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- Uploaded on May 9, 2008
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by Dusty Sensiba -
Extra information
- Camera: Canon EOS DIGITAL REBEL XT
- Taken on 2007/08/11 14:04:33
- Exposure: 0.017s (1/60)
- Focal Length: 28.00mm
- F/Stop: f/16.000
- ISO Speed: ISO100
- Exposure Bias: 0.00 EV
- No flash

Comments (5)
Kathy Keener, on October 3, 2008, said:
Are you flying or on the other side?
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Dusty Sensiba, on October 3, 2008, said:
I was on the other side, it's quite a hike to get there, but well worth the time. There are several other trestles in various stages of decomposition further into the forest.
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Kathy Keener, on October 4, 2008, said:
This hike was well worth it! Is that an unusual amount of plant life for New Mexico? We have been to Utah, Colorado and Nevada and did not see that much in one spot anywhere. But then, it may have been a matter of WHERE we were.
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Dusty Sensiba, on October 4, 2008, said:
Most highways do not get into the mountains. This particular place is in a coniferous forest that covers most of the Sacramento Mountains. There are several huge forested areas in the state, but it takes going on backroads to encounter them.
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bakersfield, on December 1, 2008, said:
Beautiful but deadly trestle. My sister fell from it in 1949 (age 12). How many others have committed suicide or taken a dare and walked on it? I hear high school kids still get drunk and dare each other to go out on it at night. Even though part of the ends are disconnected, people still try to walk on it. Some kind of solid, wide barrier needs to be put up at both ends.
H.S. Gentry
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