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Hockley Woods is a large woodland in south-east Essex. It is a Local Nature Reserve, [1] [2] and parts are a Site of Special Scientific Interest. [3] [4] It is owned and managed by Rochford District Council. [3] Hockley Woods are the largest residual area of the wildwood, which covered much of Essex after the Ice Age, 10,000 years ago. Hockley ...
Rock Creek, Ohio: operating: Contains four camps: Broadbent, McCahill, McIntosh and Cub World Camp Avery Hand: former Johnny Appleseed Council: Mansfield, Ohio: closed 2008: Now Ohio Bird Sanctuary Camp Belden: former Greater Cleveland Council: Litchfield and Belden, Ohio: sold to Ohio Department of Natural Resources: Now Camp Belden Wildlife ...
Hocking Hills State Park is a state park in the Hocking Hills region of Hocking County, Ohio, United States.In some areas the park adjoins the Hocking State Forest.Within the park are over 25 miles (40 km) of hiking trails, rock formations, waterfalls, and recess caves.
Later additions to the group were Tamarack Farm (a work camp for 15- to 17-year-olds of all genders), Saltash Mountain (co-ed, focused on hiking trips), Flying Cloud (for 11- to 14-year-old boys, originally borrowing the traditions of the Lakota people but later creating their own system of wilderness living in the manner of cultures from ...
Sycamore State Park is a 2,384-acre (965 ha) protected woodlands and public recreation park at 4675 N. Diamond Mill Road, in Trotwood, Ohio, United States.It is the only state park in Montgomery County, Ohio along Wolf Creek, a tributary of the Miami River, immediately west of Trotwood, east of Brookville, Ohio, and south of Clayton.
Marylands is a 3.7 hectare Local Nature Reserve in Hockley in Essex. It is owned by Rochford District Council and managed by Hockley Parish Council. [1] [2] The site has a varied fauna and flora, with 96 species of trees, shrubs, grasses and herbs, and 13 of butterflies. Nine of the tree species are associated with ancient woodland.
US President Dwight Eisenhower (1890 - 1965) (left) and Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev (1874 - 1971) at Camp David, Maryland, September 25, 1959.
Fort Scott Camp opened in 1922 on Mt. Nebo Road near Cleves. Due to space constraints, it moved to a 204-acre (83 ha) property near New Baltimore in 1924. [1] The camp was located 2 miles (3.2 km) from Fernald Feed Materials Production Center. In 1984, Fernald was revealed to be a uranium processing plant that was sending radioactive ...