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  • HUNTING WILD BOAR, France. Mist over the hills and cloud in the valley. Ardeche. Wild boar & deer hunting with hounds. A pursuit which is loved by some and hated by others. The hunters say hunting is natural, their opposers say it is bloodthirsty. There are millions of guns and it is a popular bloodsport.
    011.wild_boar_hunting.jpg
  • HUNTING WILD BOAR, France. Mist over the hills and cloud in the valley. Ardeche. Wild boar & deer hunting with hounds. A pursuit which is loved by some and hated by others. The hunters say hunting is natural, their opposers say it is bloodthirsty. There are millions of guns and it is a popular bloodsport.
    003.wild_boar_hunting.jpg
  • RIVER  AND STORM  CLOUDS, MALAYSIA. Sarawak, Borneo, South East Asia.  Tropical rainforest and one of the world's richest, oldest eco-systems, flora and fauna, under threat from development, logging and deforestation. Home to indigenous Dayak native tribal peoples, farming by slash and burn cultivation, fishing and hunting wild boar. Home to the Penan, traditional nomadic hunter-gatherers, of whom only one thousand survive, eating roots, and hunting wild animals with blowpipes. Animists, Christians, they still practice traditional medicine from herbs and plants. Native people have mounted protests and blockades against logging concessions, many have been arrested and imprisoned.
    sarawak_borneo114.jpg
  • HUNTING WILD BOAR, France. Mist over the hills and cloud in the valley. Ardeche. Wild boar & deer hunting with hounds. A pursuit which is loved by some and hated by others. The hunters say hunting is natural, their opposers say it is bloodthirsty. There are millions of guns and it is a popular bloodsport.
    032.wild_boar_hunting.jpg
  • ROYAL CAMBODIAN RAILWAYS. The journey from Phnom Penh to Battambang is the last working route. A passenger train, operates only at weekends. A Czech made diesel locomotive, leaves the capital Saturday morning, arriving in Battambang 22 hours later in the dead of night, and returns on Sunday. Max speed is about 30kmh, often slower due to the track's terrible condition. Carriages are dilapidated, with holes in the floor and only spaces for windows. Passengers sit or sleep on hardwood bench seats, hammocks, or on the floor of cargo carriages. The drivers, controllers & guards add to their small monthly pay by charging for local passengers and cargo; from motor bikes and local produce to timber loaded aboard at the 30 stations along the route. This together with other trains and farm vehicles further slows the journey. In rural areas, the track is a lifeline, and used for local transport on 'bamboo trains' powered by belt-motors, or pushcarts. Boom towns, with a 'goldrush mentality' near the rapidly depleted rainforest, are a hive of activity, with logging as their resource, where children workers even gamble away their earnings on cardgames. In the city, the railway has a life of its own, where people live and work nearby or on the track itself. Market stalls, restaurants, chairs and tables, are removed only briefly, when the infrequent train passes!///The sun setting over landscape in Pursat
    cambodia_railway_track130.jpg
  • Countryside, Lincolnshire, United Kingdom
    BREXIT_BRITAIN_DSC00806.JPG
  • Countryside, Lincolnshire, United Kingdom
    BREXIT_BRITAIN_DSC00803.JPG
  • The old site of Smokey Mountain Rubbish dump in Steung Mean Chey, Phnom Penh, Cambodia. It is now valuable land for property development. Its being allowed to settle down and the toxic gases released, until in several years time they will begen a program to redevelop the site. Phnom Penh Cambodia<br />
<br />
Smokey Mountain was Phnom Penh's municipal rubbish dump. Thousands worked there, some 600 minors and 2000 adults, recycling the city's rubbish, dumped there by garbage trucks every day. The dump was notorious as many very young children worked there. People ate and slept overnight in the rubbish and fumes, under plastic tarpaulins or in the open air. They worked 24 hours a day, like miners, with headlamps at night, collecting plastic, metals, wood, cloth & paper, which they sorted and cleaned, weighed and sold, to be carried away for recycling. A day's work typically brought less than a dollar per person. One and a half to two dollars per day per family. The overpowering, acrid odour of grey smokey fumes blowing across the dump, from which the place got its name 'Smokey Mountain' used to be smelt miles away. The shantytowns and squats, the recycling worker's homes butted onto or are inside the dump itself. There was no running water, sanitation and many were ill. Children often worked with friends or relatives. Religious and ngo's helped some children, but this is often resisted by families who needed the extra income they generate.
    Smokey_Mountain_redevelopment_site03...JPG
  • The old site of Smokey Mountain Rubbish dump in Steung Mean Chey, Phnom Penh, Cambodia. It is now valuable land for property development. Its being allowed to settle down and the toxic gases released, until in several years time they will begen a program to redevelop the site. Phnom Penh Cambodia<br />
<br />
Smokey Mountain was Phnom Penh's municipal rubbish dump. Thousands worked there, some 600 minors and 2000 adults, recycling the city's rubbish, dumped there by garbage trucks every day. The dump was notorious as many very young children worked there. People ate and slept overnight in the rubbish and fumes, under plastic tarpaulins or in the open air. They worked 24 hours a day, like miners, with headlamps at night, collecting plastic, metals, wood, cloth & paper, which they sorted and cleaned, weighed and sold, to be carried away for recycling. A day's work typically brought less than a dollar per person. One and a half to two dollars per day per family. The overpowering, acrid odour of grey smokey fumes blowing across the dump, from which the place got its name 'Smokey Mountain' used to be smelt miles away. The shantytowns and squats, the recycling worker's homes butted onto or are inside the dump itself. There was no running water, sanitation and many were ill. Children often worked with friends or relatives. Religious and ngo's helped some children, but this is often resisted by families who needed the extra income they generate.
    Smokey_Mountain_redevelopment_site03...JPG
  • The old site of Smokey Mountain Rubbish dump in Steung Mean Chey, Phnom Penh, Cambodia. It is now valuable land for property development. Its being allowed to settle down and the toxic gases released, until in several years time they will begen a program to redevelop the site. Phnom Penh Cambodia<br />
<br />
Smokey Mountain was Phnom Penh's municipal rubbish dump. Thousands worked there, some 600 minors and 2000 adults, recycling the city's rubbish, dumped there by garbage trucks every day. The dump was notorious as many very young children worked there. People ate and slept overnight in the rubbish and fumes, under plastic tarpaulins or in the open air. They worked 24 hours a day, like miners, with headlamps at night, collecting plastic, metals, wood, cloth & paper, which they sorted and cleaned, weighed and sold, to be carried away for recycling. A day's work typically brought less than a dollar per person. One and a half to two dollars per day per family. The overpowering, acrid odour of grey smokey fumes blowing across the dump, from which the place got its name 'Smokey Mountain' used to be smelt miles away. The shantytowns and squats, the recycling worker's homes butted onto or are inside the dump itself. There was no running water, sanitation and many were ill. Children often worked with friends or relatives. Religious and ngo's helped some children, but this is often resisted by families who needed the extra income they generate.
    Smokey_Mountain_redevelopment_site03...JPG
  • The old site of Smokey Mountain Rubbish dump in Steung Mean Chey, Phnom Penh, Cambodia. It is now valuable land for property development. Its being allowed to settle down and the toxic gases released, until in several years time they will begen a program to redevelop the site. Phnom Penh Cambodia<br />
<br />
Smokey Mountain was Phnom Penh's municipal rubbish dump. Thousands worked there, some 600 minors and 2000 adults, recycling the city's rubbish, dumped there by garbage trucks every day. The dump was notorious as many very young children worked there. People ate and slept overnight in the rubbish and fumes, under plastic tarpaulins or in the open air. They worked 24 hours a day, like miners, with headlamps at night, collecting plastic, metals, wood, cloth & paper, which they sorted and cleaned, weighed and sold, to be carried away for recycling. A day's work typically brought less than a dollar per person. One and a half to two dollars per day per family. The overpowering, acrid odour of grey smokey fumes blowing across the dump, from which the place got its name 'Smokey Mountain' used to be smelt miles away. The shantytowns and squats, the recycling worker's homes butted onto or are inside the dump itself. There was no running water, sanitation and many were ill. Children often worked with friends or relatives. Religious and ngo's helped some children, but this is often resisted by families who needed the extra income they generate.
