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  • Cabazon Dinosaurs, also referred to as Claude Bell's Dinosaurs, are enormous, sculptured roadside attractions located in Cabazon, California. Mr. Rex, hiding behind the hedge, is a 100-ton tyrannosaurus rex concrete structure.
    _F3A0908_1.jpg
  • Largely American passengers re-join their cruise holiday voyage around the Gulf of Mexico during a day's stop-over in Cancun, Mexico. Reflected in the puddles of recent seasonal rain, they queue up on the port's quayside to have their identity passes checked before being allowed back on board the Fun Ship Ecstasy. Seen above them and in reflected in the water at their feet are some of the many windows and portholes of this enormous vessel belonging to the Vegas-style Carnival Cruise lines company. The Panamanian-registered MS Ecstasy is a 70,367 ton cruise ship carrying 2,052 passengers and 920 crew whose routes are mainly around the Gulf and Carribean Sea.
    carnival_cruises03-15-12-2007 _1.jpg
  • An oversized dragon is vandalised or stripped of all its artistry after the conclusion of the "Boi Bumba" Carnival, Parintins, Brazil. The carnival serves to celebrate and re-enact Indian traditions and perpetuate myths and legends. It has evolved over time and involves the battle between to opposing bulls, known as Garantido and Caprichoso.
    CPA-10126561_1.jpg
  • Brazil -Parintins - The Boi Bumba carnival and the dance of the "Caprichoso" bull to  infection percursive rhythm  to celebrate the three day event deep in the Amazon. The carnival serves to celebrate and re-enact Indian traditions and perpetuate myths and legends. It has evolved over time and involves the battle between to opposing bulls, known as Garantido and Caprichoso
    CPA-10126549_1.jpg
  • Brazil -Parintins - The Boi Bumba carnival and a group of Indian warriors dance to infectious rhythms to celebrate the three day event deep in the Amazon. The carnival serves to celebrate and re-enact Indian traditions and perpetuate myths and legends. It has evolved over time and involves the battle between to opposing bulls, known as Garantido and Caprichoso
    CPA-10126546_1.jpg
  • Brazil -Parintins - The Boi Bumba carnival and a group of participants with heavily feathered costumes give  an infectious rhythm    to the celebrations during the three day event deep in the Amazon. The carnival serves to celebrate and re-enact Indian traditions and perpetuate myths and legends. It has evolved over time and involves the battle between to opposing bulls, known as Garantido and Caprichoso
    CPA-10126534_1.jpg
  • Brazil -Parintins - The Boi Bumba carnival and a group of drummers, known as the 'Batucada" give  an infectious rhythm    to the celebrations during the three day event deep in the Amazon. The carnival serves to celebrate and re-enact Indian traditions and perpetuate myths and legends. It has evolved over time and involves the battle between to opposing bulls, known as Garantido and Caprichoso.
    CPA-10126533_1.jpg
  • Brazil -Parintins - During the Boi Bumba carnival celebrations a large float in the form of a ship re-enacts the arrival of the Spanish Conquistadores as they disembark in Brazil and attempt to destroy the indian population. The carnival serves to celebrate and re-enact Indian traditions and perpetuate myths and legends. It has evolved over time and involves the battle between to opposing bulls, known as Garantido and Caprichoso.
    CPA-10126529_1.jpg
  • A oversized Caterpiller leaves the warehouse to enter the "Bumbodromo", the stadium where the "Boi Bumba" Carnival takes place, Parintins, Brazil. The carnival serves to celebrate and re-enact Indian traditions and perpetuate myths and legends. It has evolved over time and involves the battle between to opposing bulls, known as Garantido and Caprichoso.
