View allAll Photos Tagged Logging,
This is from the first roll of Kodachrome I ever shot and is over a year old. I'm seriously backlogged. I love this film though; too bad it's going away.
Canon EOS Elan 7. Nikon 28mm f/2.8 E-Series.
Kodak Kodachrome 64.
Scanned on an Epson V700.
Log work by Sitka Log Homes. The dormers in this handcrafted log house provide more room upstairs and add character to the loft ceiling.
My 1st Log Cabin Quilt Block I ever made.
This block was made for the Friday Night Sew-In hosted by Handmade by Heidi: handmadebyheidi.blogspot.com/search/label/Friday%20Night%...
Blog Post: koolbeenz-blog.blogspot.com/2011/12/friday-night-sew-in-f...
For take a class with Dave & Dave: Flora. Be creative, show us plants in an amazing new way.
No one said that the flora still had to be alive!
Engineered Log Jams (ELJ) at Tharwa, A.C.T., Australia, construted to improve fish passage and habitat in the Upper Murrumbidgee Demonstration Reach. More information here: upperbidgeereach.org.au/node/599
Old log at a ex-sawmill in Kalimantan, Indonesia.
Photo by Ryan Woo/CIFOR
If you use one of our photos, please credit it accordingly and let us know. You can reach us through our Flickr account or at: cifor-mediainfo@cgiar.org and m.edliadi@cgiar.org
Caption: Forest Service logging crew, Camp 7. Enos Cole, foreman. Menominee Indian Reservation, Shawano County, Wisconsin.
Date: January, 1909
Photographer: Braniff, E. A.
Local Call Number: FHS4592
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.
Driver dies in logging truck crash
Posted: Jul. 10, 2008
Raleigh, N.C. — A driver died Thursday when his logging truck hit a guardrail on the Interstate 440 Inner Beltline in Raleigh, went down an embankment and crashed into a tree in the woods.
The driver has been identified as Eric Gene Simmons, 54, of 1609 Dogwood Acres Drive in Sanford. The truck he was driving belonged to Elliott Logging Inc., 4385 Center Church Road in Sanford.
The accident occurred just after 10:30 a.m. Traffic was backed up for hours near the South Saunders Street interchange.
The driver's body was pinned inside the truck. Authorities said they were not sure why the logging truck went off the road, but witnesses said they believed the truck struck the guardrail due to a ruptured tire.
After the truck struck the guardrail and exited the road, it overturned onto its left side and continued to travel down the embankment, according to police. A tree struck the truck in the upper-front portion of the cab. Logs separated from the truck’s trailer and one struck a nearby parked 18-wheeler truck. The driver of that truck took shelter between that truck’s cab and trailer. He was not injured.
At 5:30 p.m. crews had cleared debris from the scene.
Its obligatory to take a photo like this when you see a big stack of timber. Seen alongside the Fritham-Frogham track in the southern part of Islands Thorns Inclosure, in the pouring rain.
Two loggers on a log run down a river.
Location: Island Falls, Maine
Date: Unknown
Image derived from the original glass negative.
Geotagged
Taken on February 2, 2012 at Log Peeler at Camp Snoopy, Knott's Berry Farm (Knott's Resort, Buena Park, CA)
This is a logo that I created for a Netball Club. Once the design was finalised I experimented with different colours for the club to choose from.
Logging truck carrying Radiata Pine in Billapaloola State Forest along Billapaloola Rd, Tumorrama, New South Wales, Australia. Photographed on 15 May 2017.
Sawing Chestnut logs in the north Georgia mountains near Clayton. Date unknown.
In the 1880’s, railroads began penetrating the North Georgia Mountains making timber easier to access. Large landowners built these railroads. These companies bought much of this mountain land for as little as $1.00 per acre. Their goal was to cut the timber, sell the land, and move on to another location. They logged the land for lumber and for bark of chestnut, chestnut oak and hemlock trees. Tanic acid was extracted from the bark, which was used in tanning leather. This was big industry in those days as almost every household item was leather or involved leather in its use.
Wildfire also took a toll. Sparks from wood burning trains and skidders ignited thousands of acres. Farmers lost control of fires they set to clear land, to rid the woods of insects and snakes and to improve forage for cattle and swine which roamed the woods.
This loss of forest resources was about to change. Congress passed the Weeks Law authorizing land purchases from willing sellers to protect the headwaters of navigable streams and insure a continuous supply of timber.
The Forest Service purchased 31,000 acres in Fannin, Gilmer, Lumpkin and Union Counties from the Gennett family in 1911 for $7.00 per acre. Thus, began the role of stewardship on lands that would become the Chattahoochee National Forest.
For more information on Chattahoochee Oconee National Forest history please visit: www.fs.usda.gov/detail/conf/learning/history-culture/?cid...
A nice old log house. / Szép régi gerendaház.
Sighetu Marmației, Village Museum - on of the most interesting sights in this nice town in Northern Romania. We visited the place on the fourth day of our family road trip to the region in August 2015.
Skanzen, Máramarossziget - a város egyik legszebb látnivalója, számos eredeti faépülettel, melyek annyira jellemzőek Máramarosra. 2015. augusztusában jártunk itt, családi autós kirándulásunk negyedik napján.
SIGHET VILLAGE MUSEUM
Founded in 1981, Sighet Village Museum is the largest and most complex display of the traditional Maramures village and the rural artisanal techniques from this region. The basic concept of the museum is the arrangement of the homesteads around the church, as in Maramures villages, all the streets and paths leading towards it. The church (errected in 1621 in Oncesti) is situated on a hill thus overviewing the entire community and showing once more the importance of religion in Maramures. The museum holds over 30 homesteads (the oldest ones dating since 16th century) together with their appurtenances and traditional equipments: stable, barn, well, oil press or carriage. Some of the houses have the original furniture and accesories: the stove, the pottery, kitchen tools, weaving loom or toddler swing. Visitors can admire and understand different building techniques depending on the Maramures region where the houses were errected and also based on the century they were built in. Houses from Borsa, Ruscova, Mara-Cosau, Campulung la Tisa, Sapanta or Iza Valley areas are displayed, among them tourists being able to withness hungarian, jewish and ukrainian households.