ScenicNH Photography - White Mountains New Hampshire

  • My Account
  • Articles by Email
  • Home
  • Images
    • Portfolios
    • Login
    • Lightboxes
    • Cart
    • My Account
  • Search
  • Products
    • Login
    • Cart
    • My Account
  • Writing
  • Projects
  • F.A.Q.
  • About
  • Contact
  • Login
  • Register
  • Lightboxes
  • Cart
  • My Account
left arrow Back to Galleries

Search Results

(75 images)
Your search yielded 75 images
Add to Cart DISPLAY OPTIONS
  • Poor "Leave No Trace" habits along the the Sawyer River Trail in the White Mountains, New Hampshire USA. This area is located near the Swift River crossing along the trail.
    SC1010227.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Backcountry camping impact along the Sawyer River Trail in the White Mountains, New Hampshire USA. This area is also the location of logging Camp 6 along the old Sawyer River Railroad, which was a logging railroad that operated from 1877 -1928. In this case the camping impact not only effects the forest, but it also disturbs artifacts in the area.
    SC127536.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Backcountry camping impact along the Sawyer River Trail in the White Mountains, New Hampshire USA. This area is also the location of logging Camp 6 along the old Sawyer River Railroad, which was a logging railroad that operated from 1877 -1928. In this case the camping impact not only effects the forest, but it also disturbs artifacts in the area.
    SC127531.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Backcountry camping impact along the Sawyer River Trail in the White Mountains, New Hampshire.
    SC1214157.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Backcountry camping impact along the Sawyer River Trail in the White Mountains, New Hampshire USA. And yes this is what you think it is.
    SC1214187.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Backcountry camping impact along the Sawyer River Trail in the White Mountains, New Hampshire.
    SC1214159.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Human impact on the northern slopes of Mount Jim in Kinsman Notch of Woodstock, New Hampshire USA during the summer months
    NH1411460.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Human impact on the northern slopes of Mount Jim in Kinsman Notch of Woodstock, New Hampshire USA during the summer months
    NH1411466.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Environmental impact from poor camping ethics on the summit of Mount Flume in the White Mountains of New Hampshire. Healthy trees were cut to build this make shift tent platform or shelter.
    SC1113351.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Poor leave no trace habits - Poor camping ethics in the Pemigewasset Wilderness of the White Mountains, New Hampshire. Trees were cut to build this make shift lean to.
    SC121546.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Poor leave no trace habits - Poor camping ethics in the Pemigewasset Wilderness of the White Mountains, New Hampshire. Trees were cut to build this make shift lean to.
    SC121545.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Poor leave no trace habits - Poor camping ethics in the Pemigewasset Wilderness of the White Mountains, New Hampshire. Trees were cut to build this make shift lean to.
    SC121540.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Washpit, Pack Out All Food Scraps Sign in the White Mountain National Forest of New Hampshire.
    SND4578-06.tif
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Abandoned campsite in the Mount Flume Valley of the Pemigewasset Wilderness in the New Hampshire White Mountains. At 45,000 acres, the Pemigewasset Wilderness is an ideal wilderness for primitive camping.
    SC107238.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Abandoned campsite along a tributary of the Wild Ammonoosuc River, on the side of Mt. Blue, in Kinsman Notch of the White Mountains, New Hampshire. Camping gear was left behind and is now scattered throughout the site.
    NH156345.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Tent setup in the Randolph East parking lot along Pinkham B Road (Dolly Copp Road) in Randolph, New Hampshire on August 16, 2020 at 7:03 AM. Overnight camping at trailhead parking lots in the White Mountains is not allowed. License plates of the vehicles in the parking lot have been blurred out.
    NH204164.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Tent setup in the Randolph East parking lot along Pinkham B Road (Dolly Copp Road) in Randolph, New Hampshire on August 16, 2020 at 7:03 AM. Overnight camping at trailhead parking lots in the White Mountains is not allowed. License plates of the vehicles in the parking lot have been blurred out.
    NH204166.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Poor "Leave No Trace" habits near Shoal Pond in the White Mountains, New Hampshire.
    SC096324.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Poor Leave No Trace habits at a campsite along the side Sawyer River Trail in the White Mountains, New Hampshire.
    M093682.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Poor Leave No Trace habits at a campsite along the side Sawyer River Trail in the White Mountains, New Hampshire.
    M093687.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Poor Leave No Trace habits at a campsite along the side Sawyer River Trail in the White Mountains, New Hampshire.
