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The old rail complex sure does not look like one. A thousand years of disuse have permitted foliage to reclaim the cleared land and almost completely turned it into a place of the forest like any other; the formation of trees in rows along where the tracks used to be and bars of metal tangled in roots give tell to the signs that this place was once industrial.
The trail of the track remnants lead east, where you see a bridge for quite infrequent traffic and, quite surprisingly, a less tarnished set of tracks. Erosion has eaten the ground beneath it, but as you pass the road bridge, the ground stabilizes, and the tracks become almost feasibly refurbished - though in much disrepair.
If you were to hazard a guess, they used this old rail road for a while before building a new one. And it was this relatively recent usage of it, something to the tune of a hundred years ago, that lets the tracks be feasibly used by the carts Leshy mentioned.