


"Moss-Bearded Fence"
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. A 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. A 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. A 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**