MohicanView Cabin

MohicanView Cabin Welcome to MohicanView Cabin! MohicanView Tiny Cabin.

Reservations are being accepted now for this new (Oct. 2019) custom Amish built Cabin in the heart of Mohican in Ohio.book at https://airbnb.com/h/mohicancabin For those who want a get away in the Mohican area...hiking, biking, wineries, and Amish country and relaxing at the end of the day at the cabin.

03/26/2022
03/02/2022

Matt Moneymaker to appear at Pleasant Hill Lake Park’s Bigfoot Event This Fall

Perrysville, OH (March 1, 2022)— A new event at Muskingum Watershed Conservancy District’s (MWCD) Pleasant Hill Lake Park is coming this fall! Seekers of Bigfoot (aka sasquatch, Grassman, Yeti, etc.) should mark their calendars for September 9 - 11, 2022 to attend Bigfoot Basecamp Weekend. Matt Moneymaker, Founder and President of the Bigfoot Field Researchers Organization (BFRO) and co-host of "Finding Bigfoot'' on Animal Planet Channel will host a VIP dinner and Townhall event.

“The weekend will kick off with a VIP dinner and presentation by Moneymaker on Friday, September 9, along with a guided Bigfoot hike and movie under the stars” says Louis Andres, Program Specialist at Pleasant Hill Lake Park. “Saturday’s activities will include a Community Townhall with Moneymaker, guided pontoon tours, and survival skills activities, to name a few. A nighttime thermal drone search will also be broadcast Saturday night to survey for large mammal targets -- coyotes, deer, sasquatches, etc. -- assisted by ground spotters with handheld thermal imagers.”

Ohio ranks 5th in United States with over 318 BFRO reported sightings. Locally, Ashland County has nine reported sightings and Richland County has four reported encounters. The most recent sightings were in Ashland County at Mohican State Park on June 18, 2021, and another Class A sighting occurring at Pleasant Hill Lake Park primitive camp area on August 18, 2020, according to the BFRO page.

The weekend will feature family-friendly events, food trucks, and a Movie at the Lake. Additionally, the primitive camping area, which is now closed to the public, will be open for an exclusive camping experience during the event. Advance reservations are required for the primitive camping and some of the scheduled events and can be purchased online at MWCD.org/Bigfoot.

About BRFO

The BFRO site is the only collection of bigfoot reports from across North America that have been investigated by researchers to determine credibility. The BFRO has a large network of experienced volunteer investigators across the U.S. and Canada who use various methods to determine the credibility of reports. They spend a great deal of time and effort sorting through and investigating sighting reports to determine which are credible enough to display to the public. None of the modern reports in the BFRO's online database are made public without investigation.

About Muskingum Watershed Conservancy District

The MWCD, a political subdivision of the state, was organized in 1933 to develop and implement a plan to reduce flooding and conserve water for beneficial public uses in the Muskingum River Watershed, the largest wholly contained watershed in Ohio. Since their construction, the 16 reservoirs and dams in the MWCD region have been credited for saving over $7 billion worth of potential property damage from flooding, according to the federal government, as well as providing popular recreational opportunities that bolster the region’s economy. A significant portion of the reservoirs are managed by the MWCD and the dams are managed for flood-risk management by the federal U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE). For more information about the MWCD, visit www.mwcd.org and follow the MWCD on Facebook and Twitter.

12/08/2021

The Mohican State Park and adjoining Mohican Memorial State Forest offer over 90 miles of hiking, horseback riding, and mountain biking trails. Visit the park office or camp store to pick up a map, or visit the kiosks located throughout the park to begin your next outdoor adventure!

12/05/2021

A short film documenting and honoring the remarkable re-creation of the Mohican forest.

Lucky to have a cabin that backs up to the beautiful Mohican Forest.  If you look at the trees on hikes, you can see the...
11/30/2021

Lucky to have a cabin that backs up to the beautiful Mohican Forest. If you look at the trees on hikes, you can see the pines perfectly lined up as they were planted decades ago.

