ScenicNH Photography - White Mountains New Hampshire

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(69 images)
Your search yielded 69 images
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  • 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.
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  • 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.
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  • 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
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  • 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
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  • Mt Tecumseh, August 2021 - A tree wound on a birch tree along the Mt Tecumseh Trail in New Hampshire. This tree wound is the result of man not using proper protocol to remove a painted trail marker (blaze) from the tree. A yellow trail blaze was painted on the tree in 2011, and then it was improperly removed from the tree in the spring of 2012. The bark, where the blaze was, was cut and peeled away creating a tree wound where rot, fungus, and insects could enter the tree. And this is how the wound looked in August 2021. Most trail maintenance organizations in the White Mountains no longer use this practice of blaze removal because it damages trees and goes against leave no trace principles.
    NH217971.jpg
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  • 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
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  • 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
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  • Old campsite along Mack Brook in Livermore, New Hampshire during the autumn months. Proper leave no trace practices should be used when backcountry camping; campers should dismantle campsites once done with them, and pack all trash out of the forest.
    NH207276.jpg
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  • Poor "Leave No Trace" habits near Shoal Pond in the White Mountains, New Hampshire.
    SC096324.jpg
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  • Poor Leave No Trace habits at a campsite along the side Sawyer River Trail in the White Mountains, New Hampshire.
    M093687.jpg
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  • Poor Leave No Trace habits at a campsite along the side Sawyer River Trail in the White Mountains, New Hampshire.
    M093682.jpg
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  • Poor Leave No Trace habits at a campsite along the side Sawyer River Trail in the White Mountains, New Hampshire.
    M093686.jpg
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  • Poor leave no trace camping - Abandoned campsite off of Fire Road 511 along the Kancamagus Scenic Byway (route 112), which is one of New England's scenic byways in the White Mountains, New Hampshire.
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  • Poor leave no trace camping - How an abandoned campsite off of Fire Road 511 along the Kancamagus Scenic Byway in the White Mountains, New Hampshire looked after being picked up.
    SC1110209.jpg
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  • 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
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  • Poor leave no trace camping - Abandoned campsite off of Fire Road 511 along the Kancamagus Scenic Byway (route 112), which is one of New England's scenic byways in the White Mountains, New Hampshire.
    SC1110197.jpg
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  • Poor leave no trace camping - Abandoned campsite off of Fire Road 511 along the Kancamagus Scenic Byway (route 112), which is one of New England's scenic byways in the White Mountains, New Hampshire.
    SC1110182.jpg
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  • Poor leave no trace camping - Abandoned campsite off of Fire Road 511 along the Kancamagus Scenic Byway (route 112), which is one of New England's scenic byways in the White Mountains, New Hampshire.
    SC1110183.jpg
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  • Poor leave no trace camping - Tent left at campsite off of Fire Road 511 along the Kancamagus Scenic Byway (route 112), in the White Mountains, New Hampshire.
    SC1110190.jpg
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  • Poor "Leave No Trace" habits on the the side a Sawyer River Trail in the White Mountains, New Hampshire.
    SC097077.jpg
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  • Poor "Leave No Trace" habits on the the side a Sawyer River Trail in the White Mountains, New Hampshire USA
    SC097073.jpg
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  • Poor "Leave No Trace" habits on the the side a Sawyer River Trail in the White Mountains, New Hampshire.
    SC097072.jpg
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  • Poor "Leave No Trace" habits on the the side a Sawyer River Trail in the White Mountains, New Hampshire.
    SC097069.jpg
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  • May 2013 - A tree wound on a yellow birch tree along the Mt Tecumseh Trail in New Hampshire. This wound is the result of man not properly removing a painted trail marker (blaze) from the tree. The blaze was painted on the tree in 2011, and then improperly removed from the tree in the spring of 2012. The bark, where the blaze was, was cut and peeled away creating a tree wound.
    NH137145.jpg
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  • 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.
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  • 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
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  • 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
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  • Man made campsite along Hancock Notch Trail in the White Mountain National Forest in New Hampshire during the autumn months.
    NH1332114.jpg
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  • 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
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  • Man made campsite along Walker Brook in Franconia Notch State Park in the White Mountains, New Hampshire.
    NH137393.jpg
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  • January 2016 - A man-made tree wound on a yellow birch tree along the Mt Tecumseh Trail in New Hampshire. Proper protocol was ignored when a painted trail marker (blaze) was removed from this tree, and this is the ending result. This blaze was painted on the tree in 2011, and then improperly removed from the tree in the spring of 2012. The bark, where the blaze was, was cut and peeled away creating a tree wound.
    NH161607.jpg
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  • Beebe River Railroad - Old refrigerator along the Beebe River drainage in Sandwich, New Hampshire USA. This railroad was an logging railroad.
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  • Abandoned tire in Kinsman Notch of the White Mountains, New Hampshire USA during the spring months.
    NH157059.jpg
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  • May 2015 - A tree wound on a yellow birch tree along the Mt Tecumseh Trail in New Hampshire. Proper trail blaze removal protocol was not used when a painted trail marker (blaze) was removed from this tree, and this is the ending result. The blaze was painted on the tree in 2011, and then improperly removed from the tree in the spring of 2012. The bark, where the blaze was, was cut and peeled away creating a tree wound.
