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  • Freshly baked Haxby cob at the Haxby Bakehouse, Yorks artisan bakery in Haxby, North Yorkshire, United Kingdom on 10th February 2017. Haxby Bakehouse make bread using traditional methods of slow fermentation. They use low yeasted overnight sponges, natural sourdough levain or a combination of the two. This means the bread they produce is full of flavour without the use of any artificial flour improvers, preservatives or emulsifiers.
    A0035839cc_1.jpg
  • Guarded by the male cob, a female mute swan (pen) incubates her eggs on a nest surrounded by plastic bags waste, in an urban water basin. She shares the nest with wrappers and bottles, bags and cans tossed from a nearby walkway and perhaps drifted on the water from this urban basin in London's Docklands. The mute swan, which is the white swan most commonly seen in the British Isles, will normally mate at anytime from spring through to summer, with the cygnets being born anytime from May through to July. A swan's nest takes 2-3 weeks and the egg laying process begins with an egg being laid every 12-24 hours. They will all be incubated (ie sat on to start the growth process) at the same time with hatching usually 42 days (6 weeks) later.
    nesting_swan06-09-04-2014.jpg
  • Corn on the cob. Notting Hill Carnival in West London. A celebration of West Indian / Caribbean culture and Europe's largest street party, festival and parade. Revellers come in their hundreds of thousands to have fun, dance, drink and let go in the brilliant atmosphere. It is led by members of the West Indian / Caribbrean community, particularly the Trinidadian and Tobagonian British population, many of whom have lived in the area since the 1950s. The carnival has attracted up to 2 million people in the past and centres around a parade of floats, dancers and sound systems.
    20150830_notting hill carnival_116.jpg
  • Corn cobs on a table. The Guarani are one of the most populous indigenous populations in Brazil, but with the least amount of land. They mostly live in the State of Mato Grosso do Sul and Mato Grosso. Their tradtional way of life and ancestral land is increasingly at risk from large scale agribusiness and agriculture. There have been recorded cases and allegations of violence between owners of large farms and the Guarani communities in this region.
    _MG_7181_1.jpg
  • Corn/Maize grown in the Tai Dam ethnic minority village of Ban Na Mor, Oudomxay province, Lao PDR. The women of Ban Na Mor sell seasonal local products in their roadside market which they have gathered from the fields and forests or grown in their own gardens – anything from cucumbers to bamboo rats, pineapples to barbequed frogs. Ban Na Mor market is ideally situated on route 13 which goes to the border with China allowing them to take advantage of the many Chinese tour buses and businessmen passing through.
    A0017506cc_1.jpg
  • Corn cob on the ground with corn plants in the background. The Guarani are one of the most populous indigenous populations in Brazil, but with the least amount of land. They mostly live in the State of Mato Grosso do Sul and Mato Grosso. Their tradtional way of life and ancestral land is increasingly at risk from large scale agribusiness and agriculture. There have been recorded cases and allegations of violence between owners of large farms and the Guarani communities in this region.
    _MG_7061_1.jpg
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