Semi-nomadic Samburu woman of Kenya’s Mathews Range
Thursday, May 22, 2014
Wednesday, May 21, 2014
Kenya: Goat Milking In A Samburu Camp
In northern Kenya’s Mathews Range, also known as the Lenkiyo Hills, a little
Samburu girl is feeding a baby goat some leftover milk after its mother has
been milked. The girl’s mother is holding the last of the jugs she filled with
her goats’ milk. Milk is all her family has for breakfast every day.
I walked eight days around the range, photographing the people along the way, using three Samburu men and three pack camels.
Monday, May 19, 2014
Sunday, May 18, 2014
Bali: A Smile In The Crowd
In Bali, an Indonesian Island, my clicking camera brought a brief smile
to the face of a woman who, with others, was watching the passage of a funeral
procession. Most women lining the street were carrying on their heads offerings
they would display on a large makeshift table outside a Balinese Hindu temple. The old lady in
her coffin would be cremated there and quite joyously dispatched to a better world.
Saturday, May 17, 2014
Niger: Wodaabe Friends
This Wodaabe nomad man of Niger’s Sahel is watching other men dance the
Gerewol, which doubles as an annual male beauty contest between clans. It takes
place during the few weeks of rain that provide enough pasture and water for
those people’s zebus to allow the tribe to stay together at one place for a
while.
The way he and a friend lean
on each other does not connote homosexuality and is common among Wodaabe men
and women.
Friday, May 16, 2014
Ghana: Inseparable Little Girl Friends
Last month, Highlights for Children magazine published my story of two inseparable
nine-year-old Ashanti girls of Ghana. This picture, which ended Becky-and-Bonsa’s
story, shows them going for a walk at day’s end, still full of things to tell
each other before going to bed. I photographed them in Adukrom, a big village
of wonderful cocoa-growing people surrounded by tall and thick rain forest near
Kumasi. The girls’ story is being offered to children’s book publishers.
Thursday, May 15, 2014
Brazil: Street Capoeira
I photographed the following scene in Salvador, Brazil, in 1971.
Supported by two musicians, a man challenged spectators to face him in a bout
of capoeira, a form of Brazilian martial art, for a prize. A valiant teenager
did, but was not long in biting the dust, and the coins that fell in the ring
went to the man.
Wednesday, May 14, 2014
Brazil: A Woman's Pride In Shining Pots
Squatting next to Rio Preto in Brazil’s Amazon rain forest, a woman
washes dishes and polishes pots. Behind her and to her left are two canoes.
Rio Preto means Black River in Potuguese. There are many black rivers in
the Amazon, including Rio Negro, South America’s second most powerful river after
the Amazon, of which it is a tributary.
Black rivers look like black mirrors. However, when scooped in a hand
their waters have the color of tea. They even taste like tea. Unlike white
rivers, which run over sand and clay, they run over rocks and should be
transparent instead of muddy, like the Amazon. They get their color by soaking
the surrounding vegetation when seasonally flooding the forest.
Tuesday, May 13, 2014
Colombia: Last Of The Ice Miners
One of travel’s rewards is the
unexpected you can nearly always count on when leaving behind the boredom of modern life. In 1994, when I climbed southern Colombia’s
Cumbal Volcano with my family, our goal was to peek inside its crater. We never
imagined we would be watching farmers carrying blocks of fossil ice on their
backs from the bottom of that crater.
Now the farmers quickly wrapped
the ice inside grass and espeletias. This would protect its temperature from
the sun and the warm sides of the horses which would carry it down the volcano.
The men told us they would sell the ice
to small ice cream makers in villages far below.
Unfortunately, we had arrived
too late to watch them ax the ice out of the rocks. They were done for the day.
And soon forever. Electricity and refrigerators would soon reach those villages.
Monday, May 12, 2014
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