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- Taking out the virgin forest. [Audio] (1)
- Tale telling on Coal River. [Audio] (1)
- Tame ginseng. [Audio] (2)
- Tank Turner's coal bank. [Audio] (1)
- Telling good moonshine from bad moonshine. [Audio] (1)
- Telling the ridges from Ivy Knob. [Audio] (1)
- Telling trees by smell. [Audio] (1)
- Tending "three leaves" and "two prongs." [Audio] (1)
- Tending wild ginseng and goldenseal. [Audio] (1)
- Terms of address for elders. [Audio] (1)
- "That mountain is like a drugstore." [Audio] (1)
- "That place has been called everything." [Audio] (1)
- "That seng will shine, won't it?" [Audio] (1)
- "That's a stinking elm." [Audio] (1)
- "There is nothing I can't can." [Audio] (1)
- "There was a big timber truck come in." [Audio] (1)
- "There was a tree over on Peach Tree side." [Audio] (1)
- "There was a walnut tree stood in Hazy." [Audio] (1)
- "There was no cutting of white walnut." [Audio] (1)
- "There were more chestnuts around here than any other timber." [Audio] (1)
- "There's a few mountain lions back in this country." [Audio] (1)
- "There's a lot of history to this place." [Audio] (1)
- "There's a lot of history up in here." [Audio] (1)
- "There's always trees that you remember." [Audio] (1)
- "There's an art to ginsenging." [Audio] (1)
- "There's been a lot of changes in the woods." [Audio] (1)
- "There's nice places to camp up and down this river." [Audio] (1)
- "There's something about this root that's more than we know." [Audio] (1)
- "There's too many hickories and oaks dying." [Audio] (1)
- "They called it Greeksville instead of Whitesville." [Audio] (1)
- "They called it the Charlie Rock." [Audio] (1)
- "They called it the rich bench." [Audio] (1)
- "They cut a red oak up here in Martin's Creek." [Audio] (1)
- "They made their living by farming." [Audio] (1)
- "They raised everything they ate." [Audio] (1)
- "They'd way rather lose a man than a mule." [Audio] (1)
- "This area's the epicenter of the mixed mesophytic forest." [Audio] (1)
- "This house has got some years on it." [Audio] (1)
- "This house here was in jeopardy." [Audio] (1)
- This is Martin's Creek. [Audio] (1)
- "This is the most beautiful place in the world." [Audio] (1)
- "This log barn was built in 1928. I helped build that." [Audio] (1)
- "Thomas Dickens come in here and settled." [Audio] (1)
- "Thomas Dickens had a family somewhere in the teens." [Audio] (1)
- Thomas Dickens, an early settler on Peach Tree Creek. [Audio] (1)
- "A timber that wouldn't hardly rot." [Audio] (1)
- Timbering, siltation and fishing. [Audio] (1)
- The time for molly moochers. [Audio] (1)
- Tracking stills by knowing the waterways. [Audio] (1)
- Tracking the nut trees. [Audio] (1)
- Traditional screech owl story. [Audio] (1)
- Trash fish in Coal River. [Audio] (1)
- Trees as hunting props. [Audio] (1)
- Turning the cane mill with mule and truck. [Audio] (1)