    Smokey_Mountain_redevelopment_site03...JPG
  • The old site of Smokey Mountain Rubbish dump in Steung Mean Chey, Phnom Penh, Cambodia. It is now valuable land for property development. Its being allowed to settle down and the toxic gases released, until in several years time they will begen a program to redevelop the site. Phnom Penh Cambodia<br />
<br />
Smokey Mountain was Phnom Penh's municipal rubbish dump. Thousands worked there, some 600 minors and 2000 adults, recycling the city's rubbish, dumped there by garbage trucks every day. The dump was notorious as many very young children worked there. People ate and slept overnight in the rubbish and fumes, under plastic tarpaulins or in the open air. They worked 24 hours a day, like miners, with headlamps at night, collecting plastic, metals, wood, cloth & paper, which they sorted and cleaned, weighed and sold, to be carried away for recycling. A day's work typically brought less than a dollar per person. One and a half to two dollars per day per family. The overpowering, acrid odour of grey smokey fumes blowing across the dump, from which the place got its name 'Smokey Mountain' used to be smelt miles away. The shantytowns and squats, the recycling worker's homes butted onto or are inside the dump itself. There was no running water, sanitation and many were ill. Children often worked with friends or relatives. Religious and ngo's helped some children, but this is often resisted by families who needed the extra income they generate.
    Smokey_Mountain_redevelopment_site03...JPG
  • The old site of Smokey Mountain Rubbish dump in Steung Mean Chey, Phnom Penh, Cambodia. It is now valuable land for property development. Its being allowed to settle down and the toxic gases released, until in several years time they will begen a program to redevelop the site. Phnom Penh Cambodia<br />
<br />
Smokey Mountain was Phnom Penh's municipal rubbish dump. Thousands worked there, some 600 minors and 2000 adults, recycling the city's rubbish, dumped there by garbage trucks every day. The dump was notorious as many very young children worked there. People ate and slept overnight in the rubbish and fumes, under plastic tarpaulins or in the open air. They worked 24 hours a day, like miners, with headlamps at night, collecting plastic, metals, wood, cloth & paper, which they sorted and cleaned, weighed and sold, to be carried away for recycling. A day's work typically brought less than a dollar per person. One and a half to two dollars per day per family. The overpowering, acrid odour of grey smokey fumes blowing across the dump, from which the place got its name 'Smokey Mountain' used to be smelt miles away. The shantytowns and squats, the recycling worker's homes butted onto or are inside the dump itself. There was no running water, sanitation and many were ill. Children often worked with friends or relatives. Religious and ngo's helped some children, but this is often resisted by families who needed the extra income they generate.
    Smokey_Mountain_redevelopment_site03...JPG
  • The old site of Smokey Mountain Rubbish dump in Steung Mean Chey, Phnom Penh, Cambodia. It is now valuable land for property development. Its being allowed to settle down and the toxic gases released, until in several years time they will begen a program to redevelop the site. Phnom Penh Cambodia<br />
<br />
Smokey Mountain was Phnom Penh's municipal rubbish dump. Thousands worked there, some 600 minors and 2000 adults, recycling the city's rubbish, dumped there by garbage trucks every day. The dump was notorious as many very young children worked there. People ate and slept overnight in the rubbish and fumes, under plastic tarpaulins or in the open air. They worked 24 hours a day, like miners, with headlamps at night, collecting plastic, metals, wood, cloth & paper, which they sorted and cleaned, weighed and sold, to be carried away for recycling. A day's work typically brought less than a dollar per person. One and a half to two dollars per day per family. The overpowering, acrid odour of grey smokey fumes blowing across the dump, from which the place got its name 'Smokey Mountain' used to be smelt miles away. The shantytowns and squats, the recycling worker's homes butted onto or are inside the dump itself. There was no running water, sanitation and many were ill. Children often worked with friends or relatives. Religious and ngo's helped some children, but this is often resisted by families who needed the extra income they generate.
    Smokey_Mountain_redevelopment_site02...JPG
  • The old site of Smokey Mountain Rubbish dump in Steung Mean Chey, Phnom Penh, Cambodia. It is now valuable land for property development. Its being allowed to settle down and the toxic gases released, until in several years time they will begen a program to redevelop the site. Phnom Penh Cambodia<br />
<br />
Smokey Mountain was Phnom Penh's municipal rubbish dump. Thousands worked there, some 600 minors and 2000 adults, recycling the city's rubbish, dumped there by garbage trucks every day. The dump was notorious as many very young children worked there. People ate and slept overnight in the rubbish and fumes, under plastic tarpaulins or in the open air. They worked 24 hours a day, like miners, with headlamps at night, collecting plastic, metals, wood, cloth & paper, which they sorted and cleaned, weighed and sold, to be carried away for recycling. A day's work typically brought less than a dollar per person. One and a half to two dollars per day per family. The overpowering, acrid odour of grey smokey fumes blowing across the dump, from which the place got its name 'Smokey Mountain' used to be smelt miles away. The shantytowns and squats, the recycling worker's homes butted onto or are inside the dump itself. There was no running water, sanitation and many were ill. Children often worked with friends or relatives. Religious and ngo's helped some children, but this is often resisted by families who needed the extra income they generate.
    Smokey_Mountain_redevelopment_site02...JPG
  • MOON HAZE BURNING, Amazon, near Boavista, northern Brazil, South America. As the forests burn in the Amazon the moon and atmosphere becomes saturated with strange colours. Ecological biosphere and fragile ecosystem where flora and fauna, and native lifestyles are threatened by progress and development. The rainforest is home to many plants and animals who are endangered or facing extinction. This region is home to indigenous primitive and tribal peoples including the Yanomami and Macuxi.
    brazil124.JPG
  • TRAFFIC POLLUTION. Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, South America. Heavy traffic in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil's capital. Traffic congestion and high pollution levels cause illness. The most visible consequences of air pollution is smog, the effects of this environmental problem are more devastating than what simply meets the eye. Breathing in these chemicals daily is damaging the body causing serious health problems to people and especially children and babies. Asthma attacks can be triggered by high levels of air pollution. The health condition asthma can also be caused by air pollution. asthma attacks set off by pollutants are one of the largest causes of air pollution related death  in America
    brazil293.JPG
  • TRAFFIC POLLUTION. Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, South America. Heavy traffic in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil's capital. Traffic congestion and high pollution levels cause illness. The most visible consequences of air pollution is smog, the effects of this environmental problem are more devastating than what simply meets the eye. Breathing in these chemicals daily is damaging the body causing serious health problems to people and especially children and babies. Asthma attacks can be triggered by high levels of air pollution. The health condition asthma can also be caused by air pollution. asthma attacks set off by pollutants are one of the largest causes of air pollution related death  in America
    brazil292.JPG
  • ATLANTIC COAST, Ilha Grande, Brazil, South America. Coastline south of Rio de Janerio, tourist destination and ecological biosphere. Sandy beaches and Atlantic Rainforest. Temperate rainforest micro-climate. A region that is being developed for eco-tourism and is a popular holiday destination for locals and foreigners.
    brazil004.JPG
  • ATLANTIC COAST, Ilha Grande, Brazil, South America. Coastline south of Rio de Janerio, tourist destination and ecological biosphere. Sandy beaches and Atlantic Rainforest. Temperate rainforest micro-climate. A region that is being developed for eco-tourism and is a popular holiday destination for locals and foreigners.
    brazil003.JPG
  • TODOS  SANTOS, Guatemala. Celebrations for the Day of the Dead in cemetery. Western Highlands, Huehuetenango, Todos Santos. Mayan traditional festival. Todos Santos Horse Race, the 'Skach Koyl' on All Saints Day 1st November; the 'Day of the dead' November 2nd. Mayan dances about Spanish 'Conquistadores' and Mayan Spirits, accompanied by marimbas take place October 31st.
