Extended Stay America - Mt. Olive - Budd Lake - Budd Lake Hotels, New Jersey
Extended Stay America - Mt. Olive - Budd Lake 2 Stars Hotel in Budd Lake, New Jersey Within US Travel DirectoryThis Extended Stay America - Mt.
Olive - Budd Lake is located in Budd Lake and especially designed for longer stays, with all rooms featuring a fully equipped kitchen.
The hotel offers free WiFi and a 24-hour front desk.
Every kitchen at Extended Stay America - Mt.
Olive is equipped with a stove , microwave and a fridge.
The hotel also provides guests with laundry and ironing facilities, upgraded bedding with extra pillows, and a water filter in every room.
The property offers free onsite parking and free local phone calls.
Attractions within close proximity to the hotel include the Pax Amicus Castle Theatre, the Wild West City and the Rockaway Townsquare Mall.
Extended Stay America - Mt. Olive - Budd Lake - Budd Lake Hotels, New Jersey
Location in : 71 International Drive South, NJ 07828 - Budd Lake, New Jersey, USA
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15 Julia Place, Budd Lake, NJ
Elegantly appointed and brand new 3BR w/ loft. Huge list of upgrades! Efficient & Bright. Enjoy resort-style living with clubhouse, pool, gym,
tennis, tot lots & sand volleyball Close to Rts 80 & 46. The first thing you'll notice is the incredible hardwood through a smart Bainbridge floor plan. Gas fireplace with remote, Kohler fixtures, Granite counters, upgraded cabinets and SS appliances are only out-shined by the suncatching skylight above your breakfast nook. The natural woods behind offer the best privacy in Morris Chase. Master suite offers plenty of space, two walk-ins, double vanity sinks and a separate tub and shower. Loft is wired for phone and cable and skylight provides plenty of natural light. Awesome amenities and low maintenance fees!
Off-Roading (Hidden Lakes of New Jersey)
We found some hidden blue lakes located in the Pine Barrens of New Jersey and went off road driving and fat bike riding.
Tracks: Stop Biting (Instrumental) by Abstract Rude, Concerto (Instrumental) by Swollen Members, & Reinstated (Instrumental) by Son Doobie. All tracks produced by Rob the Viking
Extended Stay America - Mt. Olive - Budd Lake in Budd Lake NJ
Rates: . . .. .. ... . . . . . . .. .. .. Extended Stay America - Mt. Olive - Budd Lake 71 International Drive South Budd Lake NJ 07828 This Extended Stay America - Mt. Olive - Budd Lake is located in Budd Lake and especially designed for longer stays, with all rooms featuring a fully equipped kitchen. The hotel offers free WiFi and a 24-hour front desk. Every kitchen at Extended Stay America - Mt. Olive is equipped with a stove , microwave and a fridge. The hotel also provides guests with laundry and ironing facilities, upgraded bedding with extra pillows, and fresh water in in every room. The property offers free onsite parking and free local phone calls. Attractions within close proximity to the hotel include the Pax Amicus Castle Theatre, the Wild West City and the Rockaway Townsquare Mall.
My Drive Home - Norwalk, CT to Budd Lake, NJ
1/8/10 12 p.m. - 1:30 p.m.
Taken with Lapse It on Android.
BUDD LAKE BEAR TERRORIZES LOCAL NEIGHBORHOOD ..
July 4th, 2017 .. A local 500 lb black bear spent July 4th walking through front and back yards of the sleepy little town of Budd Lake NJ today, in Morris county ..
Abandoned NJ Tile and Brick Factory Ruins Pine Barrens Pasadena Brooksbrae
A vist to the Abandoned Pasadena Brooksbrae Tile and Brick Factory Ruins in Manchester New Jersey in the Pine Barrens.
GPS: 39.887904, -74.441565
New York TImes Article October 28, 2007
A FEW hundred yards in from the road, past the abandoned railroad tracks, a casual hiker may be surprised to come across rows of stone stanchions and brick walls in the middle of the forest. A closer inspection will reveal a series of tunnels. Look even closer and one will notice the multicolored bits of paint splattered across most of the surfaces of this ruin.
Welcome to Brooksbrae Brick Company, one of the Pine Barrens’ dozens of ghost towns. Slightly eerie though it may be, this is not where you will find spectral images of those who once roamed these lonely woods. Leave that to the ghost hunters who come out in droves this time of year in search of the Jersey Devil or other apparitions believed to still reside here.
Rather, these lost towns are what remain of communities where thousands of people lived and toiled in the 18th and 19th centuries, producing tile, bricks, glass, lumber, paper, iron and munitions.
