I found this lovely photo of a star magnolia while perusing Flickr for photos tagged "Downsville".
Yes, it's Coach Mom's back yard.
A view from Main Street America by a congenital Democrat and truth-seeking attorney. Proud Member of the Reality-Based Community. Posting on the Internets since 2004.
The project will cut about 10 acres of trees near the battle site, part of the park's plan to cut 576 acres of non-historic trees to restore as many 1863 viewsheds as possible.
So far, the Park Service has cut 165 acres of trees, but has left "witness trees" - those that were there at the time of the battle - intact, said Jim Johnson, chief of resource planning.
Johnson said a staff biotechnician marks trees old enough to have stood during the battle as not to be cut.
He said the Park Service spared a tall, shady tree that stands on top of Devil's Den because it probably stood during the battle, though it would have been a sapling then.
The Park Service will continue to treat cut areas for two years to prevent weeds from growing in and prevent trees from repopulating the area, Johnson said.
"Every meadow wants to be a woods if you don't cut it and maintain it," Johnson said.
The finished rehabilitation project is expected to cost nearly $3.5 million in federal and private funds. The Park Service is using historical maps, photos, sketches and archival records to recreate topographic and other features. The plan calls for clearing woods, replanting orchards, restoring fencing and rehabilitating farm lanes and roads that once crisscrossed the battlefield.
Perhaps the most controversial part of the plan calls for demolishing noted architect Richard Neutra's 1962 Cyclorama, home to Paul Dominique Philippoteaux's historic circa 1884 painting of the battle.
The building is on the National Register of Historic Places. It also sits on Cemetery Ridge, the place where Union soldiers repulsed the ill-fated Pickett's Charge.