Tripping on Travel: Durkee Brook, Windham County, CT

6 months ago
2

For this location, I chose not to put it on a map for viewers. At my proximity where I captured this footage, Durkee Brook is not in a state park, or forest, or local park. It's not equipped with public access. It's not a place for swimming, and the surrounding rocky nature of the environment suggests it would be unsafe for me to climb down for a closer look. While I can see on a map the brook goes around a nearby pond, I also see while on location that the brook's water is also coming from the overflow of water from that same pond. Whatever Durkee Brook may have looked like originally, the way it looks at my proximity suggests engineers did more than create a tunnel beneath the adjacent road. As Durkee Brook flows south to where it ends at the Quinebaug River, it appears from my proximity that rocks and boulders were deliberately placed to help regulate the water flow.

My footage begins close-by Durkee Brook, amongst the green plant and tree life that thrives this time of year. There is one short segment in the video when I turned down the volume during editing, because a truck on the adjacent road was passing. The last segment in the video is the other side of the road where the brook escapes from the tunnel and flows down south through the woods. Overall, the pleasant sounds of water flow and birds dominate the footage.

Dramatic Interlude by Alexander Nakarada | https://www.serpentsoundstudios.com
Music promoted by https://www.free-stock-music.com
Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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