ScenicNH Photography - White Mountains New Hampshire

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(127 images)
Your search yielded 127 images
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  • View of the Three Sisters from Mount Chocorua in the White Mountains, New Hampshire on a hazy day. Remnants of a fire tower are on Middle Sister.
    SCM2022-04.jpg
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  • View of the Three Sisters from Mount Chocorua in the White Mountains, New Hampshire. Remnants of a fire tower are on Middle Sister.
    SCM2050-04.jpg
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  • Scenic view of Three Sisters from Mount Chocorua in the New Hampshire White Mountains. The Presidential Range is off in the distance.
    SCM1917-06.jpg
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  • Scenic view of Three Sisters from Mount Chocorua in the New Hampshire White Mountains. The Presidential Range is off in the distance.
    SCM1936-06.jpg
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  • Scenic view of Three Sisters from Mount Chocorua in the New Hampshire White Mountains.
    SCM1994-04.jpg
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  • Three hikers travel north along the Appalachian Trail, near Mount Lafayette, during the winter months in the New Hampshire White Mountains.
    SC0915538.jpg
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  • Three hikers descending the Greenleaf Trail from the summit of Mount Lafayette in the New Hampshire White Mountains. Cannon Mountain ski area can be seen in the background. The Appalachian Trail travels over the summit of Mount Lafayette.
    SC111313.jpg
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  • Three hikers descend North Baldface Mountain using Baldface Circle Trail in the White Mountains, New Hampshire USA during the spring months.
    SCD074992.tif
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  • Middle Sister Groundhouse (fire tower) on Middle Sister Mountain in Albany, New Hampshire USA. This fire tower was in operation from 1927-1948
    SCM1933-06.jpg
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  • Middle Sister Groundhouse (fire tower) on Middle Sister Mountain in Albany, New Hampshire USA. This fire tower was in operation from 1927-1948
    SCM1953-06.jpg
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  • Middle Sister Groundhouse (fire tower) on Middle Sister Mountain in Albany, New Hampshire USA. This fire tower was in operation from 1927-1948
    SCM1918-06.jpg
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  • Middle Sister Groundhouse (fire tower) on Middle Sister Mountain in Albany, New Hampshire USA. This fire tower was in operation from 1927-1948.
    SCW2081-06.jpg
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  • Middle Sister Groundhouse (fire tower) on Middle Sister Mountain in Albany, New Hampshire USA. This fire tower was in operation from 1927-1948
    SCM1897-06.jpg
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  • Ethan Pond shelter located just off the Ethan Pond Trail, part of the Appalachian Trail in the White Mountains of New Hampshire during the autumn months. The Adirondack style shelter seen here in this photo was built in 1957.
    NH179842.jpg
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  • Abandoned tires in forest along Route 112 in Easton, New Hampshire USA.
    NH155477.jpg
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  • Beaver Brook Shelter along the Appalachian Trail (Beaver Brook Trail), on the north side of Mount Moosilauke, in Kinsman Notch of the White Mountains, New Hampshire USA during the winter months. This shelter is an Adirondack-style shelter, sleeps 8 hikers, and was built in 1993/1994.
    NH152012.jpg
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  • Middle Sister Groundhouse (fire tower) on Middle Sister Mountain in Albany, New Hampshire USA. This fire tower was in operation from 1927-1948
    SC093981.jpg
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  • Middle Sister Groundhouse (fire tower) on Middle Sister Mountain in Albany, New Hampshire USA. This fire tower was in operation from 1927-1948
    SC093978.jpg
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  • Group of skiers traveling south on the Appalachian Trail (Gulfside Trail) near Mount John Quincy Adams in the Presidential Range of the New Hampshire during the winter months. Strong winds cause snow to blow off the mountain top.
    SC103116.jpg
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  • Privy sign at Jeffers Brook shelter in Benton, New Hampshire. Built in 1981, this Adirondack-style shelter is located off of Town Line Trail, part of the Appalachian Trail, on the west side of Mount Moosilauke.
