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  • Canoeing and kayaking along the River Wye at Hay-on-Wye or Y Gelli Gandryll in Welsh, known as "the town of books", is a small town in Powys, Wales famous for it's many second hand and specialist bookshops, although the number has declined sharply in recent years, many becoming general antique shops and similar.
    20130825_hay canoeing_E.jpg
  • Canoeing and kayaking along the River Wye at Hay-on-Wye or Y Gelli Gandryll in Welsh, known as "the town of books", is a small town in Powys, Wales famous for it's many second hand and specialist bookshops, although the number has declined sharply in recent years, many becoming general antique shops and similar.
    20130825_hay canoeing_D.jpg
  • Canoeing and kayaking along the River Wye at Hay-on-Wye or Y Gelli Gandryll in Welsh, known as "the town of books", is a small town in Powys, Wales famous for it's many second hand and specialist bookshops, although the number has declined sharply in recent years, many becoming general antique shops and similar.
    20130825_hay canoeing_C.jpg
  • Canoeing and kayaking along the River Wye at Hay-on-Wye or Y Gelli Gandryll in Welsh, known as "the town of books", is a small town in Powys, Wales famous for it's many second hand and specialist bookshops, although the number has declined sharply in recent years, many becoming general antique shops and similar.
    20130825_hay canoeing_B.jpg
  • Canoeing and kayaking along the River Wye at Hay-on-Wye or Y Gelli Gandryll in Welsh, known as "the town of books", is a small town in Powys, Wales famous for it's many second hand and specialist bookshops, although the number has declined sharply in recent years, many becoming general antique shops and similar.
    20130825_hay canoeing_A.jpg
  • Man out canoeing on the Worcester and Birmingham Canal in Birmingham, United Kingdom. The Worcester and Birmingham Canal is a canal linking Birmingham and Worcester in England. It starts in Worcester, as an offshoot of the River Severn and ends in central Birmingham. It is 29 miles long.
    20180114_canal canoe_001.jpg
  • After heavy use during a busy summer, canoes are stacked vertically under still clear skies, on 12th September 2018, in Aberdovey, Gwynedd, Wales.
    aberdovey_canoes-02-12-09-2018.jpg
  • As a boy swings from a tree, canoeists enjoy a day's paddling down the River Lesse, Belgium's prime kayaking destination  in the southern Ardennes region. At Anseremme, south of the town of Dinant, the adventurers negotiate their way down 21 km of gentle fresh water through the beautiful Belgian gorges and forests. Before plunging down a weir (Barrage in French) near a camp site they are pelted by splashing water from campers in the water. The red canoes have been hired for the day from 'Kayaks Ansiaux' and another rival company who rent blue boats. Families and young people make the slow journey along the Lesse, Paddles match the colours of the canoes and they all glint off a strong afternoon sun during the high-season holiday month. Most commonly routes start in Han and go all the way down to Dinant, where the Lesse meets the Meuse.
    germany_holiday39-06082008_1.jpg
  • Scavengers in a Canadian canoe search the field of flooded tents at the very wet 2005 Glastonbury festival.
    05-glasto_1028.jpg
  • Mousehole Tidal Pool, Cornwall, UK. Until the 1950s and the rise of the heated indoor swimming pool, children learnt to swim outdoors. For those close to the sea, many man-made tidal swimming pools were constructed around Britain’s coastline. Heated by the sun, these tidal pools were often built to keep bathers safe from high and rough seas, which explains why so many of them are clustered in Scotland and around the surfing beaches of Cornwall. Whether they are simple swimming holes made by shoring up natural rock pools or grand lido-like pools complete with lifeguards and tea huts, they are all refreshed by good high tides.
    02-01_1.jpg
  • Canoeists paddle through the Soca Gorge on the Soca River, on 21st June 2018, in Kobarid, Slovenia.
    slovenia-184-21-06-2018.jpg
  • The Team GB slalom canoeists Tim Baillie and Etienne Stott celebrate after their C2 final race watched by celebrating fans in the Olympic Park during the London 2012 Olympics. This land was transformed to become a 2.5 Sq Km sporting complex, once industrial businesses and now the venue of eight venues including the main arena, Aquatics Centre and Velodrome plus the athletes' Olympic Village. After the Olympics, the park is to be known as Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park.
    olympic_park110-02-08-2012.jpg
  • Computer monitor belonging to Elena Cheban,  projects manager. The image on the monitor reflects Elena’s hobby and passion not to mention her dreams outside the office. From the series Desk Job, a project which explores globalisation through office life around the World.
    484Moscow_Business4_804_1.jpg
  • Canoeists paddle through the Soca Gorge on the Soca River, on 21st June 2018, in Kobarid, Slovenia.
    slovenia-185-21-06-2018.jpg
  • Canoeists paddle through the Soca Gorge on the Soca River, on 21st June 2018, in Kobarid, Slovenia.
    slovenia-182-21-06-2018.jpg
  • Three time Olympic silver medallist, David Florence at Lee Valley White Water Centre with Team GBs Canoe Slalom Team on the 7th June 2019 in London in the United Kingdom. Mens slalom canoeists, David Florence is one of the world’s top mens slalom canoeists. He is a three time Olympic silver medallist, a three time World Champion and has won more than 25 World Cup medals including 9 golds.
    LeeValley-1011603.jpg
  • Jada Mustafa-Moore at Lee Valley White Water Centre with Team GBs Canoe Slalom Team on the 7th June 2019 in London in the United Kingdom.
    LeeValley-1011612.jpg
  • Three time Olympic silver medallist, David Florence at Lee Valley White Water Centre with Team GBs Canoe Slalom Team on the 7th June 2019 in London in the United Kingdom. Mens slalom canoeists, David Florence is one of the world’s top mens slalom canoeists. He is a three time Olympic silver medallist, a three time World Champion and has won more than 25 World Cup medals including 9 golds.