    M093686.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Unattended campfire at a campsite along the Carrigain Notch Trail near EB&L Railroad’s Camp 20 in the Pemigewasset Wilderness in the New Hampshire White Mountains. When I came upon this campsite, the fire was still burning under the rocks of the fire ring, and the camp was vacant. I put the fire out and stayed at the site for over 30 minutes to make sure the fire was out. This is poor leave no trace practices.
    NH178108.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Unattended campfire at a campsite along the Carrigain Notch Trail near EB&L Railroad’s Camp 20 in the Pemigewasset Wilderness of the New Hampshire White Mountains. When I came upon this campsite, the fire was still burning under the rocks of the fire ring, and the camp was vacant. I put the fire out and stayed at the site for over 30 minutes to make sure the fire was out. This is poor leave no trace practices.
    NH178103.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Campsite along the East Branch of the Pemigewasset River in the Pemigewasset Wilderness in Lincoln, New Hampshire. When the photographer came upon this campsite, the fire was still going, and the camp was vacant. He put the fire out and stayed at the site for over 20 minutes to make sure the fire was out.
    SC105649.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Campsite along the East Branch of the Pemigewasset River in the Pemigewasset Wilderness in Lincoln, New Hampshire. When the photographer came upon this campsite, the fire was still going, and the camp was vacant. He put the fire out and stayed at the site for over 20 minutes to make sure the fire was out.
    SC105648.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Campsite along the East Branch of the Pemigewasset River in the Pemigewasset Wilderness in Lincoln, New Hampshire. When the photographer came upon this campsite, the fire was still going, and the camp was vacant. He put the fire out and stayed at the site for over 20 minutes to make sure the fire was out.
    SC105646.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Man made campsite along Hancock Notch Trail in the White Mountain National Forest in New Hampshire during the autumn months.
    NH1332114.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Abandoned campsite along a tributary of the Wild Ammonoosuc River, on the side of Mt. Blue, in Kinsman Notch of the White Mountains, New Hampshire USA.
    NH156327.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Man made campsite along Walker Brook in Franconia Notch State Park in the White Mountains, New Hampshire.
    NH137393.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Hardwood tree that has been burned from a campfire along Walker Brook in Franconia Notch State Park of the White Mountain National Forest, New Hampshire
    NH137397.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Poor Leave No Trace Ethics - Fresh firepit and campsite trash at Oliverian Brook Trailhead in the White Mountains, New Hampshire. The site was fresh in October 2011. And photographed in November 2011.
    SC1118638.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Abandoned campsite along the Bondcliff Trail in the Pemigewasset Wilderness of the White Mountains, New Hampshire.
    NH147643.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Location of Camp 15 along the old East Branch & Lincoln Railroad (1893-1948) in the Pemigewasset Wilderness in Lincoln, New Hampshire USA. On the left was the landing and work area.
    SC1118503.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Artifact (Home Comfort Stove made by Wrought Iron Range Co in St. Louis, Missouri) at logging Camp 18 along the East Branch & Lincoln Railroad in the Pemigewasset Wilderness of New Hampshire. The EB&L was a logging railroad that operated from 1893-1948, and this camp was located along the Upper East Branch of the railroad. The removal of artifacts from federal lands without a permit is a violation of federal law.
    SC096529.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • The site of the old North Woodstock Civilian Conservation Corps Camp in North Woodstock, New Hampshire USA. This camp operated from 1935-1939.
    NH146349.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Artifact (Home Comfort Stove made by Wrought Iron Range Co in St. Louis, Missouri) at logging Camp 18 along the East Branch & Lincoln Railroad in the Pemigewasset Wilderness of New Hampshire. The EB&L was a logging railroad that operated from 1893-1948, and this camp was located along the Upper East Branch of the railroad. The removal of artifacts from federal lands without a permit is a violation of federal law.
    SC1013971.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Artifact at logging Camp 17 along the East Branch & Lincoln Railroad (1893-1948) in the Pemigewasset Wilderness of New Hampshire. This logging camp was located along the Upper East Branch of the EB&L Railroad. The removal of artifacts from federal lands without a permit is a violation of federal law.
    SC096376.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Artifacts at possibly the location of the Upper Osceola Camp in Waterville Valley, New Hampshire. This area was logged during the Mad River Logging Era. And during this era, logging camps that housed loggers, were scattered throughout the region.
