Show Navigation

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 25 images found }

Loading ()...

  • Western redcedar (Thuja plicata) stripped of their bark in the Bacon Creek drainage, Mount Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest, Washington. The bark, easily removed by making a cut at the base and peeling upward, is traditionally used for making rope, clothing, and other soft goods. Harvesting in single strips avoids killing the tree.
    100710_4068.JPG
  • Western redcedar (Thuja plicata) stripped of their bark in the Bacon Creek drainage, Mount Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest, Washington. The bark, easily removed by making a cut at the base and peeling upward, is traditionally used for making rope, clothing, and other soft goods. Harvesting  in single strips avoids killing the tree.
    100710_4017.JPG
  • Western redcedar (Thuja plicata) harvested for bark in the Bacon Creek drainage, Mount Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest, Washington. The bark, easily removed by making a cut at the base and peeling upward, is traditionally used for making rope, clothing, and other soft goods. Harvesting in single strips avoids killing the tree.
    100710_4071.JPG
  • Top view of trees killed by a bark beetle outbreak near Twisp Pass, North Cascades National Park, Washington. Bark beetle populations have exploded and caused massive devastation throughout the west since the late 1990s. Recent warmer winters have not been sufficiently severe to kill the native beetle and suppress its population growth.
    051015_0184.JPG
  • Top view of trees killed by a bark beetle outbreak near Twisp Pass, North Cascades National Park, Washington. Bark beetle populations have exploded and caused massive devastation throughout the west since the late 1990s. Recent warmer winters have not been sufficiently severe to kill the native beetle and suppress its population growth.
    051015_0178.JPG
  • Top view of trees killed by a bark beetle outbreak near Twisp Pass, North Cascades National Park, Washington. Bark beetle populations have exploded and caused massive devastation throughout the west since the late 1990s. Recent warmer winters have not been sufficiently severe to kill the native beetle and suppress its population growth.
    051015_0183.JPG
  • Detail of quaking aspen (Populus tremuloides) bark, Lost Creek Wilderness, Colorado.
    120519_2500.JPG
  • Detail of the jigsaw puzzle bark of a ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa) along Monument Creek Trail, Okanogan National Forest, Washington.
    100704_2750.JPG
  • Detail of patterned tree bark, Lost Creek Wilderness, Colorado.
    120520_3301.JPG
  • Lummi elder Ted Solomon, holding a traditional cedar bark hat, stands on the shore of Stommish Beach to welcome arriving canoes at the Lummi Indian Reservation, Washington on July 30, 2007. Canoes, coming as far as Alaska, were ceremoniously welcomed by the Lummi Nation, hosts of the 2007 Canoe Journey. Dancing, singing and "potlatching" followed for a week until the canoes left for their return voyage on August 5. Solomon teaches Lummi language and cedar basket weaving.
    070730_0264.JPG
  • A young woman wearing a traditional cedar bark hat listens intently to Chief Edgar Charlie as he addresses his crew at Stommish Beach on the Lummi Indian Reservation, Washington on July 30, 2007. The group paddled all the way from the North end of Vancouver Island to visit the Lummi Nation, hosts of the 2007 Canoe Journey. Dancing, singing and "potlatching" followed for a week until the canoes left for their return voyage on August 5.
    070730_0190.JPG
  • Large douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) on the trail to Blue Lake, North Cascades Scenic Highway Corridor, Washington.
    100702_2026.JPG
  • Ethan Welty places his hand on the trunk of a giant old-growth western redcedar (Thuja plicata) along the Baker River Trail in Mount Baker National Forest, Washington.
    100718_5118.JPG
  • Detail of a coniferous forest in the Diois, Drôme valley, France.
    111228_0190.JPG
  • Mixed aspen and pine forest on a misty morning in the Lost Creek Wilderness, Colorado.
    120519_2432.JPG
  • Quaking aspen (Populus tremuloides) in fog, Lost Creek Wilderness, Colorado.
    120519_2333.JPG
  • Ethan Welty places his hand on the trunk of a giant old-growth western redcedar (Thuja plicata) along the Baker River Trail in Mount Baker National Forest, Washington.
    100718_5118.JPG
  • Detail of aspen and ponderosa pine tree trunks, Lost Creek Wilderness, Colorado.
    120519_2323.JPG
  • Detail of a quaking aspen (Populus tremuloides) tree trunk and knot in Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado.
    090920_0386.JPG
  • Heart shaped scratch on an aspen tree in Uncompahgre National Forest, Colorado.
    110324_0976.JPG
  • Obadiah Reid stops to smell the fragrant bark of a ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa) on the Goose Creek Trail, Lost Creek Wilderness, Colorado.
    120520_3325.JPG
  • The remains of a large slab avalanche are visible on a slope of Bowen Mountain above a pine forest riddled with trees killed by a bark beetle outbreak in Baker Gulch, Never Summer Wilderness, Colorado.
    100605_9090.JPG
  • Open stands of lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta) are illuminated by afternoon light in Baker Gulch, Never Summer Wilderness, Colorado. The swaths of forest with a reddish tint on the distant hills are lodgepole killed by the mountain pine bark beetle.
    100605_9233.JPG
  • A Kumiai indian man holds up a sample of a bush whose bark can cause rashes in the indigenous village of San Antonio Necua, Baja California Norte, Mexico. Supposedly, locals grow immune from repeat exposure, but visitors should be wary.
    091122_6498.JPG
  • A dog barks at a young man as he drifts past in an inner tube in Boulder Creek on a hut summer day in Boulder, Colorado.
    120809_7372.JPG
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

ethan/welty

  • Portfolios
  • Tearsheets
  • Clients
  • About
  • Contact
  • Archive
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area