    todos_santos035.jpg
  • Portmeirion, in North Wales, is a resort, where no one has ever lived. A self-taught Welsh architect named Sir Clough Williams-Ellis built it out of architectural salvage between the 1920s and 1970s, loosely based on his memories of trips to Portofino. Including a pagoda-shaped Chinoiserie gazebo, some Gothic obelisks, eucalyptus groves, a crenellated castle, a Mediterranean bell tower, a Jacobean town hall, and an Art Deco cylindrical watchtower. He kept improving Portmeirion until his death in 1978, age 94. It faces an estuary where at low tide one can walk across the sands and look out to sea. At high tide, the sea is lapping onto the shores. Every building in the village is either a shop, restaurant, hotel or self-catering accomodation. The village is booked out at high season, with numerous wedding receptions at the weekends. Very popular amongst the English and Welsh holidaymakers. Many who return to the same abode season after season. Hundreds of tourists visit every day, walking around the ornamental gardens, cobblestone paths, and shopping, eating ice-creams, or walking along the woodland and coastal paths, amongst a colourful assortment of hydrangea, rhododendrons, tree ferns and redwoods. The resort boasts two high class hotels, a la carte menus, a swimming pool, a lifesize concrete boat, topiary, pools and wishing wells. The creator describes the resort as "a home for fallen buildings," and its ragged skyline and playful narrow passageways which were meant to provide "more fun for more people." It does just that.///Overlooking the estuary Afon Dwyryd towards Pothmadog and Tremadog
    portmeirion_wales110.JPG
  • Portmeirion, in North Wales, is a resort, where no one has ever lived. A self-taught Welsh architect named Sir Clough Williams-Ellis built it out of architectural salvage between the 1920s and 1970s, loosely based on his memories of trips to Portofino. Including a pagoda-shaped Chinoiserie gazebo, some Gothic obelisks, eucalyptus groves, a crenellated castle, a Mediterranean bell tower, a Jacobean town hall, and an Art Deco cylindrical watchtower. He kept improving Portmeirion until his death in 1978, age 94. It faces an estuary where at low tide one can walk across the sands and look out to sea. At high tide, the sea is lapping onto the shores. Every building in the village is either a shop, restaurant, hotel or self-catering accomodation. The village is booked out at high season, with numerous wedding receptions at the weekends. Very popular amongst the English and Welsh holidaymakers. Many who return to the same abode season after season. Hundreds of tourists visit every day, walking around the ornamental gardens, cobblestone paths, and shopping, eating ice-creams, or walking along the woodland and coastal paths, amongst a colourful assortment of hydrangea, rhododendrons, tree ferns and redwoods. The resort boasts two high class hotels, a la carte menus, a swimming pool, a lifesize concrete boat, topiary, pools and wishing wells. The creator describes the resort as "a home for fallen buildings," and its ragged skyline and playful narrow passageways which were meant to provide "more fun for more people." It does just that.///Overlooking the estuary Afon Dwyryd towards Pothmadog and Tremadog
    portmeirion_wales107.JPG
  • Portmeirion, in North Wales, is a resort, where no one has ever lived. A self-taught Welsh architect named Sir Clough Williams-Ellis built it out of architectural salvage between the 1920s and 1970s, loosely based on his memories of trips to Portofino. Including a pagoda-shaped Chinoiserie gazebo, some Gothic obelisks, eucalyptus groves, a crenellated castle, a Mediterranean bell tower, a Jacobean town hall, and an Art Deco cylindrical watchtower. He kept improving Portmeirion until his death in 1978, age 94. It faces an estuary where at low tide one can walk across the sands and look out to sea. At high tide, the sea is lapping onto the shores. Every building in the village is either a shop, restaurant, hotel or self-catering accomodation. The village is booked out at high season, with numerous wedding receptions at the weekends. Very popular amongst the English and Welsh holidaymakers. Many who return to the same abode season after season. Hundreds of tourists visit every day, walking around the ornamental gardens, cobblestone paths, and shopping, eating ice-creams, or walking along the woodland and coastal paths, amongst a colourful assortment of hydrangea, rhododendrons, tree ferns and redwoods. The resort boasts two high class hotels, a la carte menus, a swimming pool, a lifesize concrete boat, topiary, pools and wishing wells. The creator describes the resort as "a home for fallen buildings," and its ragged skyline and playful narrow passageways which were meant to provide "more fun for more people." It does just that.///Overlooking the estuary Afon Dwyryd towards Pothmadog and Tremadog
    portmeirion_wales106.JPG
  • Asia, Philippines, Central Luzon, After the Pinatubo volcano eruption. Many indigenous people last their land and which was covered with ash. Communities were made homeless. Photograph © Nigel Dickinson
    philippines139.jpg
  • TOURISM CLUBBING, Ibiza.  Sunset, sea and beach. Ibiza & Formentera, Baleares islands, Spain, Mediterranean, Europe. Popular holiday resort catering mainly for european tourists. Summer high season, April until September. Well known for 24 hour nightclubbing, package holidays, jet set, all night raves, dancing, techno clubs, drag queens & gay scene, discotheques, speciality theme nights, soapsuds, foam parties, espuma, la mousse. Attractions include shopping, beaches, watersports, boating..
    ibiza_night_fever231.jpg
  • TOURISM CLUBBING, Ibiza. Beaches in Formentera. Ibiza & Formentera, Baleares islands, Spain, Mediterranean, Europe. Popular holiday resort catering mainly for european tourists. Summer high season, April until September. Well known for 24 hour nightclubbing, package holidays, jet set, all night raves, dancing, techno clubs, drag queens & gay scene, discotheques, speciality theme nights, soapsuds, foam parties, espuma, la mousse. Attractions include shopping, beaches, watersports, boating..
    ibiza_night_fever227.jpg
  • TOURISM CLUBBING, Ibiza. Beaches in Formentera. Ibiza & Formentera, Baleares islands, Spain, Mediterranean, Europe. Popular holiday resort catering mainly for european tourists. Summer high season, April until September. Well known for 24 hour nightclubbing, package holidays, jet set, all night raves, dancing, techno clubs, drag queens & gay scene, discotheques, speciality theme nights, soapsuds, foam parties, espuma, la mousse. Attractions include shopping, beaches, watersports, boating..
    ibiza_night_fever225.jpg
  • TOURISM CLUBBING, Ibiza. Beaches in Formentera. Ibiza & Formentera, Baleares islands, Spain, Mediterranean, Europe. Popular holiday resort catering mainly for european tourists. Summer high season, April until September. Well known for 24 hour nightclubbing, package holidays, jet set, all night raves, dancing, techno clubs, drag queens & gay scene, discotheques, speciality theme nights, soapsuds, foam parties, espuma, la mousse. Attractions include shopping, beaches, watersports, boating..
    ibiza_night_fever221.jpg
  • TOURISM CLUBBING, Ibiza. Beaches in Formentera. Ibiza & Formentera, Baleares islands, Spain, Mediterranean, Europe. Popular holiday resort catering mainly for european tourists. Summer high season, April until September. Well known for 24 hour nightclubbing, package holidays, jet set, all night raves, dancing, techno clubs, drag queens & gay scene, discotheques, speciality theme nights, soapsuds, foam parties, espuma, la mousse. Attractions include shopping, beaches, watersports, boating..
    ibiza_night_fever219.jpg
  • Over the sea to Europe<br />
<br />
Kirkcaldy is one of the poorest areas in Scotland with staggeringly high numbers of child poverty. Many disadvantaged families, and vulnerable people, and over a thousand children are surviving below the breadline in Kirkaldy East, that is 40%. Voluntary organisations and foodbanks give over a thousand food parcels a month, several times more than a few years ago. The Conservative government’s policy of austerity together with the new ‘Universal Credit’ system which replaced six other benefits, makes millions of people poorer, many hundreds of thousands on the poverty line or below. Whilst people overall voted strongly against Brexit in Scotland, in other parts of the country, poorer constituencies voted largely for Brexit, in a vote against the City of London.
    Brexitland071DSC03914 copy.JPG
  • Countryside, Lincolnshire, United Kingdom
    BREXIT_BRITAIN_DSC00809.JPG
  • Countryside, Lincolnshire, United Kingdom
    BREXIT_BRITAIN_DSC00808.JPG
  • Caterpillar Cat on horizon. Road Protest actions at Twyford Down, near the Donga pathways, outside Winchester, against the M3 road extension. 1992-94<br />
<br />
The British Road Protesters movement began in the early 1990s when the Donga tribe squatted Twyford Down to save this beautiful site, a site of scientific interest SSI from the Ministry of transport's road building programme which threatened to destroy the landscape. The Dongas was the name of the ancient walkways, the paths trodden in the middle ages by people walking down to Winchester. A small tribe were joined by people of all walks of life who came to Twyford Down to defend it. A long hard battle over several years ended in the 'cutting' a new motorway built through this ancient monument and destroying it. <br />
<br />
The Road Protest movement in Britain continued for many years and more battles were fought in London against the MII both at Wanstead then in Leytonstone, and subsequently at Newbury, and in Sussex. the protesters were very inventive in their use of non violent peaceful direct action. They barricaded themselves into squats, made tree houses, tunnels and have huge demonstrations against the bailliffs, police and security who tried to force their way through the defences of this alternative environmental popular movement. Many of the roads were built eventually and many sites of great beauty lost, but the government had to stand down from its road building policy and eventually the programme was halted. the protests cost the government billions. Out of that movement grew many environmental NGOs who have to this day kept fighting for ecological and sustainable environmental solutions rather than following the cult of the car, petrol and roadbuilding..
    road_protest_uk030.JPG
  • The old site of Smokey Mountain Rubbish dump in Steung Mean Chey, Phnom Penh, Cambodia. It is now valuable land for property development. Its being allowed to settle down and the toxic gases released, until in several years time they will begen a program to redevelop the site. Phnom Penh Cambodia<br />
<br />
Smokey Mountain was Phnom Penh's municipal rubbish dump. Thousands worked there, some 600 minors and 2000 adults, recycling the city's rubbish, dumped there by garbage trucks every day. The dump was notorious as many very young children worked there. People ate and slept overnight in the rubbish and fumes, under plastic tarpaulins or in the open air. They worked 24 hours a day, like miners, with headlamps at night, collecting plastic, metals, wood, cloth & paper, which they sorted and cleaned, weighed and sold, to be carried away for recycling. A day's work typically brought less than a dollar per person. One and a half to two dollars per day per family. The overpowering, acrid odour of grey smokey fumes blowing across the dump, from which the place got its name 'Smokey Mountain' used to be smelt miles away. The shantytowns and squats, the recycling worker's homes butted onto or are inside the dump itself. There was no running water, sanitation and many were ill. Children often worked with friends or relatives. Religious and ngo's helped some children, but this is often resisted by families who needed the extra income they generate.