    SNDW072361.jpg
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  • Smarts Mountain summit /cabin sign along the Appalachian Trail (Lambert Ridge Trail) in New Hampshire. A 41 foot steel tower is located on Smarts Mountain near the cabin. The tower was built in 1915.
    SNDS073531.jpg
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  • Rocky Branch Shelter #2 was an Adirondack-style shelter located along the Rocky Branch Trail in the Dry River Wilderness of the New Hampshire White Mountains. This shelter has been dismantled in 2015 and no longer exists.
    SCDW1235-07.jpg
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  • Rocky Branch Shelter #2 was an Adirondack-style shelter located along the Rocky Branch Trail in the Dry River Wilderness of the New Hampshire White Mountains. This shelter has been dismantled and no longer exists.
    SCDW1231-07.jpg
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  • Ethan Pond shelter located just off the Ethan Pond Trail, part of the Appalachian Trail in the White Mountains, New Hampshire covered in snow. The Adirondack style shelter seen here in this photo was built in 1957.
    SCDW1086-07.jpg
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  • Ethan Pond shelter located just off the Ethan Pond Trail, part of the Appalachian Trail in the White Mountains, New Hampshire covered in snow. The Adirondack style shelter seen here in this photo was built in 1957.
    SCDW1088-07.jpg
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  • The Trapper John Shelter is an adirondack-style shelter located on a side path off of Holts Ledge Trail (a section of the Appalachian Trail) in Lyme, New Hampshire. Built at the site of the Holt’s Ledge Cabin in 1973 by the Dartmouth Outing Club, this shelter is named for Trapper John McIntyre, a character from M*A*S*H. Remnants of the cabin’s stone fireplace and chimney are next to the shelter.
    SCDW072658.jpg
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  • The privy at Ore Hill Shelter located along the Appalachian Trail (Ore Hill Trail) in Warren, New Hampshire. Ore Hill Shelter was burned down by arsonists in October 2011.
    SCDW072579.jpg
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  • Ore Hill Shelter was an Adirondack-style shelter located along the Ore Hill Trail, part of the Appalachian Trail, in Warren, New Hampshire. Built in 2001 by the Dartmouth Outing Club, this shelter was burned down in October 2011.  This photo shows how the shelter looked in 2007
    SCDW072564.jpg
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  • Jeffers Brook shelter in Benton, New Hampshire. Built in 1981, this Adirondack-style shelter is located off of Town Line Trail, part of the Appalachian Trail, on the west side of Mount Moosilauke.
    SCDW072355.jpg
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  • Beaver Brook Shelter along the Appalachian Trail (Beaver Brook Trail), on the north side of Mount Moosilauke, in Kinsman Notch of the White Mountains, New Hampshire USA during the winter months. This shelter is an Adirondack-style shelter, sleeps 8 hikers, and was built in 1993/1994.
    SCDW072317.tif
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  • Moose Mountain Shelter along the Moose Mountain Trail, part of the Appalachian Trail, on Moose Mountain in Hanover, New Hampshire. Built in 2004 by the Dartmouth Outing Club, this is an Adirondack-style shelter.
    SCDS072969.jpg
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  • Rattle River shelter along the Rattle River Trail, part of the Appalachian Trail, in Shelburne, New Hampshire. Built in 1963, this is how the shelter looked in 2007.
    SCD074498.jpg
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  • Rocky Branch No. 1 shelter in the White Mountains of New Hampshire. Located along the Rocky Branch Trail, the shelter standing today was built in 1974. It is an Adirondack style shelter. This is how the shelter looked in 2007.
    SCD074413.jpg
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  • Privy at the old Eliza Brook Shelter along the Appalachian Trail (Kinsman Ridge Trail), between Mount Wolf and South Kinsman, in the New Hampshire White Mountains.This was an Adirondack style shelter that slept 8. It was replaced with a new shelter in 2010.
