The view on the way out; a view of the most impenetrable part of the woods. It is the north side of the forest.

A thicket of saplings, raspberry brambles, and dogwoods block the way in, but, I DID get some see some colouring up of some Sugar Maple foliage at the woodland’s edge.

A patch of Taxus canadensis. An untrained eye would see them as young canadian hemlock, but a few berries here and there along with other details (such as the fact that Canadian Hemlock has silver undersides for its needles) reveals what it actually is.

Interestingly its said that its rarer in deer heavy locales? (supposedly in Miichigan in particular) Despite being super-toxic to livestock, deer apparently like to browse on it, especially in winter.

There were a LOT of Canadian Hemlock (Tsuga canadensis); old trees, young trees, one even uprooted but still holding on (will have a separate post for those two specific groups).

I’m sure there are at least 15+ specimens in that forest. I have never seen this many Canadian Hemlock trees in the wild before! All other specimens I’ve seen in the past have been either garden specimens (like in Cuddy Gardens) or were singular lonely specimens in the entire forest (that one swam forest walk a few years back).

It’s…. almost strange to think this tree is threatened by pests down south in the Appalachia.

I was very confused this fern especially when I discovered its identity (thanks to @geopsych); Sensitive Fern (Onoclea sensibilis).

I was not aware they could get SO BIG with such big fronds; some definitely almost reached waist high in height. Also weird; I don’t seem to have any uploaded pics of the MASSIVE colony of them which I saw in that forest…