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00000173-90ba-d20e-a9f3-93ba728f0000In 1940, the Federal Writers Project produced a massive book detailing the scenic treasures and everyday life along Ohio’s roads - roads that went through the big cities as well as through farmland and tucked-away places. Seventy years later, the roads have changed and the pulse of the people is different – in some places. Picking up where the Federal Writers Project left off, in 2012, the Ohio Humanities Council launched the Road Trip! radio series and The New Ohio Guide Audio Tours at SeeOhioFirst.org. This new guide takes those older routes and gives them a 21st century twist, recreating them as free downloadable audio tours, and the Road Trip! radio series.

New Ohio Guide: Minerals, Mining, and Reclamation

This part of Meigs County has seen over 150 years of extractive industries. Scars that are - just now - beginning to heal. Some Meigs county residents are looking at more sustainable ways to use the land. One of them is Paul Strauss

Over 40 years ago he left New York City and bought 80 acres near the Meigs County town of Rutland.

"I bought the old Amos farm. McCumber, he sold out. There is 200 acres in this highwall up here. My farm was never stripped but all this was. This is the old McCumber farm... This is McCumber Hill. Mr McCumber sold his coal for 15 cents a ton. Mr Amos. I like on the old Amos farm, Mr Amos met the bulldozer and the strippers with a shotgun and said you are not stepping across this line! Here’s a guy I never met who I have to love" says Strauss.

Strauss bought more land, some of it the old McCumber land. He was an herbalist and he was amazed at what he found here.

"If you get out a map, you find Charleston West Virginia, and you just extended in any direction 200 miles," says Strauss. "That is the most varied and valuable deciduous forest in America. So, I think that’s lost on a lot of people It’s got coal, it’s got timber, it’s got rivers it’s got all the species; oak, ash, maple, hickory, ramps, ginseng, goldenseal –the whole thing."

This area, Strauss says, is the heart of Appalachia. In these woods there are more species of trees and shrubs, the big herbs, than almost any area of this country or world. With the exception of the planet’s rainforest.

Strauss and other like-minded folks created nonprofit- United Plant Savers and donated land in Meigs county for a 380-acre botanical sanctuary for native medicinal plants.

Now they’ve created the Talking Forest Medicine Trail. 8 miles of trails with signs to identify the herbs and shrubs and trees and their uses.

United Plant Savers think that just being able to identify the plants isn’t enough. People need to know how you can use them and what they can do.

To hike the talking forest medicine trail make an appointment with Paul Strauss or one of his neighbors. The contact information is on the website.

"So it’s important that this land is here for the sanctity of the earth," says Strauss. "To know that you’re not going to mess with it. You can come and see these plants exactly like they were a million years ago. Exactly like the native people would use them."

I promise, it will forever change the way you look at a forest.

Download an audio tour of Rt. 33 and explore it on your own. Just visit SeeOhioFirst.org and click on The New Ohio Guide.

The New Ohio Guide is produced by the Ohio Humanities Council, a state affiliate of the National Endowment for the Humanities.