    LeeValley-1011571.jpg
  • Womans slalom kayaker, Hannah Owen at Lee Valley White Water Centre with Team GBs Canoe Slalom Team on the 7th June 2019 in London in the United Kingdom.
    LeeValley-1011541.jpg
  • Womans slalom kayaker, Fiona Pennie at Lee Valley White Water Centre with Team GBs Canoe Slalom Team on the 7th June 2019 in London in the United Kingdom. Fiona Pennie is one of Great Britain’s most experienced womens K1 slalom kayakers.
    LeeValley-1011556.jpg
  • Lee Valley White Water Centre with Team GBs Canoe Slalom Team on the 7th June 2019 in London in the United Kingdom.
    LeeValley-1011501.jpg
  • Womans slalom kayaker, Hannah Owen at Lee Valley White Water Centre with Team GBs Canoe Slalom Team on the 7th June 2019 in London in the United Kingdom.
    LeeValley-1011421.jpg
  • Womans slalom kayaker, Hannah Owen at Lee Valley White Water Centre with Team GBs Canoe Slalom Team on the 7th June 2019 in London in the United Kingdom.
    LeeValley-1011538.jpg
  • Womans slalom kayaker, Fiona Pennie at Lee Valley White Water Centre with Team GBs Canoe Slalom Team on the 7th June 2019 in London in the United Kingdom. Fiona Pennie is one of Great Britain’s most experienced womens K1 slalom kayakers.
    LeeValley-1011550.jpg
  • Womans slalom kayaker, Fiona Pennie at Lee Valley White Water Centre with Team GBs Canoe Slalom Team on the 7th June 2019 in London in the United Kingdom. Fiona Pennie is one of Great Britain’s most experienced womens K1 slalom kayakers.
    LeeValley-1011565.jpg
  • Mens slalom canoeist, Tom Abbott at Lee Valley White Water Centre with Team GBs Canoe Slalom Team on the 7th June 2019 in London in the United Kingdom.
    LeeValley-1011468.jpg
  • Womans slalom kayaker, Hannah Owen at Lee Valley White Water Centre with Team GBs Canoe Slalom Team on the 7th June 2019 in London in the United Kingdom.
    LeeValley-1011446.jpg
  • Mens slalom kayaker, Christopher Bowers, at Lee Valley White Water Centre with Team GB Canoe Slalom Team on the 7th June 2019 in London in the United Kingdom.
    LeeValley-1011405.jpg
  • An adult and young children paddle in a canoe and an inflatable through Beccles Quay, on 13th August 2020, in Beccles, Suffolk, England.
    beccles_quay02-13-08-2020.jpg
  • Carved canoe In Pyrannees sculpture park, 8th October 2011, Mayronnes, France.
    _MG_1112_1.jpg
  • There is golden light across this narrow stretch of river, yellow flowers are on the bank and in late golden sunlight, two boys paddle upstream in their Indian canoe on the River Thames near the village of Shillingford, England. Lazily they plunge their paddles into the calm, clear blue waters of this majestic river whose source rises in deepest Gloucestershire to its industrial estuary in the English Channel 215 miles (346 km) away. But here in Oxfordshire, it is an idyllic scene of innocent childhood on calm rural waters in a beautiful and tranquil setting, on an English summer afternoon. The boys don't appear to be wearing life vests nor safety equipment but propel their craft forwards against the current with confidence.
    thames_boating01-07-18-2001_1_1.jpg
  • Central African Republic. August 2012. Bangui. Boys fishing from canoes on the Ubangui river
    car1_2768_1.jpg
  • Wide view of the canoe slalom at the Lee Valley White Water Centre, north east London, on day 3 of the London 2012 Olympic Games. The Lee Valley White Water Centre is located 30 kilometres north of the Olympic Park, on the edge of the 1,000-acre River Lee Country Park – part of the Lee Valley Regional Park. The centre has two separate courses: a 300 metre Olympic-standard competition course with a 5.5m descent, and a 160m intermediate/training course with a 1.6m descent. Whitewater course specialists Whitewater Parks International, working with civil and structural engineers Cundall, are the designers of the whitewater courses.
    canoe_slalom37-29-07-2012_1.jpg
  • An adult and young children paddle in a canoe and an inflatable through Beccles Quay, on 13th August 2020, in Beccles, Suffolk, England.
    beccles_quay01-13-08-2020.jpg
  • Ryan Westley at Lee Valley White Water Centre with Team GBs Canoe Slalom Team on the 7th June 2019 in London in the United Kingdom. Ryan Westley is a men’s C1 slalom canoeist 2018 European C1 Champion.
    LeeValley-1011648.jpg
  • Ryan Westley at Lee Valley White Water Centre with Team GBs Canoe Slalom Team on the 7th June 2019 in London in the United Kingdom. Ryan Westley is a men’s C1 slalom canoeist 2018 European C1 Champion.
    LeeValley-1011645.jpg
  • Ryan Westley at Lee Valley White Water Centre with Team GBs Canoe Slalom Team on the 7th June 2019 in London in the United Kingdom. Ryan Westley is a men’s C1 slalom canoeist 2018 European C1 Champion.
    LeeValley-1011639.jpg
  • Central African Republic. August 2012. Bangui. Men fishing from canoes on the Ubangui river
    car1_2657_1.jpg
  • Canoes head out into lake Bohinj from at Ribcev Laz, on 19th June, in Lake Bohinj, Sovenia.
    slovenia-119-19-06-2018.jpg
  • Two fisherman in a rough canoe paddle out to sea to fish off the coast of the island of Principe, Sao Tome and Principe<br />
Sao Tome and Principe, are two islands of volcanic origin lying off the coast of Africa. Settled by Portuguese convicts in the late 1400s and a centre for slaving, their independence movement culminated in a peaceful transition to self government from Portugal in 1975.
