ScenicNH Photography - White Mountains New Hampshire

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(57 images)
Your search yielded 57 images
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  • Yellow and blue trail blaze along the Frankenstein Cliff Trail in the White Mountains of New Hampshire.
    SC1230226.jpg
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  • Trail Blaze along the Frankenstein Cliff Trail in the White Mountains, New Hampshire.
    SC1230216.jpg
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  • Trail Blaze along the Frankenstein Cliff Trail in the White Mountains, New Hampshire.
    SC1230183.jpg
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  • Blue trail blazing painted on hardwood tree along the Maggie's Run Trail in the White Mountains of New Hampshire
    SC1225715.jpg
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  • Blue trail blazing painted on rocks along Maggie's Run Trail in Crawford Notch State Park of the New Hampshire White Mountains.
    SC1225705.jpg
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  • Blue trail blazing painted on trees along Maggie's Run Trail in Crawford Notch State Park in the White Mountains, New Hampshire.
    SC1225660.jpg
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  • Old trail blaze painted on rock along the Frankenstein Cliff Trail in the White Mountains, New Hampshire USA during the spring months.
    SC125831.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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  • Trail Blaze on birch tree along the Skookumchuck Trail in the White Mountains, New Hampshire USA during the spring months.
    SC125587.jpg
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  • Trail blaze painted on tree along the Frankenstein Cliff Trail in the White Mountains of New Hampshire during the spring months. A proper blaze is a two by six inch rectangle.
    SC125817.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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  • 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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  • Blue trail Blazing along the Maggie's Run Trail in the White Mountains of New Hampshire.
    SC1225728.jpg
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  • Trail Stewardship - Blue trail blaze on hardwood tree that has been properly covered up (removed) with gray paint along the Maggie's Run Trail in the White Mountains of New Hampshire.
    SC1225804.jpg
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  • Trail Blaze along the Skookumchuck Trail in the White Mountains, New Hampshire USA during the spring months
    SC125570.jpg
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  • Blue blaze painted on hardwood tree along the Saco River Trail during the summer months in Crawford Notch State Park of the White Mountains, New Hampshire USA. Blazes painted on trees mark the location of the trail
    SC1111870.jpg
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  • A yellow trail blaze (marks the hiking trail) on a hardwood tree along the Mt Tecumseh Trail (ski area side) in the White Mountains of New Hampshire.
    SC1116878.jpg
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  • September 2011 - Trail blaze along the Mt Tecumseh Trail, at a brook crossing, in the New Hampshire White Mountains. Proper technique is two paint marks (on right) to indicate the trail turns right. After a trail inspection by Forest Service in June 2012, the non-conforming blazing was removed by proper parties.
    SC1113849.jpg
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  • Blaze removal along the Mt Tecumseh Trail in the White Mountains of New Hampshire. A proper trail blaze should be placed about head height on a tree. This beech tree was improperly blazed. And in 2012 proper parties removed the bottom blaze that was placed about two feet off the ground. This is how the tree looked after the blaze was removed.
    SC1212059.jpg
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  • Blaze along the Mt Tecumseh Trail in the New Hampshire White Mountains. When this tree was blazed in autumn of 2011 paint dripped down the tree. And this is how the blaze looked in 2012 after proper parties removed the dripping paint from the tree.
    NH137206.jpg
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  • Blaze removal along the Mt Tecumseh Trail in the White Mountains of New Hampshire. This beech tree was improperly blazed in 2011. And in 2012 Proper parties removed the dripping blaze (bottom blaze) using proper protocol. In time, the removed blaze will fade and not be visible. See how it looked before removal: http://bit.ly/12ECXJz
    SC1212412.jpg
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  • A white trail blaze painted on rock along the Appalachian Trail (Garfield Ridge Trail) during the summer months in the New Hampshire White Mountains.
    SC087127.jpg
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  • Flagging and yellow trail blazing on birch tree along the Mount Tecumseh Trail in the New Hampshire White Mountains. After an inspection of the trail by Forest Service, the non-conforming blazing (on left) was removed.
    SC128044.jpg
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  • Trail blazing along the Black Pond Trail in the White Mountains, New Hampshire USA
    SC127040.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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  • A faded yellow trail marker painted on a rock in the alpine zone on Caps Ridge Trail during the summer months in the White Mountains of New Hampshire.
    MD075957.tif
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  • Hiking on the Subway Trail during the early months of autumn.The Subway Trail is a side trail off the King Ravine Trail, which travels through a large boulder field in King Ravine. Located in the White Mountains, New Hampshire USA. ..Notes: The subway reconnects with the King Ravine Trail..Snow can be found in the ice caves of this ravine during the summer months
    SCD077732.tif
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  • Trail blazing along a trail in the White Mountains, New Hampshire USA.
    SC1118628.jpg
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  • Franconia Notch State Park - Kinsman Ridge Trail during the winter months. This trail leads to the summit of Cannon Mountain in the White Mountains, New Hampshire USA
    SC101269.jpg
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  • A yellow trail blaze that has been properly covered up with brown paint at Step Falls Nature Preserve in Newry, Maine USA. Acquired in 1962, Step Falls was The Nature Conservancy’s first preserve in Maine.
    ME1416336.jpg
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  • Blaze removal along the Mt Tecumseh Trail in the White Mountains of New Hampshire. This beech tree was improperly blazed in 2011. And in 2012 Proper parties removed the dripping blaze (bottom blaze) using proper protocol. In time, the removed blaze will fade and not be visible. This is how the tree looked in July 2013. See how it looked before removal: http://bit.ly/12ECXJz
    NH139708.jpg
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  • Trail blazing along the Artist's Bluff Path in  White Mountains, New Hampshire USA
    SC1127510.jpg
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  • Blue arrow painted on hardwood tree in the White Mountains, New Hampshire USA.
