ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 8月25日 06時35分


To adventurers and campers, America’s national forests are a boundless backyard for hiking trips, rafting, hunting and mountain biking. But for thousands of homeless people and hard-up wanderers, these same forests have become a retreat of last resort. Of course, people searching for solitude or those without better options have retreated to live in the woods for many years. But public lands researchers are just beginning to study who lives there, and why. Forest law enforcement officers say they’re seeing more dislocated people living off the land, often driven there by drug and alcohol addiction, mental health problems, lost jobs or scarce housing in costly mountain towns. And as officers deal with more emergency calls, drug overdoses, illegal fires and trash piles deep in the woods, tensions are boiling. @nickcotephoto captured this armchair in the forest outside of Nederland, Colorado, a couple of weeks ago. Last month, a campfire burned 600 acres of canyons and forests around Nederland. It was one of a handful across the West that in recent years officials have blamed on transient campers.


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