    Smokey_Mountain_redevelopment_site03...JPG
  • The old site of Smokey Mountain Rubbish dump in Steung Mean Chey, Phnom Penh, Cambodia. It is now valuable land for property development. Its being allowed to settle down and the toxic gases released, until in several years time they will begen a program to redevelop the site. Phnom Penh Cambodia<br />
<br />
Smokey Mountain was Phnom Penh's municipal rubbish dump. Thousands worked there, some 600 minors and 2000 adults, recycling the city's rubbish, dumped there by garbage trucks every day. The dump was notorious as many very young children worked there. People ate and slept overnight in the rubbish and fumes, under plastic tarpaulins or in the open air. They worked 24 hours a day, like miners, with headlamps at night, collecting plastic, metals, wood, cloth & paper, which they sorted and cleaned, weighed and sold, to be carried away for recycling. A day's work typically brought less than a dollar per person. One and a half to two dollars per day per family. The overpowering, acrid odour of grey smokey fumes blowing across the dump, from which the place got its name 'Smokey Mountain' used to be smelt miles away. The shantytowns and squats, the recycling worker's homes butted onto or are inside the dump itself. There was no running water, sanitation and many were ill. Children often worked with friends or relatives. Religious and ngo's helped some children, but this is often resisted by families who needed the extra income they generate.
    Smokey_Mountain_redevelopment_site03...JPG
  • The old site of Smokey Mountain Rubbish dump in Steung Mean Chey, Phnom Penh, Cambodia. It is now valuable land for property development. Its being allowed to settle down and the toxic gases released, until in several years time they will begen a program to redevelop the site. Phnom Penh Cambodia<br />
<br />
Smokey Mountain was Phnom Penh's municipal rubbish dump. Thousands worked there, some 600 minors and 2000 adults, recycling the city's rubbish, dumped there by garbage trucks every day. The dump was notorious as many very young children worked there. People ate and slept overnight in the rubbish and fumes, under plastic tarpaulins or in the open air. They worked 24 hours a day, like miners, with headlamps at night, collecting plastic, metals, wood, cloth & paper, which they sorted and cleaned, weighed and sold, to be carried away for recycling. A day's work typically brought less than a dollar per person. One and a half to two dollars per day per family. The overpowering, acrid odour of grey smokey fumes blowing across the dump, from which the place got its name 'Smokey Mountain' used to be smelt miles away. The shantytowns and squats, the recycling worker's homes butted onto or are inside the dump itself. There was no running water, sanitation and many were ill. Children often worked with friends or relatives. Religious and ngo's helped some children, but this is often resisted by families who needed the extra income they generate.
    Smokey_Mountain_redevelopment_site03...JPG
  • The old site of Smokey Mountain Rubbish dump in Steung Mean Chey, Phnom Penh, Cambodia. It is now valuable land for property development. Its being allowed to settle down and the toxic gases released, until in several years time they will begen a program to redevelop the site. Phnom Penh Cambodia<br />
<br />
Smokey Mountain was Phnom Penh's municipal rubbish dump. Thousands worked there, some 600 minors and 2000 adults, recycling the city's rubbish, dumped there by garbage trucks every day. The dump was notorious as many very young children worked there. People ate and slept overnight in the rubbish and fumes, under plastic tarpaulins or in the open air. They worked 24 hours a day, like miners, with headlamps at night, collecting plastic, metals, wood, cloth & paper, which they sorted and cleaned, weighed and sold, to be carried away for recycling. A day's work typically brought less than a dollar per person. One and a half to two dollars per day per family. The overpowering, acrid odour of grey smokey fumes blowing across the dump, from which the place got its name 'Smokey Mountain' used to be smelt miles away. The shantytowns and squats, the recycling worker's homes butted onto or are inside the dump itself. There was no running water, sanitation and many were ill. Children often worked with friends or relatives. Religious and ngo's helped some children, but this is often resisted by families who needed the extra income they generate.
    Smokey_Mountain_redevelopment_site02...JPG
  • The old site of Smokey Mountain Rubbish dump in Steung Mean Chey, Phnom Penh, Cambodia. It is now valuable land for property development. Its being allowed to settle down and the toxic gases released, until in several years time they will begen a program to redevelop the site. Phnom Penh Cambodia<br />
<br />
Smokey Mountain was Phnom Penh's municipal rubbish dump. Thousands worked there, some 600 minors and 2000 adults, recycling the city's rubbish, dumped there by garbage trucks every day. The dump was notorious as many very young children worked there. People ate and slept overnight in the rubbish and fumes, under plastic tarpaulins or in the open air. They worked 24 hours a day, like miners, with headlamps at night, collecting plastic, metals, wood, cloth & paper, which they sorted and cleaned, weighed and sold, to be carried away for recycling. A day's work typically brought less than a dollar per person. One and a half to two dollars per day per family. The overpowering, acrid odour of grey smokey fumes blowing across the dump, from which the place got its name 'Smokey Mountain' used to be smelt miles away. The shantytowns and squats, the recycling worker's homes butted onto or are inside the dump itself. There was no running water, sanitation and many were ill. Children often worked with friends or relatives. Religious and ngo's helped some children, but this is often resisted by families who needed the extra income they generate.
    Smokey_Mountain_redevelopment_site02...JPG
  • The old site of Smokey Mountain Rubbish dump in Steung Mean Chey, Phnom Penh, Cambodia. It is now valuable land for property development. Its being allowed to settle down and the toxic gases released, until in several years time they will begen a program to redevelop the site. Phnom Penh Cambodia<br />
<br />
Smokey Mountain was Phnom Penh's municipal rubbish dump. Thousands worked there, some 600 minors and 2000 adults, recycling the city's rubbish, dumped there by garbage trucks every day. The dump was notorious as many very young children worked there. People ate and slept overnight in the rubbish and fumes, under plastic tarpaulins or in the open air. They worked 24 hours a day, like miners, with headlamps at night, collecting plastic, metals, wood, cloth & paper, which they sorted and cleaned, weighed and sold, to be carried away for recycling. A day's work typically brought less than a dollar per person. One and a half to two dollars per day per family. The overpowering, acrid odour of grey smokey fumes blowing across the dump, from which the place got its name 'Smokey Mountain' used to be smelt miles away. The shantytowns and squats, the recycling worker's homes butted onto or are inside the dump itself. There was no running water, sanitation and many were ill. Children often worked with friends or relatives. Religious and ngo's helped some children, but this is often resisted by families who needed the extra income they generate.
    Smokey_Mountain_redevelopment_site02...JPG
  • The old site of Smokey Mountain Rubbish dump in Steung Mean Chey, Phnom Penh, Cambodia. It is now valuable land for property development. Its being allowed to settle down and the toxic gases released, until in several years time they will begen a program to redevelop the site. Phnom Penh Cambodia<br />
<br />
Smokey Mountain was Phnom Penh's municipal rubbish dump. Thousands worked there, some 600 minors and 2000 adults, recycling the city's rubbish, dumped there by garbage trucks every day. The dump was notorious as many very young children worked there. People ate and slept overnight in the rubbish and fumes, under plastic tarpaulins or in the open air. They worked 24 hours a day, like miners, with headlamps at night, collecting plastic, metals, wood, cloth & paper, which they sorted and cleaned, weighed and sold, to be carried away for recycling. A day's work typically brought less than a dollar per person. One and a half to two dollars per day per family. The overpowering, acrid odour of grey smokey fumes blowing across the dump, from which the place got its name 'Smokey Mountain' used to be smelt miles away. The shantytowns and squats, the recycling worker's homes butted onto or are inside the dump itself. There was no running water, sanitation and many were ill. Children often worked with friends or relatives. Religious and ngo's helped some children, but this is often resisted by families who needed the extra income they generate.