“This was not some bucolic Walden Pond — this was heavy industry,” said Budd Wilson, a former state archaeologist who over the last 48 years has excavated many of the sites of these lost towns. “People act like nothing ever happened here. That’s not the case. Plenty happened here. It was just 100 years ago.”
An observant visitor with a fertile imagination can still catch glimpses of this bygone era, whether by examining the detritus, much of which still sits on the forest floor, or by visiting the buildings and ruins that yet stand, in various stages of preservation or decay. But before setting out to discover this lost world, a little history might prove useful.
A vast labyrinth of woods, ponds, streams and trails, the Pine Barrens’ now largely protected 1.4 million acres provided fertile opportunity for colonists in the early 1700s who tapped the area’s primary resource: water.
First were the sawmills, operating on water power and taking advantage of the abundant cedar and pine. Soon after, a high level of iron ore was discovered in the water. These iron bogs became a major resource for iron production for close to 100 years, with 17 furnaces operating at one point, manufacturing cast- and wrought-iron goods.
“You had all this noise and all this smoke coming out of the tops of these furnaces,” said Mr. Wilson, describing the area in the early 1800s. “It was like having your fireplace come out into your room all the time. And people were living amongst this.”
By the mid-19th century, the clay and brick industries were thriving, as well as glass manufacturing, which used the abundant sand here. When much of the country’s manufacturing moved to the cities, this area switched to agriculture, specifically cranberries and blueberries, which are still vital industries today.
Meanwhile, the land became ripe for speculators, like the Philadelphia financier Joseph Wharton, who bought up dozens of abandoned industrial towns with plans to pump fresh water from the Pine Barrens to Philadelphia. After he was thwarted by legislation passed to prohibit such interstate export, the land was eventually sold to the state. The 115,111 acres of Wharton State Forest make up the largest single tract of land in New Jersey.
Fascinated by the ruins she stumbled upon while hiking in the Pine Barrens, Barbara Solem-Stull, of Shamong, in Burlington County, spent a year investigating the remains of some 45 former industrial towns. The result was her book “Ghost Towns and Other Quirky Places in the New Jersey Pine Barrens” (Plexus Publishing, 2005). Filled with hand-drawn maps, photos and detailed directions on how to reach these often difficult to find places, the book is part travelogue, part history and part day-trippers’ guide. A determined explorer can probably visit three or four sites in a day, she said.
To get a sense of the lost civilization here, a visitor would do well to start at Harrisville, where some of the most intact ruins stand. On the west border of Bass River Township along Route 679, Harrisville was a gathering place for many of the surrounding company towns. Industry here can be traced back to an iron-slitting mill in 1795, but the majestic brick and stone arches that remain are from the late 1800s, when the Harris brothers ran a paper mill.
Continued:
Hackettstown, NJ
Driving in Hackettstown after leaving the M&M Company.
Super 8 North Bergen - North Bergen Hotels, New Jersey
Super 8 North Bergen 2 Stars Hotel in North Bergen, New Jersey Within US Travel Directory Minutes from the attractions of Manhattan, this hotel in North Bergen, New Jersey offers access to a transfer to and from New York City 7 days a week for a charge.
Super 8 North Bergen features free Wi-Fi access as well as a free breakfast.
The guestrooms boast amenities such as refrigerators, microwaves and cable TV.
Within 5.
5 km of the North Bergen Super 8, visitors can enjoy the restaurants and shops of Hoboken, New Jersey.
Super 8 North Bergen - North Bergen Hotels, New Jersey
Location in : 2800 Columbia Avenue, NJ 07047 - North Bergen, New Jersey, USA
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The Cape May Lighthouse, Cape May Point, New Jersey
Hello, another video of three on our little get away to Cape May. The Cape May Lighthouse is located in New Jersey at the tip of Cape May, in Lower Township's Cape May Point State Park. It was built in 1859, was automated in 1946, and continues operation to this day. It is the third fully documented lighthouse to be built at Cape May Point. The first was built in 1823, the second in 1847. The exact locations of the first two lighthouses are now underwater due to erosion. There are 199 steps to the top of the Lighthouse. The view from the top extends to Cape May City and Wildwood to the north, Cape May Point to the south, and, on a clear day, Cape Henlopen, Delaware, to the west. The tower is 157 feet 6 inches tall, from the ground to the tower's cast iron spiral staircase. There are 217 steps from the ground to the top, with 199 steps in the tower's cast iron spiral staircase. The lighthouse has two separate walls. The outside wall is cone-shaped, and is 3 feet 10 inches thick at the bottom, and 1 foot 6 inches thick at the top. The inside wall is cylinder with 8.5-inch thick walls which support the spiral staircase. The walls were designed to withstand winds several times above hurricane force. I hope you enjoyed the video, watch in HD if you can. Please add me to your friends list, and subscribe. Thanks, Enginenut :-)