windthrown
361 Junkie
I've seen some CL adds for free wood chips. I would take them but have no idea what the hell I would do with wood chips.
I use them around the house to keep the mud down. I get 80+ inches of rain a year here.
So what happened with all the pros? Actually it might be a good thing they're gone, I doubt they would have enough patience to put up with someone like me.
Some are still here, some do not post much any more. Many have moved to other forums online. Some have passed away.
I've been wondering, why are the trees over there so large? I know the wettest place in the world is in Kauai (I hiked that island once, freaking awesome) so it can't just be the amount of rainfall you receive.
Oh damn I'm jealous. I would love to see that view everyday. I'm living on the wrong coast.
It is usually overcast here so you do not see the mountain peaks much this time of year. But it is a scenic place. From where I took that photo you can see Mt Hood, Mt Jefferson, Mt Adams, Mt St Helens, and Mt Rainier. We get a lot of rain on the west coast. I get 80+ inches a year here, but above me in elevation on the Cascades they get 140+ inches plus snow. At my ex's ranch in southern Oregon she gets 100+ inches of rain a year. Many rain forests all along the coastal mountain ranges from central California up through the Olympic Peninsula in Washington, and more in the west slopes of the Cascades and Sierra Nevada mountain ranges. Most of the big trees are in the rainiest areas. The tallest redwood (which is the tallest tree in the world) is near the CA/OR border in CA near the coast. The tallest Doug fir is now just south of Roseburg, OR in the coast range. The tallest Sugar pine is in the west Cascade slopes NW of Crater Lake. The tallest Sitka Spruce was along Highway 26 near Cannon Beach, OR, but that blew down in the Hurricane in '07. The largest tree in the world is the General Sherman Sequoia tree in the Sierras in California. Big trees, big tree species, lots of water.