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Clove Lakes Park has a rich natural history with valuable ecological assets and a few remnants of the past. Chief among them are the park's lakes and ponds, outcroppings of serpentine rocks, and Staten Island's largest living thing, a 119-foot-tall (36 m) tulip tree. [2] Clove Lakes Park is home to many species of indigenous wildlife.
Stony Clove Creek is a 10.3-mile-long (16.6 km) [3] creek in the Catskill Mountains in New York. It is a tributary of Esopus Creek , which in turn is a tributary of the Hudson River . It joins the Esopus in the village of Phoenicia , and has two smaller tributaries up north of Phoenicia.
Clove Brook is a 12.0-mile-long (19.3 km) [1] tributary of Papakating Creek in Sussex County, New Jersey in the United States. [2]Clove Brook, previously known as Bastions Brook, Clove Creek, Clove River, and Deep Clove River, rises from north of Colesville and travels in a southeasterly direction, predominantly on the north side of State Route 23, down through the Clove Valley toward Sussex ...
This image or media file contains material based on a work of a National Park Service employee, created as part of that person's official duties. As a work of the U.S. federal government , such work is in the public domain in the United States.
Original file (1,275 × 1,379 pixels, file size: 1.52 MB, MIME type: application/pdf) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
A map of the “Crawdads” coastal setting, including the marsh, is available at the front of every “Crawdads” book and at the bottom of this page on author Owens’ website: deliaowens.com ...
It carries many species of game fish, fowl, and amphibians.There is a lean-to and seven designated campsites near the lake. [3] Access is by an 8-mile hiking trail, starting around Platte Clove Preserve (County Route 16) up the Old Overlook Road and then around Plattekill Mountain to a junction culminating in a half-mile section called Echo Lake Trail.
In 1913, the New York State Legislature created Route 5-c, an unsigned legislative route extending through Kaaterskill Clove from Palenville to Haines Falls.The route did not connect to any other route in the legislative route system, [10] [11] and was removed on March 1, 1921, as part of a partial renumbering of the system. [12]