Mooney Grove Tour IIIPosted on March 24, 2020By cabinartToday is bridge day on our Mooney Grove Park tour. Tomorrow we’ll look at trees. mooney grove mooney grove park Tulare countyFacebookTwitterLinkedIn
Sharon DevolMarch 24, 2020 at 7:42 AMEither these are photos all of the same bridge from different angles, or they used the same blueprints for all park bridges! (Not quite like our beloved Oak Grove bridge, but I suppose it’ll do in a pinch.) Link
cabinartModeratorMarch 24, 2020 at 8:37 AMSharon, I just kept circling the bridge in different times of day, seeking a way to make it look less plain. The best solution would have been to wait for water to flow in Cameron Creek, but it was dry during my stint in the park. Link
CarolMarch 24, 2020 at 7:19 AMYou must come back once the trees have leaves, the bridge is truly interesting but mostly serviceable looking. Draping greenery could evoke beauty. Link
cabinartModeratorMarch 24, 2020 at 8:38 AMCarol, you are right, and the true solution to making it prettier would be water flowing beneath in Cameron Creek! Link
4 Comments
Either these are photos all of the same bridge from different angles, or they used the same blueprints for all park bridges!
(Not quite like our beloved Oak Grove bridge, but I suppose it’ll do in a pinch.)
Sharon, I just kept circling the bridge in different times of day, seeking a way to make it look less plain. The best solution would have been to wait for water to flow in Cameron Creek, but it was dry during my stint in the park.
You must come back once the trees have leaves, the bridge is truly interesting but mostly serviceable looking. Draping greenery could evoke beauty.
Carol, you are right, and the true solution to making it prettier would be water flowing beneath in Cameron Creek!
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