    SCD074328.jpg
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  • Ethan Pond shelter located just off the Ethan Pond Trail, part of the Appalachian Trail in the White Mountains of New Hampshire during the autumn months. The Adirondack style shelter seen here in this photo was built in 1957.
    NH179839.jpg
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  • Beaver Brook Shelter along the Appalachian Trail (Beaver Brook Trail), on the north side of Mount Moosilauke, in Kinsman Notch of the White Mountains, New Hampshire USA during the winter months. This shelter is an Adirondack-style shelter, sleeps 8 hikers, and was built in 1993/1994.
    NH152028.jpg
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  • Faded Amerianc Flags blowing in the wind  at South Side Cemetery in Nottingham, New Hampshire
    SC1012290.jpg
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  • A 1911 Baldwin 0-6-0 steam locomotive on display at the Grand Trunk Railroad Museum in Gorham, New Hampshire USA
    SC108616.jpg
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  • Flat Mountain Pond shelter in the New Hampshire White Mountains town of Waterville Valley. Built in 1964, this remote shelter is located on the edge of Flat Mountain Pond.
    SC0913539.jpg
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  • The Tip Top House (originally built as a hotel in 1853) on the summit of Mount Washington in the White Mountains, New Hampshire during the winter months. Mount Washington, at 6,288 feet, is the tallest mountain in the northeastern United States.
    SC091186.jpg
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  • Jeffers Brook shelter in Benton, New Hampshire. Built in 1981, this Adirondack-style shelter is located off of Town Line Trail, part of the Appalachian Trail, on the west side of Mount Moosilauke.
    SNDW072369.jpg
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  • Eliza Brook Shelter, located between Mount Wolf and South Kinsman at 2400 feet along the Appalachian Trail (Kinsman Ridge Trail)in the New Hampshire White Mountains.
    SCD074350.tif
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  • The site of the Resolution Shelter off of Davis Path in the federally designated Presidential Range-Dry River Wilderness in the New Hampshire White Mountains during a snow storm. The Resolution shelter was closed in 2009 because of safety issues, and it was torn down in December of 2011.
    SCDW1182-07.jpg
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  • The site of the Resolution Shelter off of Davis Path in the federally designated Presidential Range-Dry River Wilderness in the New Hampshire White Mountains during a snow storm. The Resolution shelter was closed in 2009 because of safety issues, and it was torn down in December of 2011.
    SCDW1168-07.jpg
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  • Jeffers Brook shelter in Benton, New Hampshire. Built in 1981, this Adirondack-style shelter is located off of Town Line Trail, part of the Appalachian Trail, on the west side of Mount Moosilauke.
    SCDW072352.jpg
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  • Moose Mountain Shelter along the Moose Mountain Trail, part of the Appalachian Trail, on Moose Mountain in Hanover, New Hampshire. Built in 2004 by the Dartmouth Outing Club, this is an Adirondack-style shelter.
    SCDS072954.jpg
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  • Moose Mountain Shelter along the Moose Mountain Trail, part of the Appalachian Trail, on Moose Mountain in Hanover, New Hampshire. Built in 2004 by the Dartmouth Outing Club, this is an Adirondack-style shelter.
    SCDS072962.jpg
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  • Rocky Branch No. 1 shelter in the White Mountains of New Hampshire. Located along the Rocky Branch Trail, the shelter standing today was built in 1974. It is an Adirondack style shelter. This is how the shelter looked in 2007.
    SCD074409.jpg
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  • The old Eliza Brook shelter along the Kinsman Ridge Trail, part of the Appalachian Trail, between Mount Wolf and South Kinsman, in the New Hampshire White Mountains. The Adirondack style shelter seen in the photo was built in 1963; it was replaced with a new shelter in 2010.
    SCD074340.jpg
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  • The old Eliza Brook shelter along the Kinsman Ridge Trail, part of the Appalachian Trail, between Mount Wolf and South Kinsman, in the New Hampshire White Mountains. The Adirondack style shelter seen in the photo was built in 1963; it was replaced with a new shelter in 2010.
    SCD074335.jpg
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