Woodward Cave and Campground, Woodward PA
Today we explored Woodward Cave in Woodward, Pennsylvania
Woodward Cave Tour, 7-24-10.MOV
Woodward Cave, Woodward, PA, tour 7-24-10
Hang Out Group in a Cave
On the road trip the Hogs went to Woodward Cave and Campground to check out the Cave. We all had a great time!
Caledonia State Park, Pennsylvania, Campground Review by Mrs. Fesler and Pine Grove Furnace
Campgrounds change so do your own research
Explore Stony Fork Creek Campground | Visit Potter-Tioga, PA
Randy Grim, owner of Stony Fork Creek Campground, talks about the layout of the camp and what options there are available to campers and much more!
Black Snake on a tree Pennsylvania Pa Sinnemahoning State Park
Sinnemahoning State Park Presents The Blake Snake on a Stomp :)
Kudos to Park Ranger Kim and Jackie (retired)
Behind the Scenes at Penn's Cave Wildlife Park
Huntingdon County Visitors Bureau executive director Matt Price, and membership services director Ed Stoddard got a private guided tour of Penn's Cave Wildife Park in Centre Hall, PA. Penn's Cave is a great day-trip while vacationing in the Raystown Lake Region of The Alleghenies!
2015 Everything Boating - Slideshow
At Lighthouse Harbor Marina on Lake Wallenpaupack Pa...We are Everything Boating! New & used boat sales, rentals, parasailing, jet ski rentals, Hobie kayaks & paddleboards, full service department, stocked watersports store & ships' store and so much more!
Visit us at LighthouseHarbor.com or our watersports store at OnlineWatersports.com.
Camping in a Deserted part of Tracy Ridge Part: 2 of 5
Drunk guys singin Toby Keith
Kareoke night at Happy Acres campground
Patton Cave
While hiking in Charles C. Deam Wilderness, I led my family to one of my favorite landmarks. Get the rest of the story at
Get more of Jamie's story and videos at…
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Jamie Lewis Hedges creates & writes adventure, including retreats for nonprofits.
Explore your nature & culture. Find your voice.
Echo your mission.
► Jamie travels from Grand Rapids, MI. In the last year, his family has traveled 35,000 miles across 27 state lines. He's explored Canada, Ireland, Vietnam. He's led others through remote areas of the US, Sub-Saharan Africa, and Columbian Amazon.
► His passion is creating retreats for nonprofit staff & boards to find their voice. His background is in anthropology, team building, and outdoor recreation. He's worked in 5 nonprofits, 2 as an administrator, and consulted 15.
► Jamie has spoken publicly for 20+ years. His talks are captivating stories that reflect on the outdoors, culture, and social responsibility.
Theme MuSIC - Josie Has the Upper Hand by Josh Woodward
The Smith Mine Disaster of 1943 – near Red Lodge, Montana MT
The Smith Mine Disaster of 1943 – near Red Lodge, Montana MT.
From the Billings, MT. Gazette, Feb 26, 2013:
Saturday paid time-and-a-half at the Montana Coal and Iron Co.’s Smith Mine between Bearcreek and Washoe.
Miners who had just emerged from the Great Depression of the 1930s eagerly worked the overtime weekend shift. They had the added incentive of doing their part to keep the World War II war machine running.
Although many were immigrants, they were a patriotic lot, according to Matt Stump, a senior in history at Montana State University Billings. Most had the cost of war bonds deducted from their wages, he said.
As 1942 drew to a close, Frank Mourich, a native of Austria, had increased his purchase of war bonds to $75 of his $132 biweekly paycheck, Stump found while researching his senior thesis.
Daylight was about an hour old when Mourich and 76 other coal miners entered the mouth of the Smith Mine on Feb. 27, 1943. On that bright winter morning, they descended about 7,000 feet into the No. 3 vein and went to work.
No one knows whether any of these men intent on their work noticed an unusual buildup of methane gas or coal dust, and there are only theories about what ignited an explosion so powerful that it blew a 20-ton locomotive off its tracks.
Management got its first notification of the disaster below from hoisting engineer Alex Hawthorne, 55, who telephoned the surface and said: “There’s something wrong down here. I’m getting out.”
All three survivors, who were described in the newspaper as “very sick,” were rushed to a hospital in Red Lodge, five miles away.
Also hospitalized early that day were eight volunteers who were searching for survivors.
Above ground, miners’ families kept a calm, hopeful watch, The Gazette reported.
Meanwhile, the Red Cross, already in a high state of preparedness because of the war, quickly established a canteen to feed the crowd gathering at the mine. Within an hour of the first call for help, the organization had set up a 50-bed emergency hospital in Red Lodge, with the assistance of local high school students.