    SFE_130423_486.jpg
  • A fisherman paddles out of an inlet in his canoe to go fishing, Principe, Sao Tome and Principe<br />
Sao Tome and Principe, are two islands of volcanic origin lying off the coast of Africa. Settled by Portuguese convicts in the late 1400s and a centre for slaving, their independence movement culminated in a peaceful transition to self government from Portugal in 1975.
    SFE_130422_114.jpg
  • Kayaks and canoes stand upright against a shop wall in Oban, Scotland. With a background of orange render and a yellow door to this outdoor adventure shop, the two coastal sport boats combine perfectly with the echoed colours, similar pastel colours on the spectrum. In addition, we see a yellow At Any Time street sign preventing motorists from parking here at the roadside. We are in a back street of Oban, a west coast ferry town that serves many outlying isles in this wild region of Scotland. Visitors enjoy sea kayaking which can be expensive to hire so these two examples can be bought from the outfitters for around £700 and £1,00 respectively. Interestingly, the brand for the smaller boat is Eskimo, a term seen in some regions of north America as unacceptable, while in others used more widely.
    oban_canoes01-03-08-2010-2.jpg
  • Kayaks in the Thames in front of Tower BridgeThames Festival 08, along the southbank of the Thames. September 2008
    A_O7F9531_1.jpg
  • Central African Republic. August 2012. Bangui. Men fishing  in the Ubangui river haul in their net but have not caught anything
    car1_2792_1.jpg
  • Kayaks in the Thames in front of Tower BridgeThames Festival 08, along the southbank of the Thames. September 2008
    A_O7F9531_1.jpg
  • A new Climate Change movement, Ocean Rebellion protest in Falmouth Harbour in Cornwall on the 11th August 2020 in Falmouth, United Kingdom. At sun down the group projected slogans on the bow of the Cruise ship The World. The action was a precursor to the official launch of Ocean Rebellion which is happening on the 19th of August and featured over 40 protestors who took to the water with flags and banners. Demonstrators then projected films and slogans onto the hull of the ship, including Sort your Ship out! and Turn The Tide, to raise awareness of the environmental impact of cruise shipping. The grassroots activist group calling itself Ocean Rebellion, has pledged an escalation of activities throughout the world to protect our common ocean heritage. ‘The fuel this ship burns is 100 times more polluting than the fuel we allow on roads. This is having a huge environmental impact not just on the oceans and their ecosystems but on air quality in the coastal communities visited by these ships. Each apartment on this cruise ship has a hundred times more emissions than the average European land based equivalent. That’s 380,309kg CO2 per year – that’s the weight of a Boeing 747 airplane’ When idling in port this ship produces more sulphur pollution than 5,000,000 cars or 138,500 trucks.
    OceanRebellion-Fal-Launch-Demo-67.jpg
  • A new Climate Change movement, Ocean Rebellion protest in Falmouth Harbour in Cornwall on the 11th August 2020 in Falmouth, United Kingdom. At sun down the group projected slogans on the bow of the Cruise ship The World. The action was a precursor to the official launch of Ocean Rebellion which is happening on the 19th of August and featured over 40 protestors who took to the water with flags and banners. Demonstrators then projected films and slogans onto the hull of the ship, including Sort your Ship out! and Turn The Tide, to raise awareness of the environmental impact of cruise shipping. The grassroots activist group calling itself Ocean Rebellion, has pledged an escalation of activities throughout the world to protect our common ocean heritage. ‘The fuel this ship burns is 100 times more polluting than the fuel we allow on roads. This is having a huge environmental impact not just on the oceans and their ecosystems but on air quality in the coastal communities visited by these ships. Each apartment on this cruise ship has a hundred times more emissions than the average European land based equivalent. That’s 380,309kg CO2 per year – that’s the weight of a Boeing 747 airplane’ When idling in port this ship produces more sulphur pollution than 5,000,000 cars or 138,500 trucks.
    OceanRebellion-Fal-Launch-Demo-49.jpg
  • A new Climate Change movement, Ocean Rebellion protest in Falmouth Harbour in Cornwall on the 11th August 2020 in Falmouth, United Kingdom. At sun down the group projected slogans on the bow of the Cruise ship The World. The action was a precursor to the official launch of Ocean Rebellion which is happening on the 19th of August and featured over 40 protestors who took to the water with flags and banners. Demonstrators then projected films and slogans onto the hull of the ship, including Sort your Ship out! and Turn The Tide, to raise awareness of the environmental impact of cruise shipping. The grassroots activist group calling itself Ocean Rebellion, has pledged an escalation of activities throughout the world to protect our common ocean heritage. ‘The fuel this ship burns is 100 times more polluting than the fuel we allow on roads. This is having a huge environmental impact not just on the oceans and their ecosystems but on air quality in the coastal communities visited by these ships. Each apartment on this cruise ship has a hundred times more emissions than the average European land based equivalent. That’s 380,309kg CO2 per year – that’s the weight of a Boeing 747 airplane’ When idling in port this ship produces more sulphur pollution than 5,000,000 cars or 138,500 trucks.
    OceanRebellion-Fal-Launch-Demo-46.jpg
  • A new Climate Change movement, Ocean Rebellion protest in Falmouth Harbour in Cornwall on the 11th August 2020 in Falmouth, United Kingdom. At sun down the group projected slogans on the bow of the Cruise ship The World. The action was a precursor to the official launch of Ocean Rebellion which is happening on the 19th of August and featured over 40 protestors who took to the water with flags and banners. Demonstrators then projected films and slogans onto the hull of the ship, including Sort your Ship out! and Turn The Tide, to raise awareness of the environmental impact of cruise shipping. The grassroots activist group calling itself Ocean Rebellion, has pledged an escalation of activities throughout the world to protect our common ocean heritage. ‘The fuel this ship burns is 100 times more polluting than the fuel we allow on roads. This is having a huge environmental impact not just on the oceans and their ecosystems but on air quality in the coastal communities visited by these ships. Each apartment on this cruise ship has a hundred times more emissions than the average European land based equivalent. That’s 380,309kg CO2 per year – that’s the weight of a Boeing 747 airplane’ When idling in port this ship produces more sulphur pollution than 5,000,000 cars or 138,500 trucks.
