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zer0gee
Cartographer
Level 7: 2970 points
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Last Logged In: April 26th, 2025
TEAM: The Disorganised Guerilla War On Boredom and Normality TEAM: CGØ TEAM: Run-of-the-mill taskers TEAM: The Ultimate Collaboration Team TEAM: Team FOEcakes TEAM: Probot TEAM: Public Library Zero TEAM: INFØ TEAM: New Orleans Zero BART Psychogeographical Association Rank 3: Cartographer EquivalenZ Rank 1: User The University of Aesthematics Rank 2: Dealer Humanitarian Crisis Rank 2: Justice Biome Rank 1: Hiker Chrononautic Exxon Rank 1: Clockwatcher Society For Nihilistic Intent And Disruptive Efforts Rank 3: The Meddlesome


retired

25 + 120 points

Disobedient Nature by zer0gee

April 8th, 2008 9:34 AM

INSTRUCTIONS: Search for, find, document an example of nature refusing to yield to or blending itself into a construction of modern man.

Document with photos when possible.

Examples should document situations where man has put up some restraint for nature and nature has disobeyed. While trees or other permanent plants are preferable, a basic example would be plants that grow in the cracks of the sidewalk.

I have just returned from spending a quantity of time in Harper's Ferry, West Virginia. This town is about an hour outside of Washington, DC, and was founded by Robert Harper in 1751. He had been sent to the Shenandoah Valley in 1747 to erect a Quaker meeting house there, and was impressed enough by the potential industrial and mercantile powers of the merging of the Potomac and Shenandoah rivers to purchase 125 acres of land at their juncture.

There have since been 13 floods during which the rivers have dumped over 20 feet of water into Harper's Ferry, most recently in 1996. The largest documented flood was in 1936, when the waters crested at 36.5 feet. Also, the town changed hands between the Union and Confederate armies eight times during the Civil War - the town is in a deep valley and not easily defended. These two factors absolutely devastated both the industrial and civilian life that had been established there.

I am a post-apocalyptic girl, and I love ruins. LOVE them. Abandoned, overgrown, falling apart whatevers totally suck me in. Harper's Ferry is full of them, both Civil War-era and more current. Harper's Ferry proper is now a national park, and you can move about freely in the ruins of the old buildings - you get a real sense of the effects of the war here, even more so than on the battlefields (which are really just big, open fields and not as interesting to me - we did go to Antietam), especially on just normal, everyday folk who were trying to make a living and raise families.

And speaking of that, I have included some photos of a more modern abandoned house, also in Harper's Ferry, for contrast. There are an amazing amount of these in the area - whereas they are building large numbers of new "McMansions" for the influx of city dwellers who have decided to sprawl out into the rural-ish outer burbs, these older buildings attest to the hardships of the Harper's Ferry natives. There is a great amount of money moving into this area now, and the more seasoned residents are pretty old-school about not liking the townhouses, strip malls, and city folk that come with it.

+ larger

pulp factory history
pulp factory ruins
ruins 3.jpg
millstone and my feet
remnants of metal gates
ruins 6.jpg
ruins 7.jpg
view of shipping canal
ruins 9.jpg
I love these rusty panels
ruins 11.jpg
ruins 12.jpg
plants find a niche
ruins 14.jpg
metal structure, slate bricks, and plants
Harper's Quaker church
ruins 19.jpg
ruins 20.jpg
trees growing inside the ruins
bridge across the Potomac River
ruins 24.jpg
ruins 25.jpg
ruins 26.jpg
railroad trestle bridge
ruins 29.jpg
vines on the trestle bridge
canal sluice gate at Lock 33
ruins of bridge across the Shenandoah River
surreal, no?
ruins 34.jpg
factory ruins
machinery
millstone
flour mill ruins
Harper's Ferry abandoned house
ruins 47.jpg
view of side porch
kitty in the window
ruins 42.jpg
porch and vines
hello kitty
shed
ruins 46.jpg

24 vote(s)



Terms

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12 comment(s)

(no subject)
posted by The Animus on April 8th, 2008 9:49 AM

So, I have to ask --

What's your zombie plan?

I just added this place to the list of places I have to see before I die. And I thank you for that.

(no subject)
posted by zer0gee on April 8th, 2008 10:09 AM

Oddly enough, though all my friends are heavily into the zombie apocalypse scenario, I am not. I have a definitive leaning toward the Mad Max side of things. An old friend of mine refers to it as my "search for the big red button." :)

You should see it. Damn amazing. I could've spent the whole trip photographing ruins.

(no subject)
posted by Burn Unit on April 8th, 2008 10:17 AM

images images! feast of images! banquet of images piles of pixels my eyes gorged on them an orgy of images!


aaaand vote.

(no subject) +1
posted by Julian Muffinbot on April 8th, 2008 11:06 AM

LOVE those pooped out conifers on the bridge remains!

(no subject)
posted by Dax Tran-Caffee on April 8th, 2008 12:44 PM

The millstone is my favorite detritus!

But the shed that has been reclaimed by the woods is my favorite. Return me to the forest, it says.

(no subject)
posted by Lincøln on April 8th, 2008 12:49 PM

Agreed Dax. The ruins are awesome pictures and must have been fun to explore, but the shed and house being reclaimed by the forest are what win it for me. That's what got my vote.

(no subject)
posted by Scienceguru on April 8th, 2008 1:32 PM

Yeah. Harper's Ferry is an interesting place.

(no subject)
posted by The Animus on April 9th, 2008 12:43 AM

Ahem.

I figured I'd ask.
Personally, as I don't have a motorcycle (or the ability to drive one), the whole Alaska idea is out of the question. Seeing as I don't own a gun, either, I'm pretty much fux0red when it comes to zombies.

(no subject)
posted by Listener on April 9th, 2008 8:52 AM

Fascinating. I too have added Harper's Ferry to the list of places to see before I die. The last picture alone (of the shed being enveloped by the woods) would have earned my vote.

(no subject)
posted by rongo rongo on April 9th, 2008 9:04 AM

My favorite is the pine trees on the former bridge supports.

(no subject)
posted by meredithian on April 10th, 2008 7:20 AM

"THIS is the forest primeval. The murmuring pines and the hemlocks,
Bearded with moss, and in garments green, indistinct in the twilight,
Stand like Druids of eld, with voices sad and prophetic,
Stand like harpers hoar, with beards that rest on their bosoms. "


or something. thorough documentation of a beautiful place.

nice, zg.
posted by Myrna Minx on June 8th, 2008 9:16 PM

how the hell did i miss this? right up my alley, this one.