Tag: newark ohio

  • Sunset at the Newark Earthworks Walk Along Hopewell Earthworks

    Sunset at the Newark Earthworks Walk Along Hopewell Earthworks


    Sunset bare trans and a sign about the earthwork
    Sunset

    Sunset at the Mound on the Heath/Newark Ohio Border with Luna

    On January 23, after a full day of winter hiking around Hocking Hills and Licking County, Luna and I stopped at an earthwork in the Heath, Ohio. Where we decided watch the sun drop behind ancient earth. We walked about a mile along the length of the mound at low light, dusted snow underfoot, and cold air rolling down from the hills.

    This wasn’t just any hill. What we walked along was part of the Newark Earthworks, one of the most remarkable prehistoric complexes of geometric earthworks in the world, built between roughly 100 BCE and 400 CE by Indigenous peoples often called the Hopewell culture. 

    Pinks and oranges make up the blue sky before sunset in heath, Ohio

    What the Newark Earthworks Are and Why They Matter

    The Newark Earthworks are a National Historic Landmark and World Heritage Site recognized in 2023 for their ancient craftsmanship and cultural significance. 

    The complex originally spread over several square miles of what is now Licking County, anchored by monumental earthen structures including the Great Circle Earthworks, the Octagon Earthworks, and the Wright Earthworks.  The walls you see rising gently from the ground are not random hills but carefully constructed embankments, once part of geometric patterns aligned with cosmic cycles. 

    At the Great Circle Earthworks, for example, the nearly 1,200‑foot diameter enclosure is one of the largest prehistoric geometric earthworks in the Americas, with walls originally up to 8 to 13 feet high surrounding a deep ditch that may once have held water. 

    These works were more than simple mounds. Archaeologists now interpret them as multi‑purpose cultural landscapes used for ceremony, social gathering, astronomy, seasonal observation and memorialization, built by Indigenous people with deep knowledge of geometry and the sky. 

    One area of the mound free of snow with bare trees and the sun setting
    Part of the mound

    Hopewell Culture and Indigenous Wisdom Beneath Our Feet

    Although we lack direct written records from those who built them, what the earthworks tell us is profound. These structures are part of a network of Hopewell Ceremonial Earthworks across Ohio, collectively recognized for their monumental scale and alignment to solar and lunar events. 

    For centuries, Indigenous peoples traveled, met, traded and participated in spiritual gatherings around these sites. The precision of placements and connections among enclosures suggests knowledge of astronomy and cosmology far beyond mere utilitarian construction. 

    Walking along the mound as the sun lowered, it was easy to feel a sense of time deep time, held in the earth beneath my steps, not just as distant history but as lived landscape.

    Another view of the mound no snow dead grass and bare trees
    More of the mound

    Sunset Light and Winter Walk Energy

    January’s sunset brings a special light. Golden rays flatten across ancient embankments and bring out texture in what otherwise looks like low, gentle rises in the ground. Luna and I walked about a mile of these earthen lines, the long shadows changing faster than the chill. The quiet of winter, sparse birds, cold wind, distant cars on the Ohio roads, made the moment feel wide in memory even if short on clock time.

    Barren trees sunset and the heath ohio mound
    Sunset over the mound

    Mounds, Meaning and Respect

    These earthworks are sacred places as much as they are archaeological landmarks. They were built for ceremony and memory by real people whose descendants today maintain cultural ties to this land. Visiting them demands curiosity, respect, and quiet observation rather than disturbance. 

    The Great Circle, near where Luna and I walked, could once have hosted gatherings of people from across the region, moments of shared meaning held in earth and sky that were much more than simple trails or tourist stops.


    Quick Facts for Visitors

    Location: Near the border of Heath and Newark, Ohio in Licking County.  Builder: Created by Indigenous peoples of the Hopewell culture between about 100 BCE and 400 CE.  Designations: National Historic Landmark, UNESCO World Heritage Site.  Structures: Includes the Great Circle Earthworks, Octagon Earthworks, and Wright Earthworks.  Purpose: Likely used for ceremony, astronomy, social gathering and memorial practices shaped by landscape and cosmos. 

    Standing near these earthworks at sunset with Luna was a reminder that Ohio’s past is vast, visible, and deeply present in its landforms. The lines of earth underfoot tell stories of ancient organization, knowledge and presence. These stories long outlast cold winters and quick days. The mound was quiet at dusk, but in its silence was an invitation to listen across centuries, a living memory beneath winter sky.


    Glenford preserve

    Poeaxtry links

  • What I Found at Dublin Ohio’s Public Art and Free Art Boxes

    What I Found at Dublin Ohio’s Public Art and Free Art Boxes

    A few years ago, my partner, our friend, and I went to see the Field of Corn in Dublin, Ohio. It’s a massive field filled with giant concrete cornstalks standing in neat rows. The scale hits you right away. It’s both strange and impressive. Walking through it feels like stepping into a frozen farm, a tribute to Ohio’s farming past that somehow feels both eerie and beautiful.