    OceanRebellion-Fal-Launch-Demo-11.jpg
  • A man kayaking along Hastings seafront on the 20th April 2019 in Hastings in the United Kingdom. Hastings is a town on England’s southeast coast, its known for the 1066 Battle of Hastings.
    Hastings-0722.jpg
  • A new Climate Change movement, Ocean Rebellion protest in Falmouth Harbour in Cornwall on the 11th August 2020 in Falmouth, United Kingdom. At sun down the group projected slogans on the bow of the Cruise ship The World. The action was a precursor to the official launch of Ocean Rebellion which is happening on the 19th of August and featured over 40 protestors who took to the water with flags and banners. Demonstrators then projected films and slogans onto the hull of the ship, including Sort your Ship out! and Turn The Tide, to raise awareness of the environmental impact of cruise shipping. The grassroots activist group calling itself Ocean Rebellion, has pledged an escalation of activities throughout the world to protect our common ocean heritage. ‘The fuel this ship burns is 100 times more polluting than the fuel we allow on roads. This is having a huge environmental impact not just on the oceans and their ecosystems but on air quality in the coastal communities visited by these ships. Each apartment on this cruise ship has a hundred times more emissions than the average European land based equivalent. That’s 380,309kg CO2 per year – that’s the weight of a Boeing 747 airplane’ When idling in port this ship produces more sulphur pollution than 5,000,000 cars or 138,500 trucks.
    OceanRebellion-Fal-Launch-Demo-70.jpg
  • A new Climate Change movement, Ocean Rebellion protest in Falmouth Harbour in Cornwall on the 11th August 2020 in Falmouth, United Kingdom. At sun down the group projected slogans on the bow of the Cruise ship The World. The action was a precursor to the official launch of Ocean Rebellion which is happening on the 19th of August and featured over 40 protestors who took to the water with flags and banners. Demonstrators then projected films and slogans onto the hull of the ship, including Sort your Ship out! and Turn The Tide, to raise awareness of the environmental impact of cruise shipping. The grassroots activist group calling itself Ocean Rebellion, has pledged an escalation of activities throughout the world to protect our common ocean heritage. ‘The fuel this ship burns is 100 times more polluting than the fuel we allow on roads. This is having a huge environmental impact not just on the oceans and their ecosystems but on air quality in the coastal communities visited by these ships. Each apartment on this cruise ship has a hundred times more emissions than the average European land based equivalent. That’s 380,309kg CO2 per year – that’s the weight of a Boeing 747 airplane’ When idling in port this ship produces more sulphur pollution than 5,000,000 cars or 138,500 trucks.
    OceanRebellion-Fal-Launch-Demo-44.jpg
  • A new Climate Change movement, Ocean Rebellion protest in Falmouth Harbour in Cornwall on the 11th August 2020 in Falmouth, United Kingdom. At sun down the group projected slogans on the bow of the Cruise ship The World. The action was a precursor to the official launch of Ocean Rebellion which is happening on the 19th of August and featured over 40 protestors who took to the water with flags and banners. Demonstrators then projected films and slogans onto the hull of the ship, including Sort your Ship out! and Turn The Tide, to raise awareness of the environmental impact of cruise shipping. The grassroots activist group calling itself Ocean Rebellion, has pledged an escalation of activities throughout the world to protect our common ocean heritage. ‘The fuel this ship burns is 100 times more polluting than the fuel we allow on roads. This is having a huge environmental impact not just on the oceans and their ecosystems but on air quality in the coastal communities visited by these ships. Each apartment on this cruise ship has a hundred times more emissions than the average European land based equivalent. That’s 380,309kg CO2 per year – that’s the weight of a Boeing 747 airplane’ When idling in port this ship produces more sulphur pollution than 5,000,000 cars or 138,500 trucks.
    OceanRebellion-Fal-Launch-Demo-71.jpg
  • A new Climate Change movement, Ocean Rebellion protest in Falmouth Harbour in Cornwall on the 11th August 2020 in Falmouth, United Kingdom. At sun down the group projected slogans on the bow of the Cruise ship The World. The action was a precursor to the official launch of Ocean Rebellion which is happening on the 19th of August and featured over 40 protestors who took to the water with flags and banners. Demonstrators then projected films and slogans onto the hull of the ship, including Sort your Ship out! and Turn The Tide, to raise awareness of the environmental impact of cruise shipping. The grassroots activist group calling itself Ocean Rebellion, has pledged an escalation of activities throughout the world to protect our common ocean heritage. ‘The fuel this ship burns is 100 times more polluting than the fuel we allow on roads. This is having a huge environmental impact not just on the oceans and their ecosystems but on air quality in the coastal communities visited by these ships. Each apartment on this cruise ship has a hundred times more emissions than the average European land based equivalent. That’s 380,309kg CO2 per year – that’s the weight of a Boeing 747 airplane’ When idling in port this ship produces more sulphur pollution than 5,000,000 cars or 138,500 trucks.
    OceanRebellion-Fal-Launch-Demo-65.jpg
  • A new Climate Change movement, Ocean Rebellion protest in Falmouth Harbour in Cornwall on the 11th August 2020 in Falmouth, United Kingdom. At sun down the group projected slogans on the bow of the Cruise ship The World. The action was a precursor to the official launch of Ocean Rebellion which is happening on the 19th of August and featured over 40 protestors who took to the water with flags and banners. Demonstrators then projected films and slogans onto the hull of the ship, including Sort your Ship out! and Turn The Tide, to raise awareness of the environmental impact of cruise shipping. The grassroots activist group calling itself Ocean Rebellion, has pledged an escalation of activities throughout the world to protect our common ocean heritage. ‘The fuel this ship burns is 100 times more polluting than the fuel we allow on roads. This is having a huge environmental impact not just on the oceans and their ecosystems but on air quality in the coastal communities visited by these ships. Each apartment on this cruise ship has a hundred times more emissions than the average European land based equivalent. That’s 380,309kg CO2 per year – that’s the weight of a Boeing 747 airplane’ When idling in port this ship produces more sulphur pollution than 5,000,000 cars or 138,500 trucks.
