ScenicNH Photography - White Mountains New Hampshire

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(51 images)
Your search yielded 51 images
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  • The Fabyan Guard Station during the autumn months. It was built in 1923 by Clifford Graham along the old Jefferson Turnpike (now Old Cherry Mountain Road) in the Carroll, New Hampshire. It's the last remaining guard station in the White Mountain National Forest. The cabin was built using spruce logs from the surrounding area.
    NH169375.jpg
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  • The Fabyan Guard Station during the autumn months. It was built in 1923 by Clifford Graham along the old Jefferson Turnpike (now Old Cherry Mountain Road) in the Carroll, New Hampshire. It's the last remaining guard station in the White Mountain National Forest. The cabin was built using spruce logs from the surrounding area.
    NH1610439.jpg
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  • The Fabyan Guard Station during the autumn months. It was built in 1923 by Clifford Graham along the old Jefferson Turnpike (now Old Cherry Mountain Road) in the Carroll, New Hampshire. It's the last remaining guard station in the White Mountain National Forest. The cabin was built using spruce logs from the surrounding area.
    NH1610487.jpg
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  • The Fabyan Guard Station during the autumn months. It was built in 1923 by Clifford Graham along the old Jefferson Turnpike (now Old Cherry Mountain Road) in the Carroll, New Hampshire. It's the last remaining guard station in the White Mountain National Forest. The cabin was built using spruce logs from the surrounding area.
    NH1610479.jpg
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  • Old shed at the Fabyan Guard Station along the old Jefferson Turnpike (now Old Cherry Mountain Road) in Carroll, New Hampshire during the autumn months. The Fabyan Guard Station is the last remaining guard station in the White Mountain National Forest.
    NH169825.jpg
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  • The Fabyan Guard Station during the autumn months. It was built in 1923 by Clifford Graham along the old Jefferson Turnpike (now Old Cherry Mountain Road) in the Carroll, New Hampshire. It's the last remaining guard station in the White Mountain National Forest. The cabin was built using spruce logs from the surrounding area.
    NH1610464.jpg
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  • The Fabyan Guard Station along old Jefferson Turnpike (now Old Cherry Mountain Road) in the White Mountains, New Hampshire during the summer months. Built in 1923 by Clifford Graham, it is the last remaining guard station in the White Mountain National Forest. The cabin was built using spruce logs from the surrounding area.
    NH1412609.jpg
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  • The Fabyan Guard Station along old Jefferson Turnpike (now Old Cherry Mountain Road) in the White Mountains, New Hampshire during the summer months. Built in 1923 by Clifford Graham, it is the last remaining guard station in the White Mountain National Forest. The cabin was built using spruce logs from the surrounding area.
    NH1412602.jpg
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  • The Fabyan Guard Station during the autumn months. It was built in 1923 by Clifford Graham along the old Jefferson Turnpike (now Old Cherry Mountain Road) in the Carroll, New Hampshire. It's the last remaining guard station in the White Mountain National Forest. The cabin was built using spruce logs from the surrounding area.
    SC1214760.jpg
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  • The Fabyan Guard Station during the autumn months. It was built in 1923 by Clifford Graham along the old Jefferson Turnpike (now Old Cherry Mountain Road) in the Carroll, New Hampshire. It's the last remaining guard station in the White Mountain National Forest. The cabin was built using spruce logs from the surrounding area.
    SC1214755.jpg
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  • The Fabyan Guard Station during the autumn months. It was built in 1923 by Clifford Graham along the old Jefferson Turnpike (now Old Cherry Mountain Road) in the Carroll, New Hampshire. It's the last remaining guard station in the White Mountain National Forest. The cabin was built using spruce logs from the surrounding area.
    NH169808.jpg
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  • Old shed at the Fabyan Guard Station along the old Jefferson Turnpike (now Old Cherry Mountain Road) in Carroll, New Hampshire during the autumn months. The Fabyan Guard Station is the last remaining guard station in the White Mountain National Forest.
    NH169831.jpg
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  • Warning sign at the start of the Alpine Zone along the Air Line Trail in the  Northern Presidential Range of the New Hampshire White Mountains.
    SCD3942-06.tif
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  • The Fabyan Guard Station - Built in 1923 by Clifford Graham along the old Jefferson Turnpike (now Old Cherry Mountain Road) in the White Mountains, New Hampshire. It's the last remaining guard station in the White Mountain National Forest. The cabin was built using spruce logs from the surrounding area.
    SC1111966.jpg
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  • The Fabyan Guard Station - Built in 1923 by Clifford Graham along the old Jefferson Turnpike (now Old Cherry Mountain Road) in the White Mountains, New Hampshire. It's the last remaining guard station in the White Mountain National Forest. The cabin was built using spruce logs from the surrounding area.
    SC1111969.jpg
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  • The Fabyan Guard Station - Built in 1923 by Clifford Graham along the old Jefferson Turnpike (now Old Cherry Mountain Road) in the White Mountains, New Hampshire. It's the last remaining guard station in the White Mountain National Forest. The cabin was built using spruce logs from the surrounding area.