    SC1111255.jpg
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  • The Presidential Range from the summit of Mount Pierce in the White Mountains, New Hampshire at sunrise. Rock Cairns, seen in the foreground, mark the route of hiking trails in the alpine zones.
    SC102431.jpg
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  • The silhouette of a rock cairn on the summit of Mount Washington at dusk in the White Mountains, New Hampshire. Rock cairns are used to mark the path of the trails in the alpine zone surrounding Mount Washington.
    SC0910335.jpg
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  • The silhouette of a rock cairn on the summit of Mount Washington at dusk in the White Mountains, New Hampshire. Rock cairns are used to mark the path of the trails in the alpine zone surrounding Mount Washington.
    SC0910337.jpg
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  • The Presidential Range from the summit of Mount Pierce in the White Mountains, New Hampshire at sunrise. Rock Cairns, seen in the foreground, mark the route of hiking trails in the alpine zones.
    SC102477.jpg
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  • The Presidential Range from the summit of Mount Pierce in the White Mountains, New Hampshire at sunrise. Rock Cairns, seen in the foreground, mark the route of hiking trails in the alpine zones.
    SC102429.jpg
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  • The silhouette of a rock cairn on the summit of Mount Washington at dusk in the White Mountains, New Hampshire. Rock cairns are used to mark the path of the trails in the alpine zone surrounding Mount Washington.
    SC0910343.jpg
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  • Hartwell Tavern along the Battle Road at Minute Man National Historical Park in Lincoln, Massachusetts during the winter months. This is a restored 18th-century home and tavern. Originally built in 1732-1733, and restored by the National Park Service in the 1980s to its 18th-century appearance, this tavern was standing on April 19, 1775 (battles of Lexington and Concord, which marked the beginning of the American Revolutionary War). And because of this the National Park Service refers to this house as a “witness house”.
    TMA091548.jpg
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  • Flagging and note placed on tree (by a hiker or hikers) along Lincoln Brook, just off the Lincoln Brook Trail, in the Pemigewasset Wilderness in the New Hampshire White Mountains. The note reads "Do not remove until 6PM This eve." Guessing this flagging marks a safe spot to cross Lincoln Brook.
    SC126894.jpg
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  • Appalachian Trail - Orange flagging marks tent lines on the summit of Mount Monroe during the winter months in the White Mountains, New Hampshire USA. Mount Washington is in the background.
    SC101854.jpg
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  • The Minute Man statue next to Old North Bridge at Minute Man National Historical Park in Concord, Massachusetts during the winter months. This footbridge spans the Concord River, and it is the site of a Revolutionary War Battlefield (on April 19, 1775, battle of Concord, which marked the beginning of the American Revolutionary War).
    TMA091642.jpg
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  • The Captain William Smith house along the Battle Road Trail at Minute Man National Historical Park in Lincoln, Massachusetts during the winter months. Captain William Smith was the commanding officer of the Lincoln Minute Men on April 19, 1775 (Battles of Lexington and Concord, which marked the beginning of the American Revolutionary War). Believed to have built been around 1692, the National Park Service restored this house in the 1980s to its 1775 appearance.
    TMA091725.jpg
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  • Captain William Smith House along the Battle Road Trail at Minute Man National Historical Park in Lincoln, Massachusetts during the winter months. Believed to have built been around 1692, the National Park Service restored it in the 1980s to its 1775 appearance. Captain William Smith was the commanding officer of the Lincoln Minute Men on April 19, 1775 (battles of Lexington and Concord, which marks the beginning of the American Revolutionary War).
    TMA091719.jpg
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  • Wooden fence near the Hartwell Tavern along the Battle Road at Minute Man National Historical Park in Lincoln, Massachusetts during the winter months. Originally built in 1732-1733, and restored by the National Park Service in the 1980s to its 18th-century appearance, the Hartwell Tavern was standing on April 19, 1775 (battles of Lexington and Concord, which marked the beginning of the American Revolutionary War). And because of this the National Park Service refers to this house as a “witness house”.
    TMA091711.jpg
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  • Hartwell Tavern along the Battle Road at Minute Man National Historical Park in Lincoln, Massachusetts during the winter months. This is a restored 18th-century home and tavern. Originally built in 1732-1733, and restored by the National Park Service in the 1980s to its 18th-century appearance, this tavern was standing on April 19, 1775 (battles of Lexington and Concord, which marked the beginning of the American Revolutionary War). And because of this the National Park Service refers to this house as a “witness house”.
    TMA091704.jpg
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  • Hartwell Tavern along the Battle Road at Minute Man National Historical Park in Lincoln, Massachusetts during the winter months. This is a restored 18th-century home and tavern. Originally built in 1732-1733, and restored by the National Park Service in the 1980s to its 18th-century appearance, this tavern was standing on April 19, 1775 (battles of Lexington and Concord, which marked the beginning of the American Revolutionary War). And because of this the National Park Service refers to this house as a “witness house”.
    TMA091678.jpg
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  • The Minute Man statue next to Old North Bridge at Minute Man National Historical Park in Concord, Massachusetts during the winter months. This footbridge spans the Concord River, and it is the site of a Revolutionary War Battlefield (on April 19, 1775, battle of Concord, which marks the beginning of the American Revolutionary War).
    TMA091585.jpg
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