    OceanRebellion-Fal-Launch-Demo-41.jpg
  • A new Climate Change movement, Ocean Rebellion protest in Falmouth Harbour in Cornwall on the 11th August 2020 in Falmouth, United Kingdom. At sun down the group projected slogans on the bow of the Cruise ship The World. The action was a precursor to the official launch of Ocean Rebellion which is happening on the 19th of August and featured over 40 protestors who took to the water with flags and banners. Demonstrators then projected films and slogans onto the hull of the ship, including Sort your Ship out! and Turn The Tide, to raise awareness of the environmental impact of cruise shipping. The grassroots activist group calling itself Ocean Rebellion, has pledged an escalation of activities throughout the world to protect our common ocean heritage. ‘The fuel this ship burns is 100 times more polluting than the fuel we allow on roads. This is having a huge environmental impact not just on the oceans and their ecosystems but on air quality in the coastal communities visited by these ships. Each apartment on this cruise ship has a hundred times more emissions than the average European land based equivalent. That’s 380,309kg CO2 per year – that’s the weight of a Boeing 747 airplane’ When idling in port this ship produces more sulphur pollution than 5,000,000 cars or 138,500 trucks.
    OceanRebellion-Fal-Launch-Demo-43.jpg
  • A new Climate Change movement, Ocean Rebellion protest in Falmouth Harbour in Cornwall on the 11th August 2020 in Falmouth, United Kingdom. At sun down the group projected slogans on the bow of the Cruise ship The World. The action was a precursor to the official launch of Ocean Rebellion which is happening on the 19th of August and featured over 40 protestors who took to the water with flags and banners. Demonstrators then projected films and slogans onto the hull of the ship, including Sort your Ship out! and Turn The Tide, to raise awareness of the environmental impact of cruise shipping. The grassroots activist group calling itself Ocean Rebellion, has pledged an escalation of activities throughout the world to protect our common ocean heritage. ‘The fuel this ship burns is 100 times more polluting than the fuel we allow on roads. This is having a huge environmental impact not just on the oceans and their ecosystems but on air quality in the coastal communities visited by these ships. Each apartment on this cruise ship has a hundred times more emissions than the average European land based equivalent. That’s 380,309kg CO2 per year – that’s the weight of a Boeing 747 airplane’ When idling in port this ship produces more sulphur pollution than 5,000,000 cars or 138,500 trucks.
    OceanRebellion-Fal-Launch-Demo-22.jpg
  • A new Climate Change movement, Ocean Rebellion protest in Falmouth Harbour in Cornwall on the 11th August 2020 in Falmouth, United Kingdom. At sun down the group projected slogans on the bow of the Cruise ship The World. The action was a precursor to the official launch of Ocean Rebellion which is happening on the 19th of August and featured over 40 protestors who took to the water with flags and banners. Demonstrators then projected films and slogans onto the hull of the ship, including Sort your Ship out! and Turn The Tide, to raise awareness of the environmental impact of cruise shipping. The grassroots activist group calling itself Ocean Rebellion, has pledged an escalation of activities throughout the world to protect our common ocean heritage. ‘The fuel this ship burns is 100 times more polluting than the fuel we allow on roads. This is having a huge environmental impact not just on the oceans and their ecosystems but on air quality in the coastal communities visited by these ships. Each apartment on this cruise ship has a hundred times more emissions than the average European land based equivalent. That’s 380,309kg CO2 per year – that’s the weight of a Boeing 747 airplane’ When idling in port this ship produces more sulphur pollution than 5,000,000 cars or 138,500 trucks.
    OceanRebellion-Fal-Launch-Demo-32.jpg
  • A new Climate Change movement, Ocean Rebellion protest in Falmouth Harbour in Cornwall on the 11th August 2020 in Falmouth, United Kingdom. At sun down the group projected slogans on the bow of the Cruise ship The World. The action was a precursor to the official launch of Ocean Rebellion which is happening on the 19th of August and featured over 40 protestors who took to the water with flags and banners. Demonstrators then projected films and slogans onto the hull of the ship, including Sort your Ship out! and Turn The Tide, to raise awareness of the environmental impact of cruise shipping. The grassroots activist group calling itself Ocean Rebellion, has pledged an escalation of activities throughout the world to protect our common ocean heritage. ‘The fuel this ship burns is 100 times more polluting than the fuel we allow on roads. This is having a huge environmental impact not just on the oceans and their ecosystems but on air quality in the coastal communities visited by these ships. Each apartment on this cruise ship has a hundred times more emissions than the average European land based equivalent. That’s 380,309kg CO2 per year – that’s the weight of a Boeing 747 airplane’ When idling in port this ship produces more sulphur pollution than 5,000,000 cars or 138,500 trucks.
    OceanRebellion-Fal-Launch-Demo-23.jpg
  • A new Climate Change movement, Ocean Rebellion protest in Falmouth Harbour in Cornwall on the 11th August 2020 in Falmouth, United Kingdom. At sun down the group projected slogans on the bow of the Cruise ship The World. The action was a precursor to the official launch of Ocean Rebellion which is happening on the 19th of August and featured over 40 protestors who took to the water with flags and banners. Demonstrators then projected films and slogans onto the hull of the ship, including Sort your Ship out! and Turn The Tide, to raise awareness of the environmental impact of cruise shipping. The grassroots activist group calling itself Ocean Rebellion, has pledged an escalation of activities throughout the world to protect our common ocean heritage. ‘The fuel this ship burns is 100 times more polluting than the fuel we allow on roads. This is having a huge environmental impact not just on the oceans and their ecosystems but on air quality in the coastal communities visited by these ships. Each apartment on this cruise ship has a hundred times more emissions than the average European land based equivalent. That’s 380,309kg CO2 per year – that’s the weight of a Boeing 747 airplane’ When idling in port this ship produces more sulphur pollution than 5,000,000 cars or 138,500 trucks.
