AlanLichty
Moderator
This is a drone's eye view looking south from over the Kentucky Creek trailhead near the headwaters of the North Fork Smith River. Driving up to this place I had no view of the surrounding terrain at all for well over 20 miles worth of single track forest service roads given the height of the trees. The trees in the immediate foreground are well over 200' tall and the only real break in the conifer canopy was over the trailhead parking area and even that was a fairly small path to get up above the treetops. I took advantage of FAA Part 107 flight rules and went up just under 400' above the tree canopy to actually get this view. As you can see from this view you can't just go up to a mountain top to see out over the forests.
Everything in the immediate foreground is old growth forest but there is a logging clear cut just above the center of this image. It's easy to spot with the squared off edges of the cut and the single species replanting characteristic of US Forest Service timber sales areas. If I had to guess that clear cut was somewhere around 15-20 years ago. The old growth forest has mixed evergreens with various species of spruce, fir, and cedar trees along with variable age/height in the tree population. Deciduous trees don't have the height to successfully compete with the evergreens so there are only glimpses of color visible from above the evergreen canopy. The visible maple in the foreground is at the edge of the road cut and is a fairly tall maple although it is dwarfed by the conifers surrounding it.
C&C always welcome.
Everything in the immediate foreground is old growth forest but there is a logging clear cut just above the center of this image. It's easy to spot with the squared off edges of the cut and the single species replanting characteristic of US Forest Service timber sales areas. If I had to guess that clear cut was somewhere around 15-20 years ago. The old growth forest has mixed evergreens with various species of spruce, fir, and cedar trees along with variable age/height in the tree population. Deciduous trees don't have the height to successfully compete with the evergreens so there are only glimpses of color visible from above the evergreen canopy. The visible maple in the foreground is at the edge of the road cut and is a fairly tall maple although it is dwarfed by the conifers surrounding it.
C&C always welcome.