I have been wanting to tell about this site because I see it twice a day. So here is my account from April 2004.
I have been commuting between home and Andover Mass. This takes me along Route 3 and along Rt 495 twice at day. I always look for interesting things in the woods, when I can spare a moment's attention from the traffic, and, of course, there are a few places along there that look interesting and worth exploring. Years ago I noticed a large rock in back of a company off of Route 3, which you can see in the southbound direction just before an overpass directly to the north of Treble Cove Rd. So I also look at this big rock on the way by every afternoon. In the past I thought it looked like a turtle and certainly this looked like one of those "spots"; even though it was in the narrow strip of woods between Rt. 3 and the EZ-Storage Company parking. From Rt. 3 you'll see something like this:
Looking more carefully at it, or rather glimpsing it more carefully as I rush by at ~70 mph, I noticed what looked like rock piles next to it, so today I figured out how to get there on surface streets and went out to take some pictures. For the record, the overpass to Rt 3 is Rangeway Rd in Billerica, just north of the Treble Cove Rd exit from Rt 3. The Rangeway Rd overpass and Rt 3 divide the land area into 4 quadrants and I explored each of them. Mainly the northwest quadrant is the interesting one, containing this large rock and 5 or so rock piles.
I kind of like the shots with Rt 3 in the background.
Several of the piles had a turtle like look to them, with a large rock hanging over the edge. Here is one, front and back:
And here is an interesting "seat" style pile only a few yards from Rt 3. It is interesting to me because of the rusting bucket in the interior. This cannot be too old and I very much think the bucket is from a "user" of the rock piles.
Previously, on Little Bear Hill, I thought I had found a rock pile with a rusted gear incorporated into it. I was judging from a picture and later concluded the "gear" was just a curl of bark. So this rusted bucket is the first certain example of a recent offering, included in a rock pile.
At the back of the main large rock there are some damaged structures. One consists of a short stone wall leading out (west) to end in yet another turtle like pile. The next picture shows this pile, in relation to the large rock. The other picture is a detail of some of the structure in the front of the large rock, which includes propped up fragments. You can barely make out a small dark cobble wedging up the middle two fragments.
After spending no more than 10 minutes at this site (hardly a place to hang out, next to Rt 3 and behind the EZ Storage Company's parking lot; but I feel bad that I was "site bagging" which I am, all too often, guilty of), I went back to the car and drove to each of the other "quadrants" to take a look around. It appears the Rt 3 and Rangeway Rd overpass pretty much went right through the middle of this nice site. But I am not saddened; perhaps because this, today, is the place I know, not the one that was here before. Also, it is still a nice site, in spite of it having been so thoroughly ravaged. Another possibility occurs to me: that this site was created after the roads were put in.
Anyway, across Rt 3 from the turtles, there were two nice split-wedge/filled rocks. Here is the first, right out near the highway (visible in the background), showing first the rock and then a look down into the split, with an arrangement of several wedges.
Here is a second split-wedged rocks, a little further back in the woods. That's a heavy rock on top: too heavy for a passing "boy scout".
Across Rangeway Rd from this place, is not much. Across Rangeway Rd from the driveway into the EZ-Storage company is a little up-and-down above a wetland. Several nice larger rocks but I only noticed one rock-pile structure of the platform/seat variety behind one large rock (you can see Rt 3 through the trees):I noticed from the car, but did not stop to photo it, that there was what looked like a "Twin" pile down in there too, closer to Rt. 3. Probably worth taking a closer look at sometime. So there you have it. Another little site, not too much the worse for wear for having been chopped into pieces by a road and a highway. Interestingly, this location is on the same direct diagonal line, which I call "Hobomock's Spine" that includes all the other sites down through Carlisle, Acton, etc.
You have some interesting sites there, nostly very different from ours, but they seem to be all over.
ReplyDeleteI think probably sites are all over where you are as well. I thought they were rare around here until I started looking for them and scouring the woods.
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