    OceanRebellion-Fal-Launch-Demo-26.jpg
  • A new Climate Change movement, Ocean Rebellion protest in Falmouth Harbour in Cornwall on the 11th August 2020 in Falmouth, United Kingdom. At sun down the group projected slogans on the bow of the Cruise ship The World. The action was a precursor to the official launch of Ocean Rebellion which is happening on the 19th of August and featured over 40 protestors who took to the water with flags and banners. Demonstrators then projected films and slogans onto the hull of the ship, including Sort your Ship out! and Turn The Tide, to raise awareness of the environmental impact of cruise shipping. The grassroots activist group calling itself Ocean Rebellion, has pledged an escalation of activities throughout the world to protect our common ocean heritage. ‘The fuel this ship burns is 100 times more polluting than the fuel we allow on roads. This is having a huge environmental impact not just on the oceans and their ecosystems but on air quality in the coastal communities visited by these ships. Each apartment on this cruise ship has a hundred times more emissions than the average European land based equivalent. That’s 380,309kg CO2 per year – that’s the weight of a Boeing 747 airplane’ When idling in port this ship produces more sulphur pollution than 5,000,000 cars or 138,500 trucks.
    OceanRebellion-Fal-Launch-Demo-29.jpg
  • A new Climate Change movement, Ocean Rebellion protest in Falmouth Harbour in Cornwall on the 11th August 2020 in Falmouth, United Kingdom. At sun down the group projected slogans on the bow of the Cruise ship The World. The action was a precursor to the official launch of Ocean Rebellion which is happening on the 19th of August and featured over 40 protestors who took to the water with flags and banners. Demonstrators then projected films and slogans onto the hull of the ship, including Sort your Ship out! and Turn The Tide, to raise awareness of the environmental impact of cruise shipping. The grassroots activist group calling itself Ocean Rebellion, has pledged an escalation of activities throughout the world to protect our common ocean heritage. ‘The fuel this ship burns is 100 times more polluting than the fuel we allow on roads. This is having a huge environmental impact not just on the oceans and their ecosystems but on air quality in the coastal communities visited by these ships. Each apartment on this cruise ship has a hundred times more emissions than the average European land based equivalent. That’s 380,309kg CO2 per year – that’s the weight of a Boeing 747 airplane’ When idling in port this ship produces more sulphur pollution than 5,000,000 cars or 138,500 trucks.
    OceanRebellion-Fal-Launch-Demo-18.jpg
  • A new Climate Change movement, Ocean Rebellion protest in Falmouth Harbour in Cornwall on the 11th August 2020 in Falmouth, United Kingdom. At sun down the group projected slogans on the bow of the Cruise ship The World. The action was a precursor to the official launch of Ocean Rebellion which is happening on the 19th of August and featured over 40 protestors who took to the water with flags and banners. Demonstrators then projected films and slogans onto the hull of the ship, including Sort your Ship out! and Turn The Tide, to raise awareness of the environmental impact of cruise shipping. The grassroots activist group calling itself Ocean Rebellion, has pledged an escalation of activities throughout the world to protect our common ocean heritage. ‘The fuel this ship burns is 100 times more polluting than the fuel we allow on roads. This is having a huge environmental impact not just on the oceans and their ecosystems but on air quality in the coastal communities visited by these ships. Each apartment on this cruise ship has a hundred times more emissions than the average European land based equivalent. That’s 380,309kg CO2 per year – that’s the weight of a Boeing 747 airplane’ When idling in port this ship produces more sulphur pollution than 5,000,000 cars or 138,500 trucks.
    OceanRebellion-Fal-Launch-Demo-07.jpg
  • A new Climate Change movement, Ocean Rebellion protest in Falmouth Harbour in Cornwall on the 11th August 2020 in Falmouth, United Kingdom. At sun down the group projected slogans on the bow of the Cruise ship The World. The action was a precursor to the official launch of Ocean Rebellion which is happening on the 19th of August and featured over 40 protestors who took to the water with flags and banners. Demonstrators then projected films and slogans onto the hull of the ship, including Sort your Ship out! and Turn The Tide, to raise awareness of the environmental impact of cruise shipping. The grassroots activist group calling itself Ocean Rebellion, has pledged an escalation of activities throughout the world to protect our common ocean heritage. ‘The fuel this ship burns is 100 times more polluting than the fuel we allow on roads. This is having a huge environmental impact not just on the oceans and their ecosystems but on air quality in the coastal communities visited by these ships. Each apartment on this cruise ship has a hundred times more emissions than the average European land based equivalent. That’s 380,309kg CO2 per year – that’s the weight of a Boeing 747 airplane’ When idling in port this ship produces more sulphur pollution than 5,000,000 cars or 138,500 trucks.
    OceanRebellion-Fal-Launch-Demo-09.jpg
  • A new Climate Change movement, Ocean Rebellion protest in Falmouth Harbour in Cornwall on the 11th August 2020 in Falmouth, United Kingdom. At sun down the group projected slogans on the bow of the Cruise ship The World. The action was a precursor to the official launch of Ocean Rebellion which is happening on the 19th of August and featured over 40 protestors who took to the water with flags and banners. Demonstrators then projected films and slogans onto the hull of the ship, including Sort your Ship out! and Turn The Tide, to raise awareness of the environmental impact of cruise shipping. The grassroots activist group calling itself Ocean Rebellion, has pledged an escalation of activities throughout the world to protect our common ocean heritage. ‘The fuel this ship burns is 100 times more polluting than the fuel we allow on roads. This is having a huge environmental impact not just on the oceans and their ecosystems but on air quality in the coastal communities visited by these ships. Each apartment on this cruise ship has a hundred times more emissions than the average European land based equivalent. That’s 380,309kg CO2 per year – that’s the weight of a Boeing 747 airplane’ When idling in port this ship produces more sulphur pollution than 5,000,000 cars or 138,500 trucks.
