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  • Springer Spaniel chewing on an old branch in a cold morning landscape on the Isle of Wight, England, United Kingdom.
    20170101_isle of wight_006.jpg
  • Bolivia,  June 2013. La Cumbre , near La Paz, 15,260 feet, 4,650 metres . 21st June Aymara New Year (Machaq Mara) , the winter solstice when the sun  comes to earth and signifies the time for planting and new growth. Chewing coca leaves.
    bol7_2785_1.jpg
  • Springer Spaniel chewing on an old branch in a cold morning landscape on the Isle of Wight, England, United Kingdom.
    20170101_isle of wight_005.jpg
  • Chen Yi He, Chinese Herbalist, having breakfast at home, Xiao Meng Yang town, Xishuangbanna, China
    chiherb_004_1.jpg
  • A two and half year-old girl sits next to her three-month old baby brother, eating lunch during a day out with their mother who is seen holding on tight to the boy. With their hands up to each other's mouths, the girl takes a bite of a slice of bread sandwich. She is clearly relishing her food and has a large appetite while the boy seems to enjoy sucking on his fingers before the age where he can eat solids. From a personal documentary project entitled "Next of Kin" about the photographer's two children's early years spent in parallel universes. Model released.
    ella+sam07-12-07_1998_1.jpg
  • A man chews Kat, the leaf of a plant that is grown in Ethiopia and is a mild narcotic, in a house in Hargeisa the capital of the Self Declared Independent country of Somaliland
    sfe_031208_0002.jpg
  • Bryn, a mongrel dog plays with his toy in Bedbridge National Pinetum, Kent, UK
    SFE_050207_0008_1.jpg
  • Sameer Iqbal,10, holding the chewing gum he sells on the street, with his social worker, Shafiq, at Ashiana headquarters in Kabul. This charity works with vulnerable children. <br />
“I make almost a dollar a day selling chewing gum, half as much as my mother, my father Is crippled”<br />
<br />
Ashiana, a charity working with vulnerable young people, is run by Mohammed Yousef who set it up in 1995.<br />
<br />
They  work with 4500 children in Kabul, Parwan, Mazar-e-Sharif, and Heart  running activities for street and working children, returnees, displaced child soldiers and similar vulnerable children offering education recreation and respite.<br />
<br />
“Life for the working children is very stressful. They are at risk from abusive adults, dangerous traffic, suicide explosions and their dysfunctional families. They are stressed at home and on the street there is no room for them to be children. We are here to provide them with some respite.”
    afghan06_1.jpg
  • A man making paan, in the Bapu bazaar, Jaipur, India<br />
Paan consists of chewing Betel leaf (Piper betle) combined with the areca nut. It is chewed as a palate cleanser and a breath freshener. It is also commonly offered to guests and visitors as a sign of hospitality and as an "ice breaker" to start conversation. It also has a symbolic value at ceremonies and cultural events in south and southeast Asia. Paan makers may use mukhwas or tobacco as an ingredient in their paan fillings. Although most types of paan contain areca nuts as a filling, some do not. Other types include what is called sweet paan, where sugar, candied fruit and fennel seeds are used.
    SFE_111028_145_1.jpg
  • A man making paan, in the Bapu bazaar, Jaipur, India<br />
Paan consists of chewing Betel leaf (Piper betle) combined with the areca nut. It is chewed as a palate cleanser and a breath freshener. It is also commonly offered to guests and visitors as a sign of hospitality and as an "ice breaker" to start conversation. It also has a symbolic value at ceremonies and cultural events in south and southeast Asia. Paan makers may use mukhwas or tobacco as an ingredient in their paan fillings. Although most types of paan contain areca nuts as a filling, some do not. Other types include what is called sweet paan, where sugar, candied fruit and fennel seeds are used.
    SFE_111028_144_1.jpg
  • A man making paan, in the Bapu bazaar, Jaipur, India<br />
Paan consists of chewing Betel leaf (Piper betle) combined with the areca nut. It is chewed as a palate cleanser and a breath freshener. It is also commonly offered to guests and visitors as a sign of hospitality and as an "ice breaker" to start conversation. It also has a symbolic value at ceremonies and cultural events in south and southeast Asia. Paan makers may use mukhwas or tobacco as an ingredient in their paan fillings. Although most types of paan contain areca nuts as a filling, some do not. Other types include what is called sweet paan, where sugar, candied fruit and fennel seeds are used.
    SFE_111028_139_1.jpg
  • A Paan wallah making paan in Old Delhi, India. <br />
Paan consists of chewing Betel leaf (Piper betle) combined with the areca nut. It is chewed as a palate cleanser and a breath freshener. It is also commonly offered to guests and visitors as a sign of hospitality and as an "ice breaker" to start conversation. It also has a symbolic value at ceremonies and cultural events in south and southeast Asia. Paan makers may use mukhwas or tobacco as an ingredient in their paan fillings. Although most types of paan contain areca nuts as a filling, some do not. Other types include what is called sweet paan, where sugar, candied fruit and fennel seeds are used.