    Smokey_Mountain_redevelopment_site02...JPG
  • The old site of Smokey Mountain Rubbish dump in Steung Mean Chey, Phnom Penh, Cambodia. It is now valuable land for property development. Its being allowed to settle down and the toxic gases released, until in several years time they will begen a program to redevelop the site. Phnom Penh Cambodia<br />
<br />
Smokey Mountain was Phnom Penh's municipal rubbish dump. Thousands worked there, some 600 minors and 2000 adults, recycling the city's rubbish, dumped there by garbage trucks every day. The dump was notorious as many very young children worked there. People ate and slept overnight in the rubbish and fumes, under plastic tarpaulins or in the open air. They worked 24 hours a day, like miners, with headlamps at night, collecting plastic, metals, wood, cloth & paper, which they sorted and cleaned, weighed and sold, to be carried away for recycling. A day's work typically brought less than a dollar per person. One and a half to two dollars per day per family. The overpowering, acrid odour of grey smokey fumes blowing across the dump, from which the place got its name 'Smokey Mountain' used to be smelt miles away. The shantytowns and squats, the recycling worker's homes butted onto or are inside the dump itself. There was no running water, sanitation and many were ill. Children often worked with friends or relatives. Religious and ngo's helped some children, but this is often resisted by families who needed the extra income they generate.
    Smokey_Mountain_redevelopment_site02...JPG
  • The old site of Smokey Mountain Rubbish dump in Steung Mean Chey, Phnom Penh, Cambodia. It is now valuable land for property development. Its being allowed to settle down and the toxic gases released, until in several years time they will begen a program to redevelop the site. Phnom Penh Cambodia<br />
<br />
Smokey Mountain was Phnom Penh's municipal rubbish dump. Thousands worked there, some 600 minors and 2000 adults, recycling the city's rubbish, dumped there by garbage trucks every day. The dump was notorious as many very young children worked there. People ate and slept overnight in the rubbish and fumes, under plastic tarpaulins or in the open air. They worked 24 hours a day, like miners, with headlamps at night, collecting plastic, metals, wood, cloth & paper, which they sorted and cleaned, weighed and sold, to be carried away for recycling. A day's work typically brought less than a dollar per person. One and a half to two dollars per day per family. The overpowering, acrid odour of grey smokey fumes blowing across the dump, from which the place got its name 'Smokey Mountain' used to be smelt miles away. The shantytowns and squats, the recycling worker's homes butted onto or are inside the dump itself. There was no running water, sanitation and many were ill. Children often worked with friends or relatives. Religious and ngo's helped some children, but this is often resisted by families who needed the extra income they generate.
    Smokey_Mountain_redevelopment_site02...JPG
  • The old site of Smokey Mountain Rubbish dump in Steung Mean Chey, Phnom Penh, Cambodia. It is now valuable land for property development. Its being allowed to settle down and the toxic gases released, until in several years time they will begen a program to redevelop the site. Phnom Penh Cambodia<br />
<br />
Smokey Mountain was Phnom Penh's municipal rubbish dump. Thousands worked there, some 600 minors and 2000 adults, recycling the city's rubbish, dumped there by garbage trucks every day. The dump was notorious as many very young children worked there. People ate and slept overnight in the rubbish and fumes, under plastic tarpaulins or in the open air. They worked 24 hours a day, like miners, with headlamps at night, collecting plastic, metals, wood, cloth & paper, which they sorted and cleaned, weighed and sold, to be carried away for recycling. A day's work typically brought less than a dollar per person. One and a half to two dollars per day per family. The overpowering, acrid odour of grey smokey fumes blowing across the dump, from which the place got its name 'Smokey Mountain' used to be smelt miles away. The shantytowns and squats, the recycling worker's homes butted onto or are inside the dump itself. There was no running water, sanitation and many were ill. Children often worked with friends or relatives. Religious and ngo's helped some children, but this is often resisted by families who needed the extra income they generate.
    Smokey_Mountain_redevelopment_site02...JPG
  • MOON HAZE BURNING, Amazon, near Boavista, northern Brazil, South America. As the forests burn in the Amazon the moon and atmosphere becomes saturated with strange colours. Ecological biosphere and fragile ecosystem where flora and fauna, and native lifestyles are threatened by progress and development. The rainforest is home to many plants and animals who are endangered or facing extinction. This region is home to indigenous primitive and tribal peoples including the Yanomami and Macuxi.
    brazil127.JPG
  • MOON HAZE BURNING, Amazon, near Boavista, northern Brazil, South America. As the forests burn in the Amazon the moon and atmosphere becomes saturated with strange colours. Ecological biosphere and fragile ecosystem where flora and fauna, and native lifestyles are threatened by progress and development. The rainforest is home to many plants and animals who are endangered or facing extinction. This region is home to indigenous primitive and tribal peoples including the Yanomami and Macuxi.
    brazil125.JPG
  • MOON HAZE BURNING, Amazon, near Boavista, northern Brazil, South America. As the forests burn in the Amazon the moon and atmosphere becomes saturated with strange colours. Ecological biosphere and fragile ecosystem where flora and fauna, and native lifestyles are threatened by progress and development. The rainforest is home to many plants and animals who are endangered or facing extinction. This region is home to indigenous primitive and tribal peoples including the Yanomami and Macuxi.
    brazil123.JPG
  • MOON HAZE BURNING, Amazon, near Boavista, northern Brazil, South America. As the forests burn in the Amazon the moon and atmosphere becomes saturated with strange colours. Ecological biosphere and fragile ecosystem where flora and fauna, and native lifestyles are threatened by progress and development. The rainforest is home to many plants and animals who are endangered or facing extinction. This region is home to indigenous primitive and tribal peoples including the Yanomami and Macuxi.
    brazil122.JPG
  • MOON HAZE BURNING, Amazon, near Boavista, northern Brazil, South America. As the forests burn in the Amazon the moon and atmosphere becomes saturated with strange colours. Ecological biosphere and fragile ecosystem where flora and fauna, and native lifestyles are threatened by progress and development. The rainforest is home to many plants and animals who are endangered or facing extinction. This region is home to indigenous primitive and tribal peoples including the Yanomami and Macuxi.
    brazil119x.JPG
  • MOON HAZE BURNING, Amazon, near Boavista, northern Brazil, South America. As the forests burn in the Amazon the moon and atmosphere becomes saturated with strange colours. Ecological biosphere and fragile ecosystem where flora and fauna, and native lifestyles are threatened by progress and development. The rainforest is home to many plants and animals who are endangered or facing extinction. This region is home to indigenous primitive and tribal peoples including the Yanomami and Macuxi.
    brazil119.JPG
  • MOON HAZE BURNING, Amazon, near Boavista, northern Brazil, South America. As the forests burn in the Amazon the moon and atmosphere becomes saturated with strange colours. Ecological biosphere and fragile ecosystem where flora and fauna, and native lifestyles are threatened by progress and development. The rainforest is home to many plants and animals who are endangered or facing extinction. This region is home to indigenous primitive and tribal peoples including the Yanomami and Macuxi.
    brazil118x.JPG
  • MOON HAZE BURNING, Amazon, near Boavista, northern Brazil, South America. As the forests burn in the Amazon the moon and atmosphere becomes saturated with strange colours. Ecological biosphere and fragile ecosystem where flora and fauna, and native lifestyles are threatened by progress and development. The rainforest is home to many plants and animals who are endangered or facing extinction. This region is home to indigenous primitive and tribal peoples including the Yanomami and Macuxi.
    brazil118.JPG
  • TRAFFIC POLLUTION. Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, South America. Heavy traffic in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil's capital. Traffic congestion and high pollution levels cause illness. The most visible consequences of air pollution is smog, the effects of this environmental problem are more devastating than what simply meets the eye. Breathing in these chemicals daily is damaging the body causing serious health problems to people and especially children and babies. Asthma attacks can be triggered by high levels of air pollution. The health condition asthma can also be caused by air pollution. asthma attacks set off by pollutants are one of the largest causes of air pollution related death  in America
    brazil291.JPG
  • TRAFFIC POLLUTION. Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, South America. Heavy traffic in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil's capital. Traffic congestion and high pollution levels cause illness. The most visible consequences of air pollution is smog, the effects of this environmental problem are more devastating than what simply meets the eye. Breathing in these chemicals daily is damaging the body causing serious health problems to people and especially children and babies. Asthma attacks can be triggered by high levels of air pollution. The health condition asthma can also be caused by air pollution. asthma attacks set off by pollutants are one of the largest causes of air pollution related death  in America
    brazil252.JPG
  • TRAFFIC POLLUTION. Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, South America. Heavy traffic in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil's capital. Traffic congestion and high pollution levels cause illness. The most visible consequences of air pollution is smog, the effects of this environmental problem are more devastating than what simply meets the eye. Breathing in these chemicals daily is damaging the body causing serious health problems to people and especially children and babies. Asthma attacks can be triggered by high levels of air pollution. The health condition asthma can also be caused by air pollution. asthma attacks set off by pollutants are one of the largest causes of air pollution related death  in America
    brazil251.JPG
  • ATLANTIC COAST, Ilha Grande, Brazil, South America. Coastline south of Rio de Janerio, tourist destination and ecological biosphere. Sandy beaches and Atlantic Rainforest. Temperate rainforest micro-climate. A region that is being developed for eco-tourism and is a popular holiday destination for locals and foreigners.