    This past week, I went back alone to check out more sculptures.

    Watch House stood out immediately. It’s quiet but intense, almost like it’s watching you as much as you’re watching it. The structure blends with its surroundings in a way that makes you pause and think. There’s a stillness that carries weight, forcing you to be present. And the flower circle around it made me fall in love even though if I stayed any longer I am sure a bee would have gotten me.

    Watch house sculpture, Dublin, Ohio
    Watch house

    I went to see Chief Leather Lips next. This is a powerful sculpture honoring the indigenous people of the area. It has a silent strength, reminding anyone who stands before it of the history buried beneath the ground. It’s solid and dignified, a quiet demand for respect.

    Chief Leather Lips
    Chief Leather Lips

    At the Dublin Arts Council, I saw several other sculptures.

    The Snail caught my eye first. Its smooth, rounded form shows patience and slowing down. In a world that’s always rushing, this little sculpture is a reminder to notice the small details we usually miss.

    orange snail Dublin, Ohio
    Snail

    The Tree of Life is massive, its tangled branches and roots twisting into one another. It represents connection and resilience. How everything in life is linked and how strength can come through struggle.

    tree of life sculpture Dublin, Oh
    Tree of Life

    Beside it stands the Sanguine Standing Stone, a spooky, haunting head sculpture. The face is rough and intense, like it’s pulling deep emotions to the surface. It feels like it’s staring right into your soul, forcing you to face things you’d rather hide.

    Finally, Jaunty Hornbeam is a wild, unpredictable figure. It looks like it’s caught mid-dance, awkward and unplanned. It’s messy, human, and a sharp contrast to the more natural pieces around it. It feels like a celebration of being weird and real.

    creepy man art but he is a tree.
    He’s pretty cool he’s just misunderstood

    Dublin also has Free Art Boxes scattered throughout town. These are like free little libraries but filled with art supplies. You take what you need, leave what you can. I hit three of these boxes and grabbed everything I needed to start making wildflower magnets.

    I stopped at ten free little libraries between Newark and Dublin. I left QR code bookmarks there. Each bookmark has free copies of my ebooks and zines attached. Sharing my work matters to me because someone might pick it up and actually connect.

    This trip was about connecting to Dublin, its people, and the quiet creative energy that keeps the city alive. If you’re near Dublin, Ohio, you should check out the Dublin Arts Council sculptures. You can also visit a Free Art Box. Another option is to grab a book from a free little library. You might find something that sticks with you.

    All media from trip

    all poeaxtry links

  • Waterfall Loop Road Trip from Newark to Cleveland | Dog-Friendly Easy Hikes & Scenic Stops

    Waterfall Loop Road Trip from Newark to Cleveland | Dog-Friendly Easy Hikes & Scenic Stops


    We Love Waterfalls

    Do it before us. Do it with us. Do it after us.

    Let me explain what this is.

    Actually, no. Let me explain how I got here first:

    I just came off a 12-hour shift.

    Got my shoe peed in while giving a shower 2 hours exactly before clock out time.

    Had to finish my shift with pee sock, pee leg, pee vibes.

    Drove my bestie and coworker 35 minutes in the opposite direction so she could start her vacation. Since she worked last night for me.

    Dropped off another one a mile from my house.

    And I still had to go feed 4 cats, one dog, and the neighbor, coworker, and or buddies cats before I even changed clothes.

    And yet?

    I’m still about to chase waterfalls.

    Why?

    Because this week is STNA Week, and I’m an STNA.

    Because I’m a caregiver, a poet, a creator, a walking paradox of exhaustion and excitement.

    Because I owe this moment, this daylight treasure hunt of stops to myself.

    This is the Loop-de-Loop of Watersong:

    A full-day road trip from Newark to Cleveland and back, with:

    Waterfalls 🌊 Forests 🌳 Overlooks ⛰️ Trails under 1 mile 🥾 Dog-friendly stops 🐾 And photo ops so good they might just heal something you forgot was broken.

    📍What You’re About to See

    This is a build-your-own experience. You can:

    Start closest to your house Do just a few or go full loop Spread it out over two days or crush it in one maybe just save it for a better time or send to a friend who’d love it.

    This is the fastest and softest way to refill your soul when you only get two days off work, you write to survive, and you hike to breathe.

    And you work to fulfill the capitalist agenda

    📲 Click the Map & Follow the Route

    This is the route I’m taking.

    Do it before me. Do it with me. Do it after me.

    🌐 Click here to open the full route in MapHub

    (Replace with your final My Maps link)

    ⚡ What’s Coming Next

    This is just part one a pre-trip drop.

    Coming soon:

    📸 Photo posts

    📖 Part 2: the full trip journal

    🌀 Maybe even more than one post, depending how wild it gets

    Because sometimes the only way to reclaim your time, your rest, your art, and your energy…

    is to take it back one stop at a time.


    What Really went this down on this waterfall “loop” links