Here we go!
On the way to the World's Largest Red Cedar.
Tall guys with lots of moss on the Northern side.
If lost in a forest...the moss is on the Northern side of a tree. Sun doesn't get there!
Here it is! 63.5' circumference, 19.5' diameter and 174' tall!
A tree-hugger gets hugged by a tree.
A view on the inside looking up through the hollow trunk.
It's the largest tree in the State of Washington and the largest tree in the World outside of California.
And yet another view.
Many of the roots show above ground.
Here's a closer look at roots above the ground.
Mary takes a photo of a Salmon Berry.
Lots of different kinds of moss here.
Mary enjoyed many a salmon Berry. I tried about 10 and all had a sour taste.
The Ferns were beautiful and about five feet tall.
Many a three-leaf clover. I couldn't one with four leaves.
Lots of beautiful moss.
Lots of large Maples with lots of moss.
A closer look at the moss on the Maple Tree.
Who says no moss grows on Mary?
A mossy Maple Tree.
Mary gets another Salmon Berry.
A dry creekbed.
Early settlers lived here.
A closer view of their homestead.
Mary tries her hand at cultivating the soil.
My guess is a 1946 Chevrolet Truck.
A side view.
A pretty walk in the park.
There were a herd of Ferns.
Most were about five feet tall.
A buttercup.
Looking into a creekbed.
A different view.
And another view.
On the bridge over the Quinault River. Snow-capped mountains are in the far background.
A neat waterfall.
Here's a close-up.
A mountain stream.