Years ago the NY state DEQ cut a deal with a "boutique logging" firm to alternate thinning and clearcutting plots in one of our favorite grouse covers, a flatland bisected by a meandering stream. Unfortunately the contract let included removal of the more valuable hardwoods but not for the removal of the slash and understory waste of the softwoods.
The result was a flatter version of exactly what Chris' photos show - a knee-deep-plus tangle of fallen trunks, stobs, branch spikes, and the remains of a couple of hundred-year old stone walls, all covered with mosses and lichens. I narrowly averted a disaster when my English setter leaped over a downed trunk, slipped on the slime, and caught a bayonet-like stob between his neck and his collar, which could have easily pierced his neck or chest as he fell. After that and a couple of cracked shin bones and soaked crotches, we quit hunting it.
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