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LMP: TB Drop Off Spot (Park Tour 13 Gully Brook) Traditional Cache

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Hidden : 11/18/2018
Difficulty:
1.5 out of 5
Terrain:
1.5 out of 5

Size: Size:   small (small)

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Geocache Description:


Come on out to Gully Brook Park! This park features a playground, 1.36 miles of walking trails, 4 geocaches, and a fishing spot. A brief glimpse into the history of Gully Brook Park:

"

Gully Brook, its tributaries and hemlock ravines were once known far and wide for their interest and beauty. 

In 1916, a group of local gentlemen began to meet and discuss the recently published essays of naturalist author John Burroughs, and Burroughs Nature Club began. Club meetings featured renowned guest speakers and explorations to places with interesting plants, birds or other natural history.

Local people became familiar with the outstanding natural areas of northeast Ohio and Gully Brook was a frequent haunt. Enjoying the abundant spring wildflowers or the shade of a record-sized slippery elm tree, hiking or studying nesting hawks and owls were some of their early pastimes. These naturalists actively worked to conserve Gully Brook and other favorite places including Gildersleeve Mountain (Chapin Forest Reservation), Pymatuning (State Park), Halle Ravine (Penitentiary Glen Reservation), Otis Springs (Hach Otis State Nature Preserve) and Mentor Headlands and Marsh (State Park and State Nature Preserve). As early as 1925, Willoughby’s newspaper called for a public “natural woods preserve for future generations” at Gully Brook.

The construction of Interstate 90 during the late 1950s dramatically changed the character of Lake County. In the Gully Brook valley, family farms were divided, streams were diverted into culverts and wild plant and animal communities were changed.

In 1990, the Lake Metroparks Openspace Opportunities Master Plan (1990-2010) identified Gully Brook as property that should be protected by Lake Metroparks. In the 1990s, Willoughby Natural Areas Conservancy supported the conservation of Gully Brook. With federal and local funding, the park was completed and opened in 2011. Today, more than a mile of Gully Brook and its watershed are protected within this park, providing a refuge for a variety of plant and wildlife species. "

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