Hocking Hills Getaways
There are plenty of roads meandering their way through the
Hocking Hills
of Ohio.
Some are paved and some are gravel. A few are still even a dusty mix of
dirt, grass and pebbles.
Run down or freshly paved, they all have
one thing in common, though. Each of these roads leads to somewhere in the
Hocking Hills. Whether it is toward the well-known sections of the region like
Ash Cave or Old Man's Cave or past a more unfamiliar place like the abandoned
town of Moonville nearly buried beneath a hundred years of brushy overgrowth,
every highway, street or dead end drive takes us to a certain place we want to
go.
The
Hocking
Hills are full of nooks and crannies hidden somewhere between the
huge pockets of wilderness, antique shopping malls and canoe liveries. Folks
drive here from big cities like Columbus, Chicago and hundreds of little towns.
They come to see the more popular sites of the region like Ash Cave, Old Man's
Cave and Cedar Falls. They canoe the Hocking River, ride horses through Hocking
Forest and find that special gift at an outlet in Logan.
But here at Hidden Hocking, we want to
show you the parts of the Hocking Hills region most folks never see. These are
places like Cantwell Cliffs and Moonville Tunnel you drive right past without
even knowing and interesting sites less than a stone's throw away that are right
under your nose but you don't see. From little shops to ghost towns, fall colors
to winter hiking trails, these are places less likely traveled and just waiting
for you to discover just what makes them special. So come, enjoy Hidden Hocking!
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He's mostly feathers and
eyeballs. He usually eats his prey in one big gulp then
spits out the rest-a grotesquely deformed wet ball of
spongy fur, slimy skull and mushy skeleton.
Tell that to your
kids. It's true. It's just plain gross. And they
like that kind of stuff. Better yet, bring them out to the
park to meet Ivan face to face. They'll like that even
better.
Ohio birds of prey
programs. Hocking Hills State Park.
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