A trail wanders beside Hanus Creek, rising and falling in gentle undulations. Filtered green light streams through the multi-storied canopy. Giant platter-like leaves of devil's club and thimbleberry stretch out into the gaps between shading spruce and hemlock arms. Tips of spruce branches litter the ground, neatly cut from on high. Some still have the cones attached, each two inches long and with square-tipped bracts. Steps away a reddish-gold mound attracts the eye. Fragments of spruce cone are strewn about, thousands upon thousands of singular bracts and the remaining cores, like cobs of corn have been tossed in a pile, a midden of sorts. A myriad of tiny holes give clues as to the developer of these sites. Above the definitive answer lies. A shower of debris rains upon our heads but not before the chattering alarm of a tiny red squirrel attracts our attention.
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