    OceanRebellion-Fal-Launch-Demo-10.jpg
  • A new Climate Change movement, Ocean Rebellion protest in Falmouth Harbour in Cornwall on the 11th August 2020 in Falmouth, United Kingdom. At sun down the group projected slogans on the bow of the Cruise ship The World. The action was a precursor to the official launch of Ocean Rebellion which is happening on the 19th of August and featured over 40 protestors who took to the water with flags and banners. Demonstrators then projected films and slogans onto the hull of the ship, including Sort your Ship out! and Turn The Tide, to raise awareness of the environmental impact of cruise shipping. The grassroots activist group calling itself Ocean Rebellion, has pledged an escalation of activities throughout the world to protect our common ocean heritage. ‘The fuel this ship burns is 100 times more polluting than the fuel we allow on roads. This is having a huge environmental impact not just on the oceans and their ecosystems but on air quality in the coastal communities visited by these ships. Each apartment on this cruise ship has a hundred times more emissions than the average European land based equivalent. That’s 380,309kg CO2 per year – that’s the weight of a Boeing 747 airplane’ When idling in port this ship produces more sulphur pollution than 5,000,000 cars or 138,500 trucks.
    OceanRebellion-Fal-Launch-Demo-06.jpg
  • A new Climate Change movement, Ocean Rebellion protest in Falmouth Harbour in Cornwall on the 11th August 2020 in Falmouth, United Kingdom. At sun down the group projected slogans on the bow of the Cruise ship The World. The action was a precursor to the official launch of Ocean Rebellion which is happening on the 19th of August and featured over 40 protestors who took to the water with flags and banners. Demonstrators then projected films and slogans onto the hull of the ship, including Sort your Ship out! and Turn The Tide, to raise awareness of the environmental impact of cruise shipping. The grassroots activist group calling itself Ocean Rebellion, has pledged an escalation of activities throughout the world to protect our common ocean heritage. ‘The fuel this ship burns is 100 times more polluting than the fuel we allow on roads. This is having a huge environmental impact not just on the oceans and their ecosystems but on air quality in the coastal communities visited by these ships. Each apartment on this cruise ship has a hundred times more emissions than the average European land based equivalent. That’s 380,309kg CO2 per year – that’s the weight of a Boeing 747 airplane’ When idling in port this ship produces more sulphur pollution than 5,000,000 cars or 138,500 trucks.
    OceanRebellion-Fal-Launch-Demo-02.jpg
  • A new Climate Change movement, Ocean Rebellion protest in Falmouth Harbour in Cornwall on the 11th August 2020 in Falmouth, United Kingdom. At sun down the group projected slogans on the bow of the Cruise ship The World. The action was a precursor to the official launch of Ocean Rebellion which is happening on the 19th of August and featured over 40 protestors who took to the water with flags and banners. Demonstrators then projected films and slogans onto the hull of the ship, including Sort your Ship out! and Turn The Tide, to raise awareness of the environmental impact of cruise shipping. The grassroots activist group calling itself Ocean Rebellion, has pledged an escalation of activities throughout the world to protect our common ocean heritage. ‘The fuel this ship burns is 100 times more polluting than the fuel we allow on roads. This is having a huge environmental impact not just on the oceans and their ecosystems but on air quality in the coastal communities visited by these ships. Each apartment on this cruise ship has a hundred times more emissions than the average European land based equivalent. That’s 380,309kg CO2 per year – that’s the weight of a Boeing 747 airplane’ When idling in port this ship produces more sulphur pollution than 5,000,000 cars or 138,500 trucks.
    OceanRebellion-Fal-Launch-Demo-01.jpg
  • A man kayaking along Hastings seafront on the 20th April 2019 in Hastings in the United Kingdom. Hastings is a town on England’s southeast coast, its known for the 1066 Battle of Hastings.
    Hastings-0725.jpg
  • A mountain and sea kayak tour guide hut at Applecross on the 4th November 2018 on the Applecross Peninsula on the west coast of Scotland in the United Kingdom.
    Applecross-HS2018-00601_1.jpg
  • A man kayaking in central Copenhagen on 19th November 2017 in Denmark
    DSC03115_1.jpg
  • A man kayaking in central Copenhagen on 19th November 2017 in Denmark
    DSC03117_1.jpg
  • A young adventurer bends down to inspect a newly-killed forest pig whilst on a Raleigh International expedition in Brunei, Borneo. The hog is dead and the boy wears only flip-flops and shorts but this is one of the remotest and most dangerous habitats on the planet and will have been a life-changing experience for him and his friends from all over the world who will have raised several thousands of sponsored Pounds for the privilege of spending two months away from a dull, comfortable life at home, rather than building community projects like bridges or schools. Raleigh International is a charity that provides adventurous and challenging expeditions for people from all backgrounds, nationalities and ages, especially young people. Over the last 23 years, 30,000 people have been involved in more than 250 expeditions to over 40 countries.
    raleigh-international03-15-12-2007 .jpg
  • As a little boy drifts off to sleep, a father with a painted face holds a giant union jack hand as British fans cheer on their hero David Florence during the canoe slalom heats at the Lee Valley White Water Centre, north east London, on day 3 of the London 2012 Olympic Games.
    canoe_slalom41-29-07-2012_1.jpg
  • French fans hold up their national flags surrounded by crowds of sports supporters seem en mass during the canoe slalom heats at the Lee Valley White Water Centre, north east London, on day 3 of the London 2012 Olympic Games.
