Tag: fossil hunting

  • My ideal rough week and Earth’s Hidden Gems

    My ideal rough week and Earth’s Hidden Gems

    Describe your ideal week.

    There’s nothing like a week dedicated to hunting beauty. Whether that is from the rocks I am hounding or the falls we are chasing. We are surrounded by natural beauty and creative inspiration. My ideal l getaway unfolds somewhere with diverse geology. A place where I can find fossils in the morning and crystals or semiprecious stones in the afternoon, all while soaking in breathtaking landscapes and the suns rays.

    Dawn to Midday: The Hunt

    Each morning starts with Luna’s cold nose nudging me awake as first light filters through the tent. Kelsey stirs beside me, already reaching for the camp stove to brew coffee. Our campsite sits far from designated campgrounds and tourist trails just wilderness, silence, and possibility. Oh yea and a composting toilet.

    After a quick breakfast, I grab my field kit. The essentials hammers, chisels, brushes, and collection bags organized for efficiency or just Aldi bags (if I’m being honest). The morning hours belong to serious specimen hunting, when my eyes are a little more sharp and my patience abundant. Some days I explore exposed rock faces rich with marine fossils; other days I sift through creek beds for tumbled treasures or I chip carefully at promising outcroppings.

    Luna explores nearby, occasionally bringing me sticks instead of rocks (still working on her training after all this time). We like it out here since she doesn’t need a leash. My partner alternates between helping me search and capturing the landscape through their camera lens. We work in comfortable silence, occasionally calling each other over when something interesting appears.

    Midday to Afternoon: Water and Wonder

    When the sun climbs high and the day heats up, we transition to water exploration. A series of waterfalls create the perfect swimming holes. There are some shallow enough for Luna to splash in, others deep enough for proper diving. The cold water shocks against sun-warmed skin, creating that perfect contrast that makes you feel completely in the moment.

    After swimming, we spread our morning’s finds across sun-heated rocks to dry and examine. I pull out my loupe to inspect the details of particularly interesting specimens or finds. I love the crystalline structure of a geode, the delicate imprint of an ancient fern, and the perfect spirals of a fossil shell. Each piece tells a story millions of years in the making.

    Evening Rituals: Fire and Flow

    As afternoon fades, we return to camp to prepare for evening. May i build the perfect campfire while Kelso seasons thick-cut steaks with just rosemary, salt, and pepper. The simple preparation lets the quality of the meat speak for itself when it sizzles over open flames.

    With dinner preparations underway, I settle into my hammock strung between two sturdy pine trees. This is when I roll a blunt of quality green, taking slow, appreciative draws as I flip through my journal to go over notes for the day’s finds. The combination of physical exertion, successful discoveries, and gentle relaxation creates the perfect mindset for creativity.

    As twilight deepens, we feast on perfectly flame cooked steaks and fire-roasted vegetables. Luna lies nearby, gnawing contentedly on her own special treat, occasionally looking up to ensure her humans are still present.

    After dinner, the campfire becomes our center. My partner roasts marshmallows for s’mores while I pull out my laptop, the words flowing more freely here than they ever do in civilization. Poems about ancient oceans, the patience of stone, and the fleeting nature of human existence emerge onto the page.

    Days of Discovery

    Each day follows this rhythm but with different locations to explore. One day might focus on sedimentary layers rich with fossils; another might take us to mineral veins in metamorphic rock. We hike to panoramic overlooks where the landscape reveals its geological story in exposed strata.

    In the evenings, we alternate between different campsites, each offering its own unique character. We spend one night beside a waterfall, another on a ridge with sunset views, a third in a grove of ancient trees whose roots have witnessed centuries.

    The Essence of Escape

    What makes this week ideal isn’t just the specimens collected, though my bags grow heavier with treasures each day. It’s the rhythm of existence dictated by sunlight rather than screens, the deep conversations that emerge around campfires, and the way that disconnecting from everything else connects me more deeply to what matters: creativity, companionship, and the ancient stories told by stones.

    As the week concludes, I carefully wrap each specimen in paper, noting observations. But the real treasures are the filled digital journal pages, the renewed connection with kelso, Luna’s evident joy, and the lingering sense of peace that comes from a week lived exactly as we choose.

    This is freedom: rocks, water, words, love, and enough green to keep the edges soft. This is my ideal week.