    SC1111967.jpg
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  • Forest during the spring months from the summit of Middle Sugarloaf Mountain in Bethlehem, New Hampshire USA. Timber Harvest along Forest Road 155 is in the foreground. This area was once part of the Zealand Valley Railroad, which was a logging railroad in operation from 1886-1897.
    SC093342.jpg
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  • Log cabin restroom at Lincoln Woods Trailhead in Lincoln, New Hampshire covered in snow during the winter months.
    NH132842.jpg
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  • The visitor information cabin at Lincoln Woods Trailhead in Lincoln, New Hampshire USA covered in snow during the winter months.
    NH132803.jpg
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  • The visitor information cabin at Lincoln Woods Trailhead in Lincoln, New Hampshire USA covered in snow during the winter months.
    NH132817.jpg
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  • The visitor information cabin at Lincoln Woods Trailhead in Lincoln, New Hampshire USA covered in snow during the winter months.
    NH132811.jpg
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  • The visitor information cabin at Lincoln Woods Trailhead in Lincoln, New Hampshire USA covered in snow during the winter months.
    NH132832.jpg
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  • Log cabin restroom at Lincoln Woods Trailhead in Lincoln, New Hampshire covered in snow during the winter months.
    NH132861.jpg
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  • Log cabin restroom at Lincoln Woods Trailhead in Lincoln, New Hampshire covered in snow during the winter months.
    NH132843.jpg
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  • September 2013 #2 - View of illegal tree cutting on Mt Tecumseh in Waterville Valley, New Hampshire. Unauthorized cutting of trees on National Forest land is considered vandalism, and it has become a problem on Mt Tecumseh. Forest Service has verified this cutting is unauthorized, and they are trying to determine who is doing it.
    NH1318712.jpg
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  • Snow covered mountains from the summit of Mount Tecumseh in Waterville Valley, New Hampshire during the winter of 2014. View shedding has improved the summit view. Forest Service has verified the cutting is unauthorized.
    NH141720-2.jpg
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  • May 2016 - Mountain view from Mount Tecumseh in Waterville Valley, New Hampshire on a cloudy May day. Unauthorized tree cutting over the last few years has improved this view. The U.S. Forest Service is trying to determine who has been cutting the trees down.
    NH164304.jpg
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  • February 2015 - View of snow blowing across the mountains from the summit of Mount Tecumseh in Waterville Valley, New Hampshire during the winter months. Illegal tree cutting has improved the view from the summit. Forest Service verified the tree cutting on the summit is illegal.
    NH152117.jpg
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  • April 2014 - Stormy weather from the summit of Mount Tecumseh in Waterville Valley, New Hampshire. Unauthorized tree cutting has improved the view from the summit. Forest Service verified the cutting is illegal and they are looking for the ones doing the cut.
    NH145609.jpg
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  • February 2014 - Winter view from Mount Tecumseh in Waterville Valley, New Hampshire. In 2011, this was only a small viewpoint, but illegal tree cutting has improved it. Forest Service is looking for any information that will identify the ones doing the cutting.
    NH142235.jpg
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  • September 2013 #1 - The summit of Mount Tecumseh in Waterville Valley, New Hampshire. Ongoing vandalism (illegal tree cutting) has improved the view from the summit. Pemi District of Forest Service verified the cutting is illegal and unauthorized.
    NH1317580.jpg
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  • In 2011, Tropical Storm Irene washed out part of the Mt Tecumseh Trail in New Hampshire, and this is part of the rerouted section of trail in April 2012. After a trail inspection by Forest Service in June 2012 some of the stones that lined each side of the trail in this section were removed. Removing the stones gives the trail a more natural look and feel. This photo shows how this section looked before the stones were removed.
    SC128026.jpg
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  • March 2012 - A fresh 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.<br />
<br />
From Forest Service: When blazes are removed from trees it is generally done with a wire brush though many of the brushes carried by our field staff have a paint scraper integrated into the same tool. The bark is usually not cut intentionally or peeled off. The one exception might be if the blaze were on a mature paper birch. We discourage the use of birches for blazing but in some places they're the only option.<br />
<br />
Blaze removal is most likely done by USFS field staff (trail crews or backcountry rangers) or the partner organization responsible for the maintenance of the trail. Occasionally it may be done by trail adopters or other authorized volunteers. Anyone not under a formal agreement with the USFS is not authorized to remove blazes.
    SC125139.jpg
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  • Non-conforming stone structures (wall) along the Mt Tecumseh Trail in the New Hampshire White Mountains during the summer of 2011. Water bar across trail is per guidelines. Trail maintenance handbooks suggest the best trails show little evidence of trail work and that work should blend in with the surroundings. After a trail inspection by Forest Service in June 2012, the walls on each side of the drainage may be removed because they have no real use.