    SFE_090828_200.jpg
  • A Paan wallah making paan in Old Delhi, India. <br />
Paan consists of chewing Betel leaf (Piper betle) combined with the areca nut. It is chewed as a palate cleanser and a breath freshener. It is also commonly offered to guests and visitors as a sign of hospitality and as an "ice breaker" to start conversation. It also has a symbolic value at ceremonies and cultural events in south and southeast Asia. Paan makers may use mukhwas or tobacco as an ingredient in their paan fillings. Although most types of paan contain areca nuts as a filling, some do not. Other types include what is called sweet paan, where sugar, candied fruit and fennel seeds are used.
    SFE_090828_195.jpg
  • A man making paan, in the Bapu bazaar, Jaipur, India<br />
Paan consists of chewing Betel leaf (Piper betle) combined with the areca nut. It is chewed as a palate cleanser and a breath freshener. It is also commonly offered to guests and visitors as a sign of hospitality and as an "ice breaker" to start conversation. It also has a symbolic value at ceremonies and cultural events in south and southeast Asia. Paan makers may use mukhwas or tobacco as an ingredient in their paan fillings. Although most types of paan contain areca nuts as a filling, some do not. Other types include what is called sweet paan, where sugar, candied fruit and fennel seeds are used.
    SFE_111028_138_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a Karen Pwo ethnic minority woman wearing traditional clothing and chewing betel nut at Mae Lay village, Chiang Mai province, Thailand
    A0035686cc crop_1.jpg
  • Market trader selling khat. Chewing khat is common amongst people in the region. Users claim it is a stimulant giving a sense of well being, allertnes sand excitement. Tadjoura, Djibouti. Tadjura is the oldest town in Djibouti and the third largest city in the country with a population of some 25,000.
    MAA-10095025_1.jpg
  • A bag of khat being traded in the port of Obock. Chewing khat is common amongst people in the region. Users claim it is a stimulant giving a sense of well being, allertnes sand excitement.  Republic of Djibouti
    10095023_1.jpg
  • A couple read their Sunday newspapers in a quiet corner of the Pony and Trap pub, October 8th 2017, in Chew Magna, Somerset, England.
    pub_couple-01-08-10-2017.jpg
  • Somerset eating apples warm in afternoon sunshine on shelves outside the Pony and Trap pub, October 8th 2017, in Chew Magna, Somerset, England.
    apple_shelves-01-08-10-2017.jpg
  • Sheep graze on a hillside outside Chewton Mendip, Somerset. Chewton Mendip is a village and civil parish in the Mendip District of Somerset, England and within the Mendip Hills Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty and the Chew Valley. Wool has for centuries been a source of great wealth to the towns of south-west England whose legacies are the fine country homes of merchants, the churches and cathedrals bestowed on the local communities. Nowadays in ther Mendip Hills, dairy farming has become more lucrative.
    sheep_landscape01-20-08-2013_1_1_1.jpg
  • "More than you can chew." A ten month-old infant uses new teeth to bite her mother's nose in the back garden of their Victorian south London terrace home. The mum winces in pain as the child sinks her new milk teeth into her skin but they enjoy a warm summer afternoon, playfully interacting with each other in a moment of parental love and harmony. The girl wears a short-sleeved t-shirt and has plump arms of baby fat, a healthy sign of a contented infant. This is from a documentary series of pictures about the first year of the photographer's first child Ella. Accompanied by personal reflections and references from various nursery rhymes, this work describes his wife Lynda's journey from expectant to actual motherhood and for Ella - from new-born to one year-old.
    corbis_ella17-20-04-1995_1.jpg
  • Bolivia,  June 2013. La Cumbre , near La Paz, 15,260 feet, 4,650 metres . 21st June Aymara New Year (Machaq Mara) , the winter solstice when the sun  comes to earth and signifies the time for planting and new growth. Man holding a bag of coca leaves, which people chew to stand the cold and hunger, and to honour Mother Earth, Pachamama.
    bol7_2516_1.jpg
  • Bolivia,  June 2013. La Cumbre , near La Paz, 15,260 feet, 4,650 metres . 21st June Aymara New Year (Machaq Mara) , the winter solstice when the sun  comes to earth and signifies the time for planting and new growth. A group of miners chew coca leaves and drink alcohol.
    bol7_2410_1.jpg
  • Somerset eating apples warm in afternoon sunshine on shelves outside the Pony and Trap pub, October 8th 2017, in Chew Magna, Somerset, England.
    apple_shelves-03-08-10-2017.jpg
  • An ethnic Kayaw woman feeding her baby chewed rice in a traditional way on 27th March 2016 in Kayah State, Myanmar. Myanmar is one of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia with 135 different indigenous ethnic groups with over a dozen ethnic Karenni subgroups in the Kayah region. Wearing traditional costumes made from handwoven cotton, Kayaw women wear many necklaces made from shells, beads and brass coils and fashioned from silver. Distended earlobes are plugged with rings of silver and the ankles and knees encased with brass coils
    A0032888cc_1_1.jpg
  • Office workers walk through a City of London street, the heart of the capital's financial district. It is lunchtime and two men have take-away sandwiches. One eats his on the go, biting into his long baguette from Pret a Manger in this narrow city street near St Paul's cathedral and the other chews his own.
    city_people01-20-03-1993_1.jpg
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