    NH157010.jpg
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  • Abandoned tires in forest along Route 112 in Easton, New Hampshire USA.
    NH155477.jpg
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  • Human impact on the northern slopes of Mount Jim in Kinsman Notch of Woodstock, New Hampshire USA during the summer months
    NH1411466.jpg
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  • Human impact on the northern slopes of Mount Jim in Kinsman Notch of Woodstock, New Hampshire USA during the summer months
    NH1411460.jpg
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  • May 2014 - A tree wound on a yellow birch tree along the Mt Tecumseh Trail in New Hampshire. This wound is the result of man not properly removing a painted trail marker (blaze) from the tree. The blaze was painted on the tree in 2011, and then improperly removed from the tree in the spring of 2012. The bark, where the blaze was, was cut and peeled away creating a tree wound.
    NH147605.jpg
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  • Graffiti painted on boulder along the Mount Tremont Trail in the White Mountains, New Hampshire USA during the spring months.
    NH146735.jpg
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  • October 2012 - A man-made tree wound on a yellow birch tree along the Mt Tecumseh Trail in New Hampshire. Proper protocol was ignored when a painted trail marker (blaze) was removed from this tree, and this is the ending result. This blaze was painted on the tree in 2011, and then improperly removed from the tree in the spring of 2012. The bark, where the blaze was, was cut and peeled away creating a tree wound.
    SC1216710.jpg
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  • Trail blazing along the Mt Tecumseh Trail in the White Mountains of New Hampshire. A proper blaze is a two by six inch rectangle. Spills and runs should be wiped away when applied and once dried, runs can be removed using proper techniques. After a trail inspection by Forest Service in June 2012, using proper protocol, they removed the bottom blaze (bad blazing) because it was placed about two feet from the ground on the tree. In time, the bad blazing will fade away and not be visible.
    SC1113987.jpg
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  • Trail blazing along the Mt Tecumseh Trail in the White Mountains, New Hampshire. A proper trail blaze should be placed about head height on a tree. After a trail inspection by Forest Service in June 2012 the bottom blaze was removed because it was painted on the tree about two feet off the ground. In time, the bad blazing will fade away and not be visible.
    SC1113985.jpg
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  • September 2011 - Trail blaze along the Mt Tecumseh Trail in the New Hampshire White Mountains. A proper blaze is a two by six inch rectangle. Spills and runs should be wiped away when applied, and once dried, runs can be removed using proper techniques. After a trail inspection by Forest Service in June 2012, the dripping blaze was removed by proper parties.
    SC1113983.jpg
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  • October 2016 - A man-made tree wound on a yellow birch tree along the Mt Tecumseh Trail in New Hampshire. Proper protocol was ignored when a painted trail marker (blaze) was removed from this tree, and this is the ending result. This blaze was painted on the tree in 2011, and then improperly removed from the tree in the spring of 2012. The bark, where the blaze was, was cut and peeled away creating a tree wound.
    NH1611894.jpg
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  • February 2015 - A tree wound on a yellow birch tree along the Mt Tecumseh Trail in New Hampshire. Proper trail blaze removal protocol was not used when a painted trail marker (blaze) was removed from this tree, and this is the ending result. The blaze was painted on the tree in 2011, and then improperly removed from the tree in the spring of 2012. The bark, where the blaze was, was cut and peeled away creating a tree wound.
    NH152317.jpg
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  • November 2014 - A tree wound on a yellow birch tree along the Mt Tecumseh Trail in New Hampshire. Proper trail blaze removal protocol was not used when a painted trail marker (blaze) was removed from this tree, and this is the ending result. The blaze was painted on the tree in 2011, and then improperly removed from the tree in the spring of 2012. The bark, where the blaze was, was cut and peeled away creating a tree wound. See how it looked before it was removed: http://bit.ly/1Q4W1Pj
    NH1416827.jpg
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  • October 2013 - A tree wound on a yellow birch tree along the Mt Tecumseh Trail in New Hampshire. This wound is the result of man not properly removing a painted trail marker (blaze) from the tree. The blaze was painted on the tree in 2011, and then improperly removed from the tree in the spring of 2012. The bark, where the blaze was, was cut and peeled away creating a tree wound.
    NH1330201.jpg
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  • "Don't Mass-Up NH" spray painted on granite blocks along the East Branch of the Pemigewasset River during the spring months in Lincoln, New Hampshire USA.
    NH133835.jpg
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  • Fire ring along the Hancock Notch Trail in the White Mountains, New Hampshire USA.
    SC0914604.jpg
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  • Mt Tecumseh, October 2020 - A tree wound on a birch tree along the Mt Tecumseh Trail in New Hampshire. This tree wound is the result of man not using proper protocol to remove a painted trail marker (blaze) from the tree. A yellow trail blaze was painted on the tree in 2011, and then it was improperly removed from the tree in the spring of 2012. The bark, where the blaze was, was cut and peeled away creating a tree wound where rot, fungus, and insects could enter the tree. And this is how the wound looked in October 2020.
    NH207109.jpg
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