    We all wear masks metaphorically speaking

    Poeaxtry’s🔗

  • Blue Rock State Park Fossil Hike – Two Heart-Shaped Fossils & a Closed Fire Tower

    Blue Rock State Park Fossil Hike – Two Heart-Shaped Fossils & a Closed Fire Tower

    View from the top of Blue Ridge’s fire tower
    Another lock in the wild another Tower view

    I made the climb. Another fire tower.

    Second one in a month. I’d looked it up before driving out to Blue Rock State Park, and every trail map and hiker report said the fire tower cab was open. So I drove. I hiked. I climbed.

    And it was locked. I wouldn’t care if it wasn’t supposed to be open, the view was still amazing.

    No interior. Just wire railing, rusted stairs, and that strange feeling of being high up and let down at the same time.

    But the trail still gave me something. Actually, two things. Two Heart-Shaped Fossil Plates, Found By Accident

    The gang from way up top The tower.
    They look so tiny!

    I wasn’t fossil hunting, not really. But like always, my eyes stay low to the trail. Always scanning for the strange and the almost-heart-shaped. And there they were. These two fossil plates, shale-gray and layered, both shaped like hearts. One had coral lines across the surface like it had been pressed into memory. The other was chunkier, heavy in the hand.

    I keep these for my fiancé. Wherever I go, if the earth offers me a heart, I take it to them. And then kelso puts them in a heart jar.

    Beautiful fungi on the Blue ridge loop trail
    I’m a sucker for fungi photos

    These two are the latest in the growing pile. None of them are polished or perfect. Most still have dirt in the lines. But that’s the point. They’re not shaped by effort they’re just found, already waiting. Like gifts from the earth for me to take home.

    The Tower Was Closed, But the Trail Gave More

    The cab being locked wasn’t that big of a deal. I’d imagined sitting cross-legged on the floor of the tower, eating a snack, writing a line or two. Smoking a joint. Just being above the trees for a while.

    Instead, I stood on the platform, held the railing, and looked through the metal. I did get to see a cute tiny lock a couple but in the fencing on the side together. I love locks on the wild.

    Sometimes the ground gives more than the sky.

    I got to see Luna from way up above. My friend sky and her baby stayed on the ground with her.

    The gangs all down there. View of my friends from mid way up the tower.
    The whole gang minus me

    Links photos song?

  • Second Fossil Hunt at Fossil Park, Ohio – Found a Heart-Shaped Fossil Rock

    Second Fossil Hunt at Fossil Park, Ohio – Found a Heart-Shaped Fossil Rock

    Fossil Park – Sylvania, Ohio

    Sign at Sylvania, Ohio Fossil park to help identify fossils you find!
    Fossil identification sign

    Second visit in 8 days / brought a friend this time

    Back again, second time in just over a week. I didn’t plan on becoming someone who returns to the same place so soon, but here I am. Fossil Park’s got a hold on me, apparently.

    This time I brought a friend. They’d never been either, and she didn’t know what to look for, what was real, what was just rock. Same as me the first time, honestly. But where I was breaking apart crumbly layers of mud and shale, they were out there going at full boulders like a one-person demolition crew. I looked over at one point and they were dead-serious trying to crack open a rock the size of a car battery. I told them, “You’re working too hard. You look for these.” And I handed her some shale. Eventually she caught on, just as I had. As for me? I found a rock shaped like a heart. That’s already a good day.

    Slyvania, Ohio water tower
    The water tower that marks the parking lot

    But this one had fossils stretched across the surface… tiny patterns and lines like pressed flowers, just petrified. It’s rough, imperfect, and absolutely getting added to the little collection I’ve been building for my fiancé. I always keep heart-shaped rocks for them. This one just happens to be 375 million years old and covered in dead sea life. Felt right.

    We took our time heading back. Talked. Wandered. Didn’t even feel rushed. That’s two visits now, and I’m already thinking about the third. Might be soon.

    Large fossil marking the entrance to Fossil parks quarry
    Large fossil at entrance

    Links kofi a song?

    Fossils more fossils even more fossils?

  • Breaking Rocks in the heat, a fossil dig, that nearly-did me in.

    Breaking Rocks in the heat, a fossil dig, that nearly-did me in.

    Sylvania Ohio water tower, blue skys, and white clouds
    The water tower from the parking lot

    I went up to Monroe, Michigan the other day. Let’s be real, their prices are cheaper. It’s legal in both Ohio and Michigan. So, who gives a fuck? I’d been meaning to combine one of these trips with a fossil stop. A few weeks ago, it hit me. Fossil Park in Sylvania, Ohio is only like a half-hour away. It is right on my way home. Easy win, right?

