View allAll Photos Tagged Logging,
This building at King's Landing depicts another aspect of life in rural New Brunswick in late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Once the harvest was in many New Brunswick men and boys left their farms to do a stint as loggers. It was hard and dangerous work but it allowed the men to earn some decent money. This was the kind of building in which the loggers bunked, with many crammed into close quarters.
Finger Lake Food Gardens
I stopped by Liam's farm yesterday and picked up my Mushroom Logs. The two on the left are inoculated with Shitake Mushroom Spores. The two on the right are inoculated with Oyster Mushroom Spores. We soaked the Shitake logs for 12 hours before setting them out to fruit. Hopefully soon we will be harvesting our own mushrooms!
While Adele was hard at work gardening, I stood around taking photographs of the leaf-cutter bees laying eggs in our bee log.
BLM horse-logging dangerous trees at popular southwest Oregon recreation area – video: Vince Randall, BLM, May 2018.
The horse logging commenced this month at the popular Cathedral Hills trail system, just south of Grants Pass.
Flatheaded fir borers eat dead or dying trees that become weakened by drought, according to federal scientists. Approximately 130,000 Doug fir trees have been killed by the fir-boring insect in southwest Oregon, estimated Bill Schaupp, an entomologist for the U.S. Forest Service, in a Jefferson Public Radio interview.
“This appears to be more widespread than we thought,” said Schaupp in the interview.
The Cathedral Hills is a popular day-use area for hikers, horseback riders and mountain bikers. Using the small horse-logging team is less intrusive for the area than larger, noisier logging equipment, said Vince Randall, the BLM forest manager for the area.
The BLM also used horse logging this past winter at the Howard Prairie Resort Campgrounds – see video: goo.gl/4XeAm2
Listen to the full public radio interview with Schaupp and Randall: goo.gl/Y4ebo5
Description
I was attracted by the simple composition of this log in the water. Nothing around. Concentrating on the structure, texture and form of the woord. Daytime long exposure by a B+W ND110. Postprocessing and black and white conversion in Lightroom only.
Technique: f/8 t: 25sec ISO:200 focal length: 26mm on NIKON D40 (APS-C)
Postprocessing:
Lightroom LR 3.3
SBB Cargo 610 519 passes Landquart with regional freight 64837 en route from Buchs SG to Domat-Ems with logs for Stallinger Timber AG.
All images on this site are exclusive property and may not be copied, downloaded, reproduced, transmitted, manipulated or used in any way without expressed written permission of the photographer. All rights reserved – Copyright Don Gatehouse
Log flat cars haul logs and poles and are equipped tall heavy duty, metal bracings to create a crib for transporting poles.
Log Meadow in Sequoia National Park. The name of this meadow is likely associated with Tharp's Log, a cabin made from a single fallen sequoia tree that can be found at the north end of the meadow. Hale Tharp raised cattle in the area in the 1860's and he used fire to hollow out a space inside the log in which to live.
Photo taken near Crescent Meadow in the Giant Forest area of Sequoia National Park (California, USA).
I walked by all this timber, and kind of liked the pattern they made. Anyone know why the logs are branded like this one is?
captured through the viewfinder Ansco Rediflex + Nikon D70, first snow of the year. Log cabin doll house.
This pile of logs was shot on B3084 heading north towards Port of Menteith, Stirlingshire, Scotland... 15/02/14
This lonely, abandoned log cabin sits overgrown with brush along Todd's Fork in Warren County, Ohio.
This is a logo I did for a little contest on 99designs. Check these guys out on Facebook to see how they're doing: www.facebook.com/IronLionFitness
A full website will be available sometime by mid January 2012
99designs.com/logo-design/contests/logo-modern-upscale-ur...
It was a cold morning in February when I took this pre-dawn shot at Log Boom Park in Kenmore, Washington, my first with a tripod.
Caption: A caravan of trucks carrying mammoth Douglas fir logs pass through North Bend, Washington. [Trucks driving down North Bend Way through town.]
[Thompson's Cafe seen in the background was built in 1941. The restaurant was later renamed the Mar-T Cafe and is now Twede's Cafe. The cafe was featured in the TV series "Twin Peaks."]
Date: [circa 1943]
Photographer: [unknown]
Local Call Number: FHS5560
Credit Line: Photo courtesy of the Forest History Society, Durham, NC
For information on photo use and more, see the Forest History Society Photograph Collection.
Saturday August 11, 11am-2pm
The Pineapple Log Cabin is both a dynamic and fun version of this classic block. It is perfect for two colour simplicity or a super scrappy palette. Often sewn with foundation piecing you will learn a few grid ruler tricks to create this block with less fuss. As a bonus, you'll also learn the easiest way to create a cushion back with button closures.
…..that is the feeling that I got while poking around in this old ghost town.
The wreck in the water is the remains of a 120 foot tug boat, that burned in this bay in 1910. The tug would have been used to haul massive loads of logs to saw mills after they were floated down the rivers during the spring thaws. The logs were cut in the winter, and brought out to lakes or rivers. When the high water came in the spring, the logs were “driven” down the rivers to spots where log booms corralled the logs. These boats were then used to pull massive amounts of logs to the mill.
This boat was moored at the dock, when the night watchman noticed flames coming from the stack on the tug. He alerted the sleeping crew members to abandon the boat, it was then cut from its moorings to prevent the fire from spreading to the dock and other buildings in the town. The burning tug drifted out into the bay and burned until it sank in 15 feet of water.
The shell of the building on the shore, is the only structure that remains intact. Many foundations and ruins are visible, and I do not imagine it will be many more winters before this building also succumbs to the elements.