Buck Fork begins its descent not far below the Appalachian Trail near the towering of Mount Guyot, where the great path has taken a sudden and short-lived turn to almost due north-south at Tri -corner Knob. Running east-west below the crests of Mount Chapman and Chapman Lead, it turns northwest to find itself absorbed in Ramsay Prong near where Ramsay Cascades Trail changes from the old auto roadbed to a true wilderness path. Here, also, the merging streams become something different, and Middle Prong of Little Pigeon River is born. From here it will drain the middle and lower reaches of Greenbrieer Cove, a truly amazing section of Great Smoky Mountains National Park. On its way, it passes as a boulder-choked watercourse under the bridge at the Ramsay Cascades Trailhead. And, as we all know, in fall, boulders collect leaves, especially fallen ones.

A  focal length of 20mm, wide-angleland to be sure, gave me the bank-to-bank field-of-view I wanted with boulders leading upstream and out of sight beyond the bend. An aperture of f/18 provided depth-of-field and a shutter speed of 0.6 second at ISO 100 gave me an overall slightly lighter-than-medium exposure.

What we seem to be learning somewhat sadly is that as the current pandemic wends its way through our world, we are loving our public lands to the point of sheer exhaustion. The numbers of visitors and the lack of maintenance/upkeep funding from a gridlocked Congress become prime arguments for the privatization of our Common Wealth. It is only through vigilance and action that we will keep this result from accruing. Please join in these efforts. Preserving public lands is not a spectator sport.