Did you know?
The Mohican Forest Park began in 1928 with 850-acres surrounding the Clearfork Mohican River Gorge, under the direction of the Ohio Division of Forestry. The area was chosen because of natural, geologic, biologic, and historic features such as specific plant species, glacial impact on the area, and how the changing course of the river carved the Gorge. Following their slogan, "Protection-Use-Renewal", the division set aside the Mohican land for developed access and preservation with surrounding fields and pastures reforested with pine and hardwoods by the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC). The Mohican Forest complex once again expanded in 1947 when the state of Ohio acquired 270 additional acres for the dedication of a "Living Memorial" to Ohio's Veterans - known as the Memorial State Forest, and included a Shrine to honor Ohio's fallen soldiers. In 1987 the ODNR Division of Natural Areas and Preserves established the 28-acre Clearfork Natural Area, consisting of a cluster of majestic, native White Pine and Hemlock. In 1967 the National Park Service designated the Clear Fork Gorge as a registered, national landmark, and the Mohican Memorial State Forest now consists of more than 4,500 acres of forested land. The Mohican Memorial State Forest is free to explore and open to the public daily. *Early photo of author and conservationist, Louis Bromfield standing at the Clearfork Gorge Overlook (Photo courtesy of Malabar Farm). *Historical content courtesy of the Cleo Redd Fisher Museum in Loudonville, Ohio.

11/09/2021

Did you know Mohican is home to one of only 15 designated Scenic Rivers in the state of Ohio?

Two segments of the Mohican River were designated as "scenic" in December 2006, totaling 32.3 miles: the Clear Fork of the Mohican River from the base of the Pleasant Hill Dam to the confluence with the Black Fork of the Mohican River - 4.8 river miles, and the entire main stem of the Mohican River from the confluence of the Clear Fork to the confluence with the Kokosing State Scenic River - 27.5 miles. Clear Fork Gorge State Nature Preserve lies adjacent to the scenic river. Other public lands in the watershed include Mohican State Park and Mohican Memorial State Forest.

The mission of the Ohio Scenic Rivers Program is to work cooperatively with local governments, businesses, landowners, non-profit organizations and other state and federal agencies to protect the aquatic resources and terrestrial communities dependent on healthy riparian habitats. Ohio currently has 15 designated Wild, Scenic and/or Recreational rivers comprising 27 stream segments. More than 830 river miles are protected in the Ohio scenic river system.

Visit https://ohiodnr.gov/wps/portal/gov/odnr/discover-and-learn/land-water/rivers-streams-wetlands/scenic-rivers-program to learn more.

11/02/2021

"The workforce that produced southern Ashland County's parkland and lakes was created in response to the Great Depression. Labor for these projects were performed by the Civilian Conservation Corps, developed in 1933 by the federal government to create jobs for unemployed men.

At Mohican, efforts to establish a state park and preserve the area's natural beauty had been underway five years when CCC Camp Mohican was established near Perrysville. The first wave of CCC laborers arrived in 1933 and went to work on roads, trails, shelters, picnic and campground areas, water wells, fire breaks, fencing and combating pests that threatened forest health.

The project started with 850 acres, most of it mature forest. Ultimately, 4,500 acres were acquired for Mohican Memorial State Forest, 1,300 acres for Mohican State Park and 28 acres for Clear Fork Gorge State Nature Preserve.

CCC projects included the removal of a truss bridge across Clear Fork of the Mohican River near what would become Pleasant Hill Dam. The bridge was moved downstream to what later would become Mohican State Park. It later was replaced with the iconic covered bridge near the trailhead to Big Lyons Falls, one of the park's most popular landmarks" (Irv Oslin, 2015).

To learn more about the Civilian Conservation Corps and the paramount legacy they've left behind , read Irv Oslin's 2015 article at https://irvoslin.wordpress.com/tag/mohican-state-park/. *Photo of the "Boys of the CCC" courtesy of Cleo Redd Fisher Museum in Loudonville, Ohio.

Lots of turkeys around the cabin!
10/29/2021

Lots of turkeys around the cabin!

Let's talk turkey!

The Wild Turkey has made a strong comeback to the Ohio landscape after decades of absence. This bird once inhabited forested areas of the entire state, providing food for Native Americans and early Ohio settlers. As settlement continued and forest lands were converted to cropland, the wild turkey's population dwindled to the point that no birds remained in the state by 1904. Today, Ohio's statewide wild turkey population now exceeds 200,000 turkeys.

10/16/2021

There's haunted history at Mohican State Park, thanks to a man named Paul Lyons.

Legend has it that Paul Lyons was a recluse who lived in the area with his milk cow, over a century ago. One dark and stormy night, Paul realized the cow had wandered off into the woods and he went to find it. He could barely hear the sound of the bell around the cow's neck over the moaning of the harsh wind. He followed the faint clanking into the darkening woods to the edge of the steep falls. Paul could see very little in the driving storm and lost his footing on the slick rock beneath his feet, falling 80 feet to his death. Folks say that on dark nights, the sound of the cowbell can be heard on the trail to the Lyons Falls, and the figure of a man waving a lantern can be seen at the top of the Cliff.

Every October people flock to the Lyons Falls in hopes of seeing the ghost of Paul Lyons and his lost cow. Maybe you'll visit the Lyons Falls too, if you dare?

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Columbus, OH

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