    And yeah, even with the gas prices up in the USA (thanks Trump for lowering them NOT). In Michigan, it’s still cheaper, and way more worth it. Even considering, the closest Ohio one is right around the corner from my house. The THC is weak, the taxes are wild, and they’re trying to take half your soul in regulation fees. Fuck Ohio.

    I was hoping to finally catch Lake Huron on this run. I thought the ride back wasn’t going to be that long. Then I actually looked at the apple map. Curious to see the distance just from Port Huron to my place. It slapped me in the face with a full five-hour drive. So Huron’s getting bumped to a future trip.

    Instead, I shifted gears and headed to Fossil Park. I’m really glad I did. All things considered, I really need to make sure I have an inhaler with me at all times!

    Fossil Park isn’t a “hike” in the usual sense. It isn’t a forest, no huge trail, no hills, no beautiful waterfalls, or views. It’s a designated fossil dig zone. This area is set up with trucked-in Silica Shale, which is a layered rock that splits into sheets. It is not the crumbly mud ball I had in my head. I spent the first hour breaking up clay blobs. A dumb ass, sweating and squinting at my phone trying to figure out what shale actually looks like. To save you the same time I wasted, here’s a little Spoiler: it’s the flat, flaky, grayish rock. You’re welcome.

    There’s a fenced-in quarry where the actual digging happens. You’re only allowed to collect fossils within that enclosed space, not just anywhere in the park. Let’s follow the rules. We should use the provided trash cans. Do not bring tools (rock hammers and such). Follow whatever else they ask. So we can work to keep the cool free things cool and free!

    Metal sign with Fossil Identification, QR codes, & information
    Photo showing most of the poster type signs near sitting areas in the quarry

    They’ve got:

    Picnic tables and with covers used as shaded spots around the quarry. The shaded covers have metal posters showing all the fossils you can find. This is super helpful if you can see your phone. It’s not too bright to see or so hot you can’t touch it. If you can see your phone, there’s a QR code on the poster also. You can it scan and learn more. There’s a big-ass water tower, pretty much in the parking lot. Which is a cool thing to use to know you’re at the right spot.

    If you’re wondering about trails, yes! And, it’s definitely not just a fenced-off fossil pit, either. The actual dig site is enclosed. The whole area has more going on. There is a network of smaller trails that connect to Sylvan Prairie Park and Pacesetter Park. I could never climb these. There is a climbing area with three multi-sided towers near the parking area. Next to it is a large covered picnic shelter just outside the dig zone. It’s certainly a spot where you can make an entire afternoon out of it! Even if you don’t spend all six hours baking in shale like I did.

    Axton stand's on top of climbable rock wall while his friend is stuck on the side

    So I totally ended up back here FOUR times since this trip! I made it up the wall ALSO!!!
    Climbing

    Here’s what you can expect to find in that Devonian Silica Shale:

    Trilobites (rare but incredible)

    Brachiopods (look like seashells but aren’t)

    Bryozoans (coral-like, colonial creatures)

    Crinoids (those segmented stem fossils)

    Gastropods (ancient snail-like shells)

    Horn corals (singular coral fossils, horn-shaped)

    I managed to grab a decent variety. Though, I forgot my bucket or even a bag. Alas, I must go back for more!

    The near-death experience I mentioned:

    I got there before noon, thinking I’d stay for “a little while.” Next thing I know, it’s after 6 p.m., my entire outfit was soaked through with sweat. I then notice I’m on the verge of either a heat stroke or an asthma attack. It was 104 degrees out. I didn’t even realize how bad it was. I tried to walk two minutes back to my car. Honestly, I had to keep stopping to breathe. Or sit. Took me forever. Not fun. Hydrate, people. This is how you die. Alone. Fossils in your pocket.

    Even though it wasn’t a traditional hike, for me. Fossil Park earns its place in this journal. I’m sure I’ll have to go back to see the trails. I also want to see more fossils! I said that like Mr. Crocker from The Fairly Odd Parents when he’s yelling “fairy godparents.” It’s outdoors. It’s a hands-on experience. It’s a rare chance to pull 375 million-year-old fossils out of the ground with your bare hands. If you’re anywhere near Toledo, Monroe, or heading East from Michigan into Ohio, it’s an easy and rewarding detour.

    Huge fossil death plate marking the quarry entrance
    Very large fossil near the entrance