    SC1113903.jpg
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  • Built in the early 1900s, Trestle No. 16 crosses Black Brook along the old East Branch & Lincoln Railroad (1893-1948) in the Pemigewasset Wilderness of Lincoln, New Hampshire. This photo shows how the trestle looked in May 2009. In 2010, Forest Service dismantled the steel footbridge in the background, and it was not replaced. The sign in the foreground warns of the trestle being an unsafe structure.
    SC093474.jpg
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  • Built in the early 1900s, Trestle No. 16 crosses Black Brook along the old East Branch & Lincoln Railroad (1893-1948) in the Pemigewasset Wilderness of Lincoln, New Hampshire. This photo shows how the trestle looked in May 2009. In 2010, Forest Service dismantled the steel footbridge in the background, and it was not replaced.
    SC093456.jpg
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  • Built in the early 1900s, Trestle No. 16 crosses Black Brook along the old East Branch & Lincoln Railroad (1893-1948) in the Pemigewasset Wilderness of Lincoln, New Hampshire. This photo shows how the trestle looked in May 2009. In 2010, Forest Service dismantled the steel footbridge in the background, and it was not replaced.
    SC093455.jpg
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  • June 2016 - Sunrise from the summit of Mount Tecumseh in Waterville Valley, New Hampshire. This viewpoint is man-made and is the result of unauthorized tree cutting. Forest Service is trying to determine who cut the trees down.
    NH165660.jpg
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  • January 2015 - Sunrise from the summit of Mount Tecumseh in Waterville Valley, New Hampshire. This picturesque view came at a price and is the result of trees being illegally cut down. Forest Service has stated the cutting on Tecumseh is illegal and if they are able to determine the responsible party they will be held accountable.
    NH15739.jpg
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  • November 2014 - Named for the Native American Shawnee chief Tecumseh, Mount Tecumseh in Waterville Valley, New Hampshire is a popular day hike. This viewpoint used to be much smaller, but unauthorized tree cutting has improved it. Forest Service is seeking any information that will help catch the ones involved.
    NH1416641.jpg
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  • November 2013 - Whiteout conditions on Mount Tecumseh in Waterville Valley, New Hampshire. Illegal tree cutting has improved the view from the summit. Forest Service verified this vandalism is unauthorized.
    NH1344140.jpg
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  • October 2013 - Winter conditions on Mount Tecumseh in Waterville Valley, New Hampshire. Illegal tree cutting has improved the summit. Forest Service has stated the cutting is unauthorized.
    NH1330151.jpg
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  • In 2011, Tropical Storm Irene washed out part of the Mt Tecumseh Trail in New Hampshire, and this is the start of the rerouted section of trail in April 2012. After a trail inspection by Forest Service in June 2012 the stone walls on each side of the trail were removed. A defined path had been established and the walls no longer served any purpose. Removing the stones gives the trail a more natural look and feel. This photo shows the trail before the stones were removed.
    SC128024.jpg
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  • In 2011, Tropical Storm Irene washed out part of the Mt Tecumseh Trail in New Hampshire, and this is the start of the rerouted section of trail in April 2012. After a trail inspection by Forest Service in June 2012 the stone walls on each side of the trail were removed. A defined path had been established and the walls no longer served any purpose. Removing the stones gives the trail a more natural look and feel. This photo shows the trail before the stones were removed.
    SC128018.jpg
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  • Built in the early 1900s, Trestle No. 16 crosses Black Brook along the old East Branch & Lincoln Railroad (1893-1948) in the Pemigewasset Wilderness of Lincoln, New Hampshire. This photo shows a timber of the trestle (right) in May 2009. In 2010, Forest Service dismantled the steel footbridge in the background, and it was not replaced.
    SC093449.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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  • May 23, 2018 - Thoreau Falls Trail bridge closed sign. The Thoreau Falls Trail bridge, which crosses the East Branch of the Pemigewasset River, in the Pemigewasset Wilderness is not safe and is out of service. The trail is still open, but hikers will have to ford the river at this location.<br />
<br />
The sign states: “Do not plan to use the Thoreau Falls Trail bridge as it has been partially decommissioned to prevent use in its current condition. Hikers must exercise good judgment and should have contingency plans in case fording the river at this location is not possible.”
    NH184166.jpg
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  • Pondicherry Wildlife Refuge - Reflection of autumn foliage in Cherry Pond in Jefferson, New Hampshire USA during the autumn months. Pondicherry was designated a National Natural Landmark in 1974 by the National Park Service.
    SC1114738.jpg
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  • Pondicherry Wildlife Refuge - Reflection of autumn foliage in Cherry Pond in Jefferson, New Hampshire USA during the autumn months. Pondicherry was designated a National Natural Landmark in 1974 by the National Park Service.
    SC1114726.jpg
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  • Pondicherry Wildlife Refuge - Cherry Pond in Jefferson, New Hampshire USA. Pondicherry was designated a National Natural Landmark in 1974 by the National Park Service.
    SC1010465.jpg
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