"Moss-Bearded Fence"

from $55.00

A moss-covered fenceline in Redwood National Forest in California. Congress created Redwood National Park in 1968 to protect the world's tallest trees and Redwood Creek's salmon fishery. The 1978 park expansion provided a buffer zone between the park and logging upstream on private lands, while a watershed restoration program removed logging roads and rehabilitated thousands of acres of over-cut land. Redwood National and State Parks protect nearly 40,000 acres of ancient forest, almost half of all that remain.

(click on image to enlarge)

**PLEASE CONTACT ME ABOUT COMBINING/REDUCING SHIPPING COSTS FOR MULTIPLE ITEMS**

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A moss-covered fenceline in Redwood National Forest in California. Congress created Redwood National Park in 1968 to protect the world's tallest trees and Redwood Creek's salmon fishery. The 1978 park expansion provided a buffer zone between the park and logging upstream on private lands, while a watershed restoration program removed logging roads and rehabilitated thousands of acres of over-cut land. Redwood National and State Parks protect nearly 40,000 acres of ancient forest, almost half of all that remain.

(click on image to enlarge)

**PLEASE CONTACT ME ABOUT COMBINING/REDUCING SHIPPING COSTS FOR MULTIPLE ITEMS**

A moss-covered fenceline in Redwood National Forest in California. Congress created Redwood National Park in 1968 to protect the world's tallest trees and Redwood Creek's salmon fishery. The 1978 park expansion provided a buffer zone between the park and logging upstream on private lands, while a watershed restoration program removed logging roads and rehabilitated thousands of acres of over-cut land. Redwood National and State Parks protect nearly 40,000 acres of ancient forest, almost half of all that remain.

(click on image to enlarge)

**PLEASE CONTACT ME ABOUT COMBINING/REDUCING SHIPPING COSTS FOR MULTIPLE ITEMS**