    brazil002.JPG
  • ATLANTIC COAST, Ilha Grande, Brazil, South America. Coastline south of Rio de Janerio, tourist destination and ecological biosphere. Sandy beaches and Atlantic Rainforest. Temperate rainforest micro-climate. A region that is being developed for eco-tourism and is a popular holiday destination for locals and foreigners.
    brazil001.JPG
  • Portmeirion, in North Wales, is a resort, where no one has ever lived. A self-taught Welsh architect named Sir Clough Williams-Ellis built it out of architectural salvage between the 1920s and 1970s, loosely based on his memories of trips to Portofino. Including a pagoda-shaped Chinoiserie gazebo, some Gothic obelisks, eucalyptus groves, a crenellated castle, a Mediterranean bell tower, a Jacobean town hall, and an Art Deco cylindrical watchtower. He kept improving Portmeirion until his death in 1978, age 94. It faces an estuary where at low tide one can walk across the sands and look out to sea. At high tide, the sea is lapping onto the shores. Every building in the village is either a shop, restaurant, hotel or self-catering accomodation. The village is booked out at high season, with numerous wedding receptions at the weekends. Very popular amongst the English and Welsh holidaymakers. Many who return to the same abode season after season. Hundreds of tourists visit every day, walking around the ornamental gardens, cobblestone paths, and shopping, eating ice-creams, or walking along the woodland and coastal paths, amongst a colourful assortment of hydrangea, rhododendrons, tree ferns and redwoods. The resort boasts two high class hotels, a la carte menus, a swimming pool, a lifesize concrete boat, topiary, pools and wishing wells. The creator describes the resort as "a home for fallen buildings," and its ragged skyline and playful narrow passageways which were meant to provide "more fun for more people." It does just that.///Overlooking the estuary Afon Dwyryd towards Pothmadog and Tremadog
    portmeirion_wales109.JPG
  • Portmeirion, in North Wales, is a resort, where no one has ever lived. A self-taught Welsh architect named Sir Clough Williams-Ellis built it out of architectural salvage between the 1920s and 1970s, loosely based on his memories of trips to Portofino. Including a pagoda-shaped Chinoiserie gazebo, some Gothic obelisks, eucalyptus groves, a crenellated castle, a Mediterranean bell tower, a Jacobean town hall, and an Art Deco cylindrical watchtower. He kept improving Portmeirion until his death in 1978, age 94. It faces an estuary where at low tide one can walk across the sands and look out to sea. At high tide, the sea is lapping onto the shores. Every building in the village is either a shop, restaurant, hotel or self-catering accomodation. The village is booked out at high season, with numerous wedding receptions at the weekends. Very popular amongst the English and Welsh holidaymakers. Many who return to the same abode season after season. Hundreds of tourists visit every day, walking around the ornamental gardens, cobblestone paths, and shopping, eating ice-creams, or walking along the woodland and coastal paths, amongst a colourful assortment of hydrangea, rhododendrons, tree ferns and redwoods. The resort boasts two high class hotels, a la carte menus, a swimming pool, a lifesize concrete boat, topiary, pools and wishing wells. The creator describes the resort as "a home for fallen buildings," and its ragged skyline and playful narrow passageways which were meant to provide "more fun for more people." It does just that.///Overlooking the estuary Afon Dwyryd towards Pothmadog and Tremadog
    portmeirion_wales108.JPG
  • TODOS  SANTOS, Guatemala. Celebrations for the Day of the Dead in cemetery. Western Highlands, Huehuetenango, Todos Santos. Mayan traditional festival. Todos Santos Horse Race, the 'Skach Koyl' on All Saints Day 1st November; the 'Day of the dead' November 2nd. Mayan dances about Spanish 'Conquistadores' and Mayan Spirits, accompanied by marimbas take place October 31st.
    todos_santos035.jpg
  • FARMLAND, MALAYSIA. Sarawak, Borneo, South East Asia.  Dayak slash and burn farmland. Tropical rainforest and one of the world's richest, oldest eco-systems, flora and fauna, under threat from development, logging and deforestation. Home to indigenous Dayak native tribal peoples, farming by slash and burn cultivation, fishing and hunting wild boar. Home to the Penan, traditional nomadic hunter-gatherers, of whom only one thousand survive, eating roots, and hunting wild animals with blowpipes. Animists, Christians, they still practice traditional medicine from herbs and plants. Native people have mounted protests and blockades against logging concessions, many have been arrested and imprisoned.
    sarawak_borneo209.jpg
  • FARMLAND, MALAYSIA. Sarawak, Borneo, South East Asia.  Dayak slash and burn farmland. Tropical rainforest and one of the world's richest, oldest eco-systems, flora and fauna, under threat from development, logging and deforestation. Home to indigenous Dayak native tribal peoples, farming by slash and burn cultivation, fishing and hunting wild boar. Home to the Penan, traditional nomadic hunter-gatherers, of whom only one thousand survive, eating roots, and hunting wild animals with blowpipes. Animists, Christians, they still practice traditional medicine from herbs and plants. Native people have mounted protests and blockades against logging concessions, many have been arrested and imprisoned.
    sarawak_borneo208.jpg
  • SLASH AND BURN, MALAYSIA. Sarawak, Borneo, South East Asia.  Dayak farmland. Tropical rainforest and one of the world's richest, oldest eco-systems, flora and fauna, under threat from development, logging and deforestation. Home to indigenous Dayak native tribal peoples, farming by slash and burn cultivation, fishing and hunting wild boar. Home to the Penan, traditional nomadic hunter-gatherers, of whom only one thousand survive, eating roots, and hunting wild animals with blowpipes. Animists, Christians, they still practice traditional medicine from herbs and plants. Native people have mounted protests and blockades against logging concessions, many have been arrested and imprisoned.
    sarawak_borneo206.jpg
  • DAYAK VILLAGE, MALAYSIA. Sarawak, Borneo, South East Asia.  Dayak village and farmland. Tropical rainforest and one of the world's richest, oldest eco-systems, flora and fauna, under threat from development, logging and deforestation. Home to indigenous Dayak native tribal peoples, farming by slash and burn cultivation, fishing and hunting wild boar. Home to the Penan, traditional nomadic hunter-gatherers, of whom only one thousand survive, eating roots, and hunting wild animals with blowpipes. Animists, Christians, they still practice traditional medicine from herbs and plants. Native people have mounted protests and blockades against logging concessions, many have been arrested and imprisoned.
    sarawak_borneo205.jpg
  • SLASH AND BURN, MALAYSIA. Sarawak, Borneo, South East Asia.  Dayak farmland. Tropical rainforest and one of the world's richest, oldest eco-systems, flora and fauna, under threat from development, logging and deforestation. Home to indigenous Dayak native tribal peoples, farming by slash and burn cultivation, fishing and hunting wild boar. Home to the Penan, traditional nomadic hunter-gatherers, of whom only one thousand survive, eating roots, and hunting wild animals with blowpipes. Animists, Christians, they still practice traditional medicine from herbs and plants. Native people have mounted protests and blockades against logging concessions, many have been arrested and imprisoned.
    sarawak_borneo204.jpg
  • TOURISM CLUBBING, Ibiza.  Sunset, sea and beach. Ibiza & Formentera, Baleares islands, Spain, Mediterranean, Europe. Popular holiday resort catering mainly for european tourists. Summer high season, April until September. Well known for 24 hour nightclubbing, package holidays, jet set, all night raves, dancing, techno clubs, drag queens & gay scene, discotheques, speciality theme nights, soapsuds, foam parties, espuma, la mousse. Attractions include shopping, beaches, watersports, boating..
    ibiza_night_fever232.jpg
  • TOURISM CLUBBING, Ibiza.  Sunset, sea and beach. Ibiza & Formentera, Baleares islands, Spain, Mediterranean, Europe. Popular holiday resort catering mainly for european tourists. Summer high season, April until September. Well known for 24 hour nightclubbing, package holidays, jet set, all night raves, dancing, techno clubs, drag queens & gay scene, discotheques, speciality theme nights, soapsuds, foam parties, espuma, la mousse. Attractions include shopping, beaches, watersports, boating..
    ibiza_night_fever230.jpg
  • TOURISM CLUBBING, Ibiza.  Sunset, sea and beach. Ibiza & Formentera, Baleares islands, Spain, Mediterranean, Europe. Popular holiday resort catering mainly for european tourists. Summer high season, April until September. Well known for 24 hour nightclubbing, package holidays, jet set, all night raves, dancing, techno clubs, drag queens & gay scene, discotheques, speciality theme nights, soapsuds, foam parties, espuma, la mousse. Attractions include shopping, beaches, watersports, boating..
