Eastern Screech Owls (Megascops asio) are the smallest resident birds of prey in Shenandoah National Park, weighing only about 5-8 oz. (that’s a couple of candy bars). They are active all winter, leaving their cozy tree-cavity nests at night in search of food. In winter, there is usually an abundance of mice and shrews, but other mainstay dinner items are hiding out until spring: frogs, salamanders, small snakes, lizards, moths, caterpillars and other insects. Wiley Screech Owls have been observed on frosty autumn mornings walking around farm fields, picking off inert grasshoppers like grapes. Posted by the US Department of the Interior on Tumblr, 2/9/14.
Like this:
Like Loading...
Where Is It: Washington, DC is 62 miles from the Front Royal entrance. Richmond, VA is 87 miles from the South entrance.
The Birth: From National Parks Traveler:
It was long before President Franklin Roosevelt dedicated Shenandoah on December 26, 1936, perhaps as many as 9,000 years ago, that the rumpled landscape of mountains, hollows, ridge-tops, and valleys were home to Native Americans, who later were replaced by hardy white settlers who scraped out a living from the land.
Much like the settlers of Great Smoky, the Virginians had a hard life of farming the thin mountain soil and living off the land. When the Great Depression struck in the 1920s, it was a death knell for the local communities. Between the Depression and the parks movement, many of the communities vanished from the landscape. Some remnants — old orchards, stone fence lines — linger, though time is slowly taking them over.
In 1926, Congress authorized the park, under the condition that no federal funds be used to purchase the land. The State of Virginia slowly acquired land along the crest of the Blue Ridge Mountains, forming a 100-mile-long swath of parkland. Shenandoah National Park was born.
Shenandoah’s struggles were far from over, however. Even before the park was officially created, National Park Service officials were discussing segregation. Jim Crow laws forced the agency to create black-only visitor centers, campgrounds, and even picnic areas. Slowly, though, the Civil Rights Movement broke down many of those barriers. Still, traces of black-only signs and buildings can be found in the park, slowly fading away. A new exhibit in the Byrd Visitor Center tells the story of segregation in the park.
While today’s presidents often head to Camp David to flee Washington, D.C., back in the 1920s a similar retreat was established at Shenandoah. In fact, it was President Herbert Hoover who put the location on the political map with his frequent retreats to a small, woodsy compound first known as Camp Rapidan and later referred to simply as Camp Hoover.
It Happened Here: From National Geographic.com:
Shenandoah National Park was built by members of the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC), a government jobs program created during the Great Depression of the 1930s. Workers constructed the rock walls, overlooks, picnic grounds, campgrounds, trails, and the Skyline Drive. They also planted the mountain laurel that lines the road, and built more than 340 structures in the park, many now listed in the National Register of Historic Places. The work of the CCC is commemorated by a statue of a CCC worker, Iron Mike.
Size: 197,411 acres
# Visitors: 1,210,200 in 2012. Attendance peaks in July/August, and is at the lowest in December/January.
Plants: From the NPS website:
The park’s Mid-Atlantic location straddles conditions of both the Northern and Southern Appalachian mountains allowing everything from lichens to oak trees to thrive. Over 1400 species of vascular plants are found in the park, though fewer than one hundred of these are the familiar trees and shrubs most noticeable to park visitors. The forests within Shenandoah National Park are generally classified as “oak-hickory”, yet they contain far more than just oak and hickory trees to discover. The park’s 70 mile length and 3500 foot elevation range create numerous habitats able to support a variety of forest cover types.
Animals: You can see big mammals in the park such as deer and bear … but there are also over 200 species of birds that live in, or migrate through, the Park. 18 species of warblers breed in the Park. Year-round species include tufted titmice, Carolina chickadees and barred owls.
Choices: From Wikipedia:
The park is best known for Skyline Drive, a 105 mile (169 km) road that runs the entire length of the park along the ridge of the mountains. The drive is particularly popular in the fall when the leaves are changing colors. 101 miles (162 km) of the Appalachian Trail are also in the park. In total, there are over 500 miles (800 km) of trails within the park. Of the trails, one of the most popular is Old Rag Mountain, which offers a thrilling rock scramble and some of the most breathtaking views in Virginia. There is also horseback riding, camping, bicycling, and many waterfalls.
Fees: $10 per vehicle, December – February. $15 per vehicle, March – November.
Staying There: Shenandoah has two main lodges as well as visitor cabins available. Camping is available in both the back country and the front country.
Contact Info:
3655 Hwy 211 East
Luray, VA 22835
Information Line: (540) 999-3500
Current Issues: The Park banned all outside firewood in 2010 in an effort to slow the spread of the Emerald Ash Borer, which has killed millions of ash trees.
Don’t Miss This:
From the Park’s Facebook page.
From the Park’s Facebook page.
Tweeted by the US Department of the Interior, 11/5/13.
From the Park’s Facebook page.
From the Park’s Facebook page.
From the Park’s Facebook page.
Dawn in the Park. Tweeted by the US Department of the Interior, 4/10/14.
From the Park’s Facebook page.
From the Park’s Facebook page.
On a recent dewey early morning, this beautiful two-foot wide web caught my eye. The Black and Yellow Argiope Spider (argiope aurantia) is commonly called a garden spider. They are quite large (up to 2 1/2 inches) and are called orb weavers because they begin weaving the web at the center, spiraling out toward the edges. From the Park’s Facebook page.
Pandora Sphinx Moth. From the Park’s Facebook page.
No filter necessary for this stunning photo from Hazel Mountain Overlook. Tweeted by the US Department of the Interior, 10/30/13.
An American Lady butterfly. From the Park’s Facebook page.
From the Park’s Facebook page.
Have you seen this blue tailed beauty while hiking? Juvenile five-lined skinks use their bright blue to tails to distract predators away from vital parts of their body. If threatened, the skink will dive into leaf litter to conceal its self and leave its tail exposed in order to distract the predator. The skink will detach its tail in order to escape. When the five-lined skink reaches maturity the blue tail changes to gray-brown. From the Park’s Facebook page.
White Oak Canyon is one of the most popular hikes in the park, with several waterfalls and cascades to enjoy along the way. The parking area and trail head is near mile post 42. The upper falls (shown above) can be hiked as an out and back hike from Limberlost trail head, or can be linked as part of an 8.2 mile loop, rated strenuous. From the Park’s Facebook page.
From the Park’s Facebook page.
From the Park’s Facebook page.
From the Park’s Facebook page.
From the Park’s Facebook page.
From the Park’s Facebook page.
From the Park’s Facebook page.
From the Park’s Facebook page.
From the Park’s Facebook page.
From the Park’s Facebook page.
From the Park’s Facebook page.
From the Park’s Facebook page.
Tweeted by the US Department of the Interior, 2/11/14.
Sunrise. March 9, 2014. Posted on Tumblr by the US Department of the Interior on 3/11/14.
More
National Park Service: Shenandoah National Park
Terra Galleria: Shenandoah National Park
West Coast Lens: Sky Line Drive
The Great American Parks Trip: Shenandoah The Beautiful
Like this:
Like Loading...