Could be Irish Moss found in lots of wooded area.
Also used as a groundcover, so I've just read by doing a Google search. ;-)
http://www.outsidepride.com/catalog/Irish-moss-Groundcover-Seed-p-16966.h...
Bruce, the need is always there to record history. Many of us use
www.findagrave.com
to add the photographs in our counties. It's not hard to use. First you should
search
for the cemeteries already listed in the county. You can do that from the main
page on
the right hand side. List the state and the county. Most cemeteries have more
than one
name, so it can be tricky. If you willing to share the photographs, this is a
good place
to help the public to find family from the 1800's to the present. I love this
site.
The only thing you need is a created. Username and password.
To put up a photo, it must be under 250 kb. That is sometimes hard to scale
down
with today's camera files being so big. So set it for the smallest size for the
web and
hopefully you won't have to crop it down to much.
Love those wild flowers too Bob.
la
----- Original Message -----
From: "Bruce Wheaton" <rbwheaton(a)yahoo.com>
To: <INPCRP(a)rootsweb.com>
Sent: Friday, March 27, 2009 8:56 AM
Subject: [INPCRP] photography
Hi All-
I went into the woods a few weeks ago to take some shots in the late afternoon
light-found the moss growing on rocks and wetland plants sprouting through the
leaves. Is there a need for gravestone photography that both documents and has
artistic qualities?
I'm currently doing restoration work in two small southern Michigan cemeteries,
with plans to start work in a small LaGrange CO., IN. graveyard this summer.
all the best-
Bruce
R. Bruce Wheaton, LEED AP
rbwheaton(a)yahoo.com
This list is for sharing pioneer cemetery questions, ideas and restoration
projects.
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