    SC116585.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • East Branch & Lincoln Railroad  - The start of where a spur line (left side) traveled off the main line to the landing area of Camp 15 along the East Branch & Lincoln Railroad in the Pemigewasset Wilderness in Lincoln, New Hampshire. This was a logging railroad which operated from 1893 - 1948 and the current Wilderness Trail (changed to Bondcliff Trail) travels through the camp.
    SC1120116.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Artifacts (stove pieces) at an abandoned camp along a tributary of the Wild Ammonoosuc River, on the side of Mount Blue, in Benton, New Hampshire. This is possibly a logging camp of the International Paper Company. The Fall Mountain Paper Company, which did log drives on the Wild Ammonoosuc River in the 1800s, became part of the International Paper Company in 1898; the last log drive was in 1911. The removal of historical artifacts from federal lands without a permit is a violation of federal law.
    NH156250.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • The site of the old North Woodstock Civilian Conservation Corps Camp (operated from 1935-1939) in North Woodstock, New Hampshire. The Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) was a public work relief program in operation from 1933 to 1942. The CCC built roads, trails, and made many improvements to the White Mountains region during their existence.
    NH146319.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Abandoned car at the site of the old North Woodstock Civilian Conservation Corps Camp in North Woodstock, New Hampshire.
    NH1514227.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Fire ring in the area of Stillwater Junction of the Pemigewasset Wilderness in Lincoln, New Hampshire USA. The rusted stove piece (artifact) in the fire ring could possibly be from the old Stillwater Camp that was in the area. The removal of historical artifacts from federal lands without a permit is a violation of federal law.
    SC106414.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Possibly the hoisting system of an old steam-powered crane or steam shovel near the end of the Camp 9 spur line of the East Branch & Lincoln Railroad (1893-1948) in the Pemigewasset Wilderness of the New Hampshire White Mountains. Steam-powered cranes were used to load logs on to railroad log trucks. This spur line, beginning at Camp 9, traveled in a northwesterly direction, crossed Franconia Brook at today's Lincoln Brook Trail crossing, and ended at a landing / work area just beyond the brook.
    SC126909.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Remnants of a wooden trestle that crossed Franconia Brook just above Camp 10 along the abandoned East Branch & Lincoln Railroad (1893-1948) in the Pemigewasset Wilderness, New Hampshire. After crossing Franconia Brook, the railroad traveled around the southern end of Owls Head into the Lincoln Brook valley, eventually ending a short distance beyond Liberty Brook at Camp 12. The removal of historic artifacts from federal lands without a permit is a violation of federal law.
    SC107050.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • The abandoned railroad bed of the East Branch & Lincoln Railroad (1893-1948) in the Thoreau Falls Valley of the Pemigewasset Wilderness in Lincoln, New Hampshire. This section of railroad is near the site of “New” Camp 22 along the North Fork Branch of the railroad.
    SC106061.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Remnants of a timber trestle that once spanned the East Branch of the Pemigewasset River in the area of Camp 18 along the East Branch & Lincoln Railroad (1893-1948) in the Pemigewasset Wilderness of Lincoln, New Hampshire.
    SC118911.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Remnants (railroad spike) of the Black Brook siding at logging Camp 16 along the East Branch & Lincoln Railroad (1893-1948) in the Pemigewasset Wilderness in Lincoln, New Hampshire. This railroad spike is an artifact of the White Mountains railroad era, and the removal of historic artifacts from federal lands without a permit is a violation of federal law.
    SC105491.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Old stone abutments from trestle No. 17 along the abandoned East Branch & Lincoln Railroad (1893-1948) in the Pemigewasset Wilderness in Lincoln, New Hampshire. This trestle spanned the East Branch of the Pemigewasset River near logging Camp 17.
    SC104845.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Artifacts (barrel rings) at possibly the P. White Camp in the Champney Brook drainage of Albany, New Hampshire. This camp was a logging camp of the Swift River Railroad which was in operation from 1906-1916. The removal of historical artifacts from federal lands without a permit is a violation of federal law.
    SC1013264.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
NEXT »
 
  • Home
  • Images
  • Search
  • Products
  • Writing
  • Blog
  • Projects
  • F.A.Q.
  • About
  • Contact
  • My Account
  • Copyright
  • Return Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy
ScenicNH Photography - White Mountains New Hampshire
603.540.5756
info@scenicnh.com
LinkedIn Twitter Facebook
All images and text are Copyright 1998-2023 ScenicNH Photography LLC / Erin Paul Donovan. All rights reserved.
Images and text located on ScenicNH.com are protected under US and International Copyright Laws; unauthorized
use is considered copyright infringement and is a violation of Federal Copyright Laws.