    ibiza_night_fever229.jpg
  • TOURISM CLUBBING, Ibiza.  Sunset, sea and beach. Ibiza & Formentera, Baleares islands, Spain, Mediterranean, Europe. Popular holiday resort catering mainly for european tourists. Summer high season, April until September. Well known for 24 hour nightclubbing, package holidays, jet set, all night raves, dancing, techno clubs, drag queens & gay scene, discotheques, speciality theme nights, soapsuds, foam parties, espuma, la mousse. Attractions include shopping, beaches, watersports, boating..
    ibiza_night_fever228.jpg
  • TOURISM CLUBBING, Ibiza. Beaches in Formentera. Ibiza & Formentera, Baleares islands, Spain, Mediterranean, Europe. Popular holiday resort catering mainly for european tourists. Summer high season, April until September. Well known for 24 hour nightclubbing, package holidays, jet set, all night raves, dancing, techno clubs, drag queens & gay scene, discotheques, speciality theme nights, soapsuds, foam parties, espuma, la mousse. Attractions include shopping, beaches, watersports, boating..
    ibiza_night_fever226.jpg
  • TOURISM CLUBBING, Ibiza. Beaches in Formentera. Ibiza & Formentera, Baleares islands, Spain, Mediterranean, Europe. Popular holiday resort catering mainly for european tourists. Summer high season, April until September. Well known for 24 hour nightclubbing, package holidays, jet set, all night raves, dancing, techno clubs, drag queens & gay scene, discotheques, speciality theme nights, soapsuds, foam parties, espuma, la mousse. Attractions include shopping, beaches, watersports, boating..
    ibiza_night_fever224.jpg
  • TOURISM CLUBBING, Ibiza. Beaches in Formentera. Ibiza & Formentera, Baleares islands, Spain, Mediterranean, Europe. Popular holiday resort catering mainly for european tourists. Summer high season, April until September. Well known for 24 hour nightclubbing, package holidays, jet set, all night raves, dancing, techno clubs, drag queens & gay scene, discotheques, speciality theme nights, soapsuds, foam parties, espuma, la mousse. Attractions include shopping, beaches, watersports, boating..
    ibiza_night_fever223.jpg
  • TOURISM CLUBBING, Ibiza. Beaches in Formentera. Ibiza & Formentera, Baleares islands, Spain, Mediterranean, Europe. Popular holiday resort catering mainly for european tourists. Summer high season, April until September. Well known for 24 hour nightclubbing, package holidays, jet set, all night raves, dancing, techno clubs, drag queens & gay scene, discotheques, speciality theme nights, soapsuds, foam parties, espuma, la mousse. Attractions include shopping, beaches, watersports, boating..
    ibiza_night_fever220.jpg
  • MOON HAZE BURNING, Amazon, near Boavista, northern Brazil, South America. As the forests burn in the Amazon the moon and atmosphere becomes saturated with strange colours. Ecological biosphere and fragile ecosystem where flora and fauna, and native lifestyles are threatened by progress and development. The rainforest is home to many plants and animals who are endangered or facing extinction. This region is home to indigenous primitive and tribal peoples including the Yanomami and Macuxi.
    brazil126.JPG
  • PRIMARY RAINFOREST, MALAYSIA. Sarawak, Borneo, South East Asia.  Canopy, storm clouds. Tropical rainforest and one of the world's richest, oldest eco-systems, flora and fauna, under threat from development, logging and deforestation. Home to indigenous Dayak native tribal peoples, farming by slash and burn cultivation, fishing and hunting wild boar. Home to the Penan, traditional nomadic hunter-gatherers, of whom only one thousand survive, eating roots, and hunting wild animals with blowpipes. Animists, Christians, they still practice traditional medicine from herbs and plants. Native people have mounted protests and blockades against logging concessions, many have been arrested and imprisoned.
    sarawak_borneo110a.jpg
  • PRIMARY RAINFOREST, MALAYSIA. Sarawak, Borneo, South East Asia.  Canopy, clouds. Tropical rainforest and one of the world's richest, oldest eco-systems, flora and fauna, under threat from development, logging and deforestation. Home to indigenous Dayak native tribal peoples, farming by slash and burn cultivation, fishing and hunting wild boar. Home to the Penan, traditional nomadic hunter-gatherers, of whom only one thousand survive, eating roots, and hunting wild animals with blowpipes. Animists, Christians, they still practice traditional medicine from herbs and plants. Native people have mounted protests and blockades against logging concessions, many have been arrested and imprisoned.
    sarawak_borneo112.jpg
  • PRIMARY RAINFOREST, MALAYSIA. Sarawak, Borneo, South East Asia.  Canopy, storm clouds. Tropical rainforest and one of the world's richest, oldest eco-systems, flora and fauna, under threat from development, logging and deforestation. Home to indigenous Dayak native tribal peoples, farming by slash and burn cultivation, fishing and hunting wild boar. Home to the Penan, traditional nomadic hunter-gatherers, of whom only one thousand survive, eating roots, and hunting wild animals with blowpipes. Animists, Christians, they still practice traditional medicine from herbs and plants. Native people have mounted protests and blockades against logging concessions, many have been arrested and imprisoned.
    sarawak_borneo111.jpg
  • PRIMARY RAINFOREST, MALAYSIA. Sarawak, Borneo, South East Asia.  Canopy, storm clouds. Tropical rainforest and one of the world's richest, oldest eco-systems, flora and fauna, under threat from development, logging and deforestation. Home to indigenous Dayak native tribal peoples, farming by slash and burn cultivation, fishing and hunting wild boar. Home to the Penan, traditional nomadic hunter-gatherers, of whom only one thousand survive, eating roots, and hunting wild animals with blowpipes. Animists, Christians, they still practice traditional medicine from herbs and plants. Native people have mounted protests and blockades against logging concessions, many have been arrested and imprisoned.
    sarawak_borneo110.jpg
  • PRIMARY RAINFOREST, Amazon, near Boavista, northern Brazil, South America. Primary rainforest and low clouds amongst mountains and hills. Ecological biosphere and fragile ecosystem where flora and fauna, and native lifestyles are threatened by progress and development. The rainforest is home to many plants and animals who are endangered or facing extinction. This region is home to indigenous primitive and tribal peoples including the Yanomami and Macuxi.
    brazil039.JPG
  • 1991: Pristine Primary Rainforest overlooking canopy with rain clouds after a storm, in Belaga district, Sarawak, Borneo.<br />
<br />
Tropical rainforest and one of the world's richest, oldest eco-systems, flora and fauna, under threat from development, logging and deforestation. Home to indigenous Dayak native tribal peoples, farming by slash and burn cultivation, fishing and hunting wild boar. Home to the Penan, traditional nomadic hunter-gatherers, of whom only one thousand survive, eating roots, and hunting wild animals with blowpipes. Animists, Christians, they still practice traditional medicine from herbs and plants. Native people have mounted protests and blockades against logging concessions, many have been arrested and imprisoned.
    sarawak_borneo109.jpg
  • PRIMARY RAINFOREST, Amazon, near Boavista, northern Brazil, South America. Primary rainforest and low clouds amongst mountains and hills. Ecological biosphere and fragile ecosystem where flora and fauna, and native lifestyles are threatened by progress and development. The rainforest is home to many plants and animals who are endangered or facing extinction. This region is home to indigenous primitive and tribal peoples including the Yanomami and Macuxi.
    brazil040.JPG
  • PRIMARY RAINFOREST, Amazon, near Boavista, northern Brazil, South America. Primary rainforest and low clouds amongst mountains and hills. Ecological biosphere and fragile ecosystem where flora and fauna, and native lifestyles are threatened by progress and development. The rainforest is home to many plants and animals who are endangered or facing extinction. This region is home to indigenous primitive and tribal peoples including the Yanomami and Macuxi.
    brazil038.JPG
  • PRIMARY RAINFOREST, Amazon, near Boavista, northern Brazil, South America. Primary rainforest and low clouds amongst mountains and hills. Ecological biosphere and fragile ecosystem where flora and fauna, and native lifestyles are threatened by progress and development. The rainforest is home to many plants and animals who are endangered or facing extinction. This region is home to indigenous primitive and tribal peoples including the Yanomami and Macuxi.
