ScenicNH Photography - White Mountains New Hampshire

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(8 images)
Your search yielded 8 images
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  • Human Impact - Old Yellow Birch (Betula alleghaniensis) damaged from barbed wire in the Little River drainage of Bethlehem, New Hampshire USA
    SC129157.jpg
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  • Human Impact - Old Yellow Birch (Betula alleghaniensis) damaged from barbed wire in the Little River drainage of Bethlehem, New Hampshire USA.
    SC129168.jpg
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  • Barbed wire in a  Shagbark Hickory tree during the winter months in a New England Forest, USA
    MDW072131.tif
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  • Guy wire anchor rod for an old utility pole along the abandoned Breadtray Basin Trail in Livermore, New Hampshire. Also known as the Breadtray Ravine Trail, this trail ascended Mount Osceola from Thornton Gore. It was abandoned in the 1950s. This utility pole held the telephone wire that was strung along the trail for the now gone Mount Osceola Fire Tower (1910 - 1958).
    NH216633.jpg
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  • Remnants of an old barbed wire fence along a stone wall in an abandoned 1800s hill farming community along old South Landaff Road in Landaff, New Hampshire USA.
    NH154998.jpg
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  • Barbed wire in softwood tree at Quincy Bog Natural Area in Rumney, New Hampshire USA. This natural area is a 50 acre preserve owned by the Rumney Ecological Systems (non-profit organization).
    NH144619.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 />
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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 />
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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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  • East Branch & Lincoln Railroad - A wire cable wrapped around tree along the old railroad bed near a brook crossing in the Hancock Brook drainage of Lincoln, New Hampshire. This was a logging Railroad which operated from 1893-1948.
    SC106205.jpg
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