge, Old Growth doesn't necessarily relate to size but age. 100 feet tall is impressive, however.

  • @RoseBushThorns588
    @RoseBushThorns588 Год назад

    No homosexual trees either! 😂🤣