    canoe_slalom27-29-07-2012_1.jpg
  • Crowds of sports supporters seem en mass during the canoe slalom heats at the Lee Valley White Water Centre, north east London, on day 3 of the London 2012 Olympic Games.
    canoe_slalom22-29-07-2012_1.jpg
  • Alongside the Olympic rings logo, a young couple share an intimate moment before the start of the canoe slalom heats at the Lee Valley White Water Centre, north east London, on day 3 of the London 2012 Olympic Games.
    canoe_slalom07-29-07-2012_1.jpg
  • Visitors paddle a canoe through the Treasures Cove area at Walt Disney Co.s Shanghai Disneyland theme park  towards the iconic castle during a trial run ahead of its official opening, in Shanghai, China, on Wednesday, June 8, 2016. The $5.5 billion Shanghai Disneyland is one  of the most profitable Disney ventures in the world and the first theme park on mainland China.
    QS2016Archive_396.jpg
  • Volunteers rest between canoe slalom heats at the Lee Valley White Water Centre, north east London, on day 3 of the London 2012 Olympic Games. London 2012 volunteers are called ‘Games Makers’, as they are helping to make the Games happen. Up to 70,000 Games Makers take on a wide variety of roles across the venues: from welcoming visitors; to transporting athletes; to helping out behind the scenes in the Technology team to make sure the results get displayed as quickly and accurately as possible. Games Makers come from a diverse range of communities and backgrounds, from across the UK and abroad. The vast majority are giving up at least 10 days to volunteer during the Games.
    canoe_slalom35-29-07-2012_1.jpg
  • Families rest before the start of the canoe slalom heats at the Lee Valley White Water Centre, north east London, on day 3 of the London 2012 Olympic Games. The slogan 'Inspire a Generation' is written on a London 2012 banner asking Britons to help encourage and influence the next generation of young people into sport, to promote health and confidence in times of economic austerity plus poor health and diet.
    canoe_slalom06-29-07-2012_1.jpg
  • A portrait of a Lance Corporal in the Rifles regiment of the British army next to the Olympic rings logo before the start of the canoe slalom heats at the Lee Valley White Water Centre, north east London, on day 3 of the London 2012 Olympic Games. A further 1,200 military personnel are being deployed to help secure the 2012 Olympics in London following the failure by security contractor G4S to provide enough private guards. The extra personnel have been drafted in amid continuing fears that the private security contractor's handling of the £284m contract remains a risk to the Games.
    canoe_slalom04-29-07-2012_1.jpg
  • Spectators queue for security checks before the start of the canoe slalom heats at the Lee Valley White Water Centre, north east London, on day 3 of the London 2012 Olympic Games.
    canoe_slalom03-29-07-2012_1.jpg
  • A volunteer directs spectators before the start of the canoe slalom heats at the Lee Valley White Water Centre, north east London, on day 3 of the London 2012 Olympic Games. London 2012 volunteers are called ‘Games Makers’, as they are helping to make the Games happen. Up to 70,000 Games Makers take on a wide variety of roles across the venues: from welcoming visitors; to transporting athletes; to helping out behind the scenes in the Technology team to make sure the results get displayed as quickly and accurately as possible. Games Makers come from a diverse range of communities and backgrounds, from across the UK and abroad. The vast majority are giving up at least 10 days to volunteer during the Games.
    canoe_slalom01-29-07-2012_1.jpg
  • Hermit, Tom Leppard, 72, has lived in seclusion at this unidentified spot on the Isle of Skye, Scotland for 22 years. He sits contemplating his quiet life in a self-made shelter largely cut-off from the outside world. Wind and rain-proof against harsh Scottish winters, his army survival skills keep him fit and healthy but his memory is fading and suffers muscular ailments. None of his possessions suffer from damp or mildew because everything he owns is wrapped in plastic containers carefully stored in special holes about his camp. Few know his exact whereabouts but concerned locals visit when weather prevents him from crossing a 2km-wide Loch in an old canoe. His days are spent washing, cleaning and carrying out maintenance jobs that keeps his home clean and fresh. Tom is a former solder and sailor and chose this spot when he sought ultimate solitude.
    5247-RPB59-leopard-man152-27-09-2007...jpg
  • Hermit, Tom Leppard, 72, has lived in seclusion at this unidentified spot on the Isle of Skye, Scotland for 22 years. He sits contemplating his quiet life in a self-made shelter largely cut-off from the outside world. Wind and rain-proof against harsh Scottish winters, his army survival skills keep him fit and healthy but his memory is fading and suffers muscular ailments. None of his possessions suffer from damp or mildew because everything he owns is wrapped in plastic containers carefully stored in special holes about his camp. Few know his exact whereabouts but concerned locals visit when weather prevents him from crossing a 2km-wide Loch in an old canoe. His days are spent washing, cleaning and carrying out maintenance jobs that keeps his home clean and fresh. Tom is a former solder and sailor and chose this spot when he sought ultimate solitude.
    5247-RPB59-leopard_man152-27-09-2007.jpg
  • Hermit, Tom Leppard 72, has been living in seclusion at this unidentified spot on the Isle of Skye, Scotland for 22 years. He crouches as he emerges from his self-made shelter, largely cut-off from the outside world. Converting the north-facing dry-stone walls into a home against harsh Scottish winters, he uses a knowledge of survival skills to help him stay fit and largely healthy although his memory is fading and muscular ailments trouble him. Few know his exact whereabouts but concerned locals visit when weather prevents him from crossing a 2km-wide Loch in an old canoe. A tarpaulin roof is weighted down by heavy rocks as winds can be fierce this far north. His days are spent washing, cleaning and carrying out maintenance jobs that keeps his home clean and fresh. Tom is a former solder and sailor and chose this spot when he sought solitude.
    5247-RPB59-leopard_man001-27-09-2007...jpg
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