    brazil037.JPG
  • Portmeirion, in North Wales, is a resort, where no one has ever lived. A self-taught Welsh architect named Sir Clough Williams-Ellis built it out of architectural salvage between the 1920s and 1970s, loosely based on his memories of trips to Portofino. Including a pagoda-shaped Chinoiserie gazebo, some Gothic obelisks, eucalyptus groves, a crenellated castle, a Mediterranean bell tower, a Jacobean town hall, and an Art Deco cylindrical watchtower. He kept improving Portmeirion until his death in 1978, age 94. It faces an estuary where at low tide one can walk across the sands and look out to sea. At high tide, the sea is lapping onto the shores. Every building in the village is either a shop, restaurant, hotel or self-catering accomodation. The village is booked out at high season, with numerous wedding receptions at the weekends. Very popular amongst the English and Welsh holidaymakers. Many who return to the same abode season after season. Hundreds of tourists visit every day, walking around the ornamental gardens, cobblestone paths, and shopping, eating ice-creams, or walking along the woodland and coastal paths, amongst a colourful assortment of hydrangea, rhododendrons, tree ferns and redwoods. The resort boasts two high class hotels, a la carte menus, a swimming pool, a lifesize concrete boat, topiary, pools and wishing wells. The creator describes the resort as "a home for fallen buildings," and its ragged skyline and playful narrow passageways which were meant to provide "more fun for more people." It does just that.///The Dome Gallery at sunset with storm clouds behind
    portmeirion_wales084.JPG
  • DEFORESTATION PRIMARY RAINFOREST, Amazon, near Boavista, northern Brazil, South America. Mountains and low cloud overlooking slash and burn farming agriculture developed by campesinos moving into the area. Ecological biosphere and fragile ecosystem where flora and fauna, and native lifestyles are threatened by progress and development. The rainforest is home to many plants and animals who are endangered or facing extinction. This region is home to indigenous primitive and tribal peoples including the Yanomami and Macuxi.
    brazil036.JPG
  • DEFORESTATION PRIMARY RAINFOREST, Amazon, near Boavista, northern Brazil, South America. Mountains and low cloud overlooking slash and burn farming agriculture developed by campesinos moving into the area. Ecological biosphere and fragile ecosystem where flora and fauna, and native lifestyles are threatened by progress and development. The rainforest is home to many plants and animals who are endangered or facing extinction. This region is home to indigenous primitive and tribal peoples including the Yanomami and Macuxi.
    brazil035.JPG
  • SLASH AND BURN DEFORESTATION Amazon, near Boavista, northern Brazil, South America. Primary rainforest, huge trees burnt down, there ashes fertilize the ground, all that remains is burning tree stumps. Ecological biosphere and fragile ecosystem where flora and fauna, and native lifestyles are threatened by progress and development. The rainforest is home to many plants and animals who are endangered or facing extinction. This region is home to indigenous primitive and tribal peoples including the Yanomami and Macuxi.
    brazil_forest008.JPG
  • SLASH AND BURN DEFORESTATION, Amazon, near Boavista, northern Brazil, South America. Burnt primary rainforest, nothing left but burnt and burning tree stumps of what used to be a great forest. Ecological biosphere and fragile ecosystem where flora and fauna, and native lifestyles are threatened by progress and development. The rainforest is home to many plants and animals who are endangered or facing extinction. This region is home to indigenous primitive and tribal peoples including the Yanomami and Macuxi.
    brazil444x.JPG
  • SLASH AND BURN DEFORESTATION, Amazon, near Boavista, northern Brazil, South America. Burnt primary rainforest, nothing left but burnt and burning tree stumps of what used to be a great forest. Ecological biosphere and fragile ecosystem where flora and fauna, and native lifestyles are threatened by progress and development. The rainforest is home to many plants and animals who are endangered or facing extinction. This region is home to indigenous primitive and tribal peoples including the Yanomami and Macuxi.
    brazil443.JPG
  • SLASH AND BURN DEFORESTATION, Amazon, near Boavista, northern Brazil, South America. Burnt primary rainforest, nothing left but burnt and burning tree stumps of what used to be a great forest. Ecological biosphere and fragile ecosystem where flora and fauna, and native lifestyles are threatened by progress and development. The rainforest is home to many plants and animals who are endangered or facing extinction. This region is home to indigenous primitive and tribal peoples including the Yanomami and Macuxi.
    brazil442.JPG
  • SLASH AND BURN DEFORESTATION, Amazon, near Boavista, northern Brazil, South America. Burnt primary rainforest, nothing left but burnt and burning tree stumps of what used to be a great forest. Ecological biosphere and fragile ecosystem where flora and fauna, and native lifestyles are threatened by progress and development. The rainforest is home to many plants and animals who are endangered or facing extinction. This region is home to indigenous primitive and tribal peoples including the Yanomami and Macuxi.
    brazil437.JPG
  • SLASH AND BURN DEFORESTATION, Amazon, near Boavista, northern Brazil, South America. Burnt primary rainforest, nothing left but burnt and burning tree stumps of what used to be a great forest. Ecological biosphere and fragile ecosystem where flora and fauna, and native lifestyles are threatened by progress and development. The rainforest is home to many plants and animals who are endangered or facing extinction. This region is home to indigenous primitive and tribal peoples including the Yanomami and Macuxi.
    brazil436.JPG
  • SLASH AND BURN DEFORESTATION, Amazon, near Boavista, northern Brazil, South America. Burnt primary rainforest, nothing left but burnt and burning tree stumps of what used to be a great forest. Ecological biosphere and fragile ecosystem where flora and fauna, and native lifestyles are threatened by progress and development. The rainforest is home to many plants and animals who are endangered or facing extinction. This region is home to indigenous primitive and tribal peoples including the Yanomami and Macuxi.
    brazil435.JPG
  • PRIMARY RAINFOREST BURNING, Amazon, near Boavista, northern Brazil, South America. Smoke coming from localised forest fire during dry season. The forest is vulnerable at this time of year to natural and manmade fires. Ecological biosphere and fragile ecosystem where flora and fauna, and native lifestyles are threatened by progress and development. The rainforest is home to many plants and animals who are endangered or facing extinction. This region is home to indigenous primitive and tribal peoples including the Yanomami and Macuxi.
    brazil434.JPG
  • PRIMARY RAINFOREST BURNING, Amazon, near Boavista, northern Brazil, South America. Smoke coming from localised forest fire during dry season. The forest is vulnerable at this time of year to natural and manmade fires. Ecological biosphere and fragile ecosystem where flora and fauna, and native lifestyles are threatened by progress and development. The rainforest is home to many plants and animals who are endangered or facing extinction. This region is home to indigenous primitive and tribal peoples including the Yanomami and Macuxi.
    brazil432.JPG
  • SLASH AND BURN DEFORESTATION, Amazon, near Boavista, northern Brazil, South America. Burnt primary rainforest, nothing left but burnt and burning tree stumps of what used to be a great forest. Ecological biosphere and fragile ecosystem where flora and fauna, and native lifestyles are threatened by progress and development. The rainforest is home to many plants and animals who are endangered or facing extinction. This region is home to indigenous primitive and tribal peoples including the Yanomami and Macuxi.
    brazil429.JPG
  • CATTLE RANCHING DEFORESTATION, Amazon, near Boavista, northern Brazil, South America. Primary rainforest is destroyed by campesinos slash and burn practice and then when no longer fertile sold for pennies for cattle ranching. It will soon be desert. Ecological biosphere and fragile ecosystem where flora and fauna, and native lifestyles are threatened by progress and development. The rainforest is home to many plants and animals who are endangered or facing extinction. This region is home to indigenous primitive and tribal peoples including the Yanomami and Macuxi.
    brazil427.JPG
  • BURNT FOREST, Amazon, near Boavista, northern Brazil, South America. White and black silhouettes of burnt forest. Ecological biosphere and fragile ecosystem where flora and fauna, and native lifestyles are threatened by progress and development. The rainforest is home to many plants and animals who are endangered or facing extinction. This region is home to indigenous primitive and tribal peoples including the Yanomami and Macuxi.
    brazil422.JPG
  • SLASH AND BURN DEFORESTATION, Amazon, near Boavista, northern Brazil, South America. Burnt primary rainforest, nothing left but burnt and burning tree stumps of what used to be a great forest. Ecological biosphere and fragile ecosystem where flora and fauna, and native lifestyles are threatened by progress and development. The rainforest is home to many plants and animals who are endangered or facing extinction. This region is home to indigenous primitive and tribal peoples including the Yanomami and Macuxi.
    brazil418.JPG
  • SLASH AND BURN DEFORESTATION, Amazon, near Boavista, northern Brazil, South America. Burnt primary rainforest, nothing left but burnt and burning tree stumps of what used to be a great forest. Ecological biosphere and fragile ecosystem where flora and fauna, and native lifestyles are threatened by progress and development. The rainforest is home to many plants and animals who are endangered or facing extinction. This region is home to indigenous primitive and tribal peoples including the Yanomami and Macuxi.
    brazil417.JPG
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Nigel Dickinson

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