On Sunday, Feb. 28, experienced miners told reporters that they believed that there was just a “thousand to one chance” trapped miners were still alive. The Butte specialists, who were equipped with oxygen masks, could stay underground as long as six hours at a time, but they were unfamiliar with the mine. Regular mine employees with only filter masks could not go as deep into the tunnel.
Desperate to save family members and friends, local miners stayed down as long as they could.
The rescue effort was grim.
“When exhausted rescuers come out of the mine, most of them are dazed and groggy from the effects of the gas for hours afterward, The Gazette reported. They are taken to the Red Lodge emergency hospital and put to bed. Drugs are administered to quiet their nerves, but many grow hysterical.”
Six bodies had been recovered by Sunday. But miners’ wives kept the faith.
“Calm and steadfast, unalterable in belief that their men will come out all right, they waited side by side on benches in the improvised canteen set up in the machine shop,” Gazette reporter Kathryn Wright wrote. “Many have been there since the disaster to meet the boys ‘when they come out.’ ”
Robert Wakenshaw’s wife, awaiting word of her husband and her father-in-law, held her head high and her shoulders erect as she told Wright: “I know they’re coming out. I have all the confidence in the world.”
Seventeen-year-old Martha Barovich knew her widowed father, Sam, would emerge safely.
In agonizing slowness over the next week, the number of bodies began to mount. The last — that of mine foreman Elmer Price, 53 — came out on March 7. He left a wife and five children.
The final casualty of the disaster, Matt Woodward, a rescue worker suffering the effects of his efforts, died April 9. His death brought the total to 75.
Video captured with a Canon Vixia HFS-100 camera and edited with Adobe Premier Pro.
Music Oppressive Gloom by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
Haunted Mental Asylum Video (WARNING)
We wanted to try making a whole YouTube video inside the abandoned haunted mental asylum in our town. I've literally never been left so confused and disturbed in my life.. Please do not try this guys.
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Hiking Adam Run Trail | Hampton Hills Metro Parks | Summit County Metro Parks | Akron, OH
Hampton Hills is part of the Summit Metroparks system. It has two hiking trails, an archery range, and a mountain biking area in designated sections of the park.
This video takes viewer along Adam Run Trail, a moderately challenging 3 mile hike in the Cuyahoga Valley. The trail first follows alongside Adam Run, with several creek crossings, before a 200 foot ascent to the valley rim.
The trail then proceeds for about 1/4 mile through a forest heavily populated by pine trees that were planted by local Girl Scout troops in the 1960's. The forest then gives way to several open fields before arriving at a short path to Top 'o the World, which is former farmland containing a preserved barn.
The last leg of Adam Run winds along several rolling hills until it descends about 150 feet (including a long set of stairs) back to the trailhead.
For more information about Adam Run Trail, visit Summit Metroparks's Hampton Hills site:
For a map, elevation profile, and other details about Adam Run, visit Hiking Project:
Trailhead location, via Google Maps:
Catch you on the trails!
Best of Bigfootage | Finding Bigfoot
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Haunted Places in North Carolina
From Charlotte to Raleigh, Greensboro to Durham, the Tar Heel state is covered in supernatural mystery, which is why The Speakeasy presents our picks for the top 10 most haunted places in North Carolina. Enjoy!
Photos:
“Queens University, Charlotte” by James Willamor ( is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0 (
“Queens University, Charlotte” by James Willamor ( is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0 (
“Harper House” by Straitgate is in the Public Domain
“BENTONVILLE BATTLEGROUND STATE HISTORIC SITE” by JERRYE & ROY KLOTZ MD ( is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 (
“Smith-McDowell House 03” by Elisa.rolle ( is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0 (
“Lady’s bedroom at the Smoth-McDowell House Museum” by Government & Heritage Library, State Library of NC ( is licensed under CC BY 2.0 (
“ASU Sanford Mall Winter” by Clayhefner is licensed under CC0 1.0 Public Domain Dedication (
“Appalachian State University” by chucka_nc ( is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0 (
“US North Carolina NYNY 11306-6-46” by United States Navy photo courtesy of David Buell ( is in the Public Domain
“USS North Carolina-27527” by Ken Thomas ( is in the Public Domain
“Grove Park Inn, Ashville NC, 5-16-2007” by jill, jellidonut…whatever ( is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0 (
“20110927 48 Grove Park Inn, Ashville, NC” by David Wilson ( is licensed under CC BY 2.0 (
“Bellamy Mansion Wilmington NC front 02” by Jameslwoodward ( is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 (
“Bellamy Mansion Slave Quarters” by Bellamy Mansion ( is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0 (
“Historic Mordecai House-Raleigh-NC-13 Sept 2010” by Mark Turner ( is in the Public Domain
“Mordecai House” by Fed Gov ( is in the Public Domain
No Agenda Episode 1132: False meme-ification
The No Agenda Show.
Episode 1132 with Adam Curry and John C. Dvorak.