    CPA-10126522_1.jpg
  • A large oversized Caterpiller leaves the warehouse to enter the "Bumbodromo", the stadium where the "Boi Bumba" Carnival takes place, Parintins, Brazil
    cp_bra_0090_1.jpg
  • Brazil -Parintins - The Boi Bumba carnival and a group of participants with heavily feathered costumes give  an infectious rhythm    to the celebrations during the three day event deep in the Amazon. The carnival serves to celebrate and re-enact Indian traditions and perpetuate myths and legends. It has evolved over time and involves the battle between to opposing bulls, known as Garantido and Caprichoso
    CPA-10126575_1.jpg
  • Brazil -Parintins - The Boi Bumba carnival and a a woman and her giant scorpion costum sit ina oudoor bar resting before entering the stadium, known as the Bumbodromo"  to celebrate the three day event deep in the Amazon. The carnival serves to celebrate and re-enact Indian traditions and perpetuate myths and legends. It has evolved over time and involves the battle between to opposing bulls, known as Garantido and Caprichoso
    CPA-10126547_1.jpg
  • Brazil -Parintins - The Boi Bumba carnival and a group of participants dance to the "Tucandeira", an indian ritual with giant insects and give  an infectious rhythm    to the celebrations during the three day event deep in the Amazon. The carnival serves to celebrate and re-enact Indian traditions and perpetuate myths and legends. It has evolved over time and involves the battle between to opposing bulls, known as Garantido and Caprichoso
    CPA-10126537_1.jpg
  • Brazil -Parintins - The Boi Bumba carnival and a group of participants dance to the "Tucandeira"  and give  an infectious rhythm    to the celebrations during the three day event deep in the Amazon. The carnival serves to celebrate and re-enact Indian traditions and perpetuate myths and legends. It has evolved over time and involves the battle between to opposing bulls, known as Garantido and Caprichoso
    CPA-10126535_1.jpg
  • The stadium also known as the Bumbodromo, is the location which serves to celebrate the annual Boi Bumba carnival. The carnival serves to celebrate and re-enact Indian traditions and perpetuate myths and legends. It has evolved over time and involves the battle between to opposing bulls, known as Garantido and Caprichoso.
    CPA-10126521_1.jpg
  • The "Cunha Poranga' Carnival Queen, dances inside the stadium during the three day event which celebrates the native Amazon indian myths and legends of the " Boi Bumba" carnival, Parintins, Brazil
    cp_bra_0094_1.jpg
  • During the "Boi Bumba" Amazon Carnival, a giant Caterpiller float roars into life during the event in Parintins Stadium, Brazil.
    cp_bra_0092_1.jpg
  • Brazil -Parintins - The Boi Bumba carnival and a group of participants with heavily feathered costumes give  an infectious rhythm    to the celebrations during the three day event deep in the Amazon. The carnival serves to celebrate and re-enact Indian traditions and perpetuate myths and legends. It has evolved over time and involves the battle between to opposing bulls, known as Garantido and Caprichoso
    CPA-10126579_1.jpg
  • Brazil -Parintins - The Boi Bumba carnival and the "Cunha Poranga", the Carnival queen dances to an infectious rhythm    to the celebrate the three day event deep in the Amazon. The carnival serves to celebrate and re-enact Indian traditions and perpetuate myths and legends. It has evolved over time and involves the battle between to opposing bulls, known as Garantido and Caprichoso
    CPA-10126574_1.jpg
  • A man paits a wall mural of the "Cunha Poranga", the queen of the "Boi Bumba" Carnival, Parintins, Brazil. The carnival serves to celebrate and re-enact Indian traditions and perpetuate myths and legends. It has evolved over time and involves the battle between to opposing bulls, known as Garantido and Caprichoso.
    CPA-10126569_1.jpg
  • Brazil -Parintins - The Boi Bumba carnival and the "Cunha Poranga", the Carnival queen dances to an infectious rhythm    to the celebrate the three day event deep in the Amazon. The carnival serves to celebrate and re-enact Indian traditions and perpetuate myths and legends. It has evolved over time and involves the battle between to opposing bulls, known as Garantido and Caprichoso
    CPA-10126543_1.jpg
  • A oversized Caterpiller enters the "Bumbodromo", the stadium where the "Boi Bumba" Carnival takes place, Parintins, Brazil. The carnival serves to celebrate and re-enact Indian traditions and perpetuate myths and legends. It has evolved over time and involves the battle between to opposing bulls, known as Garantido and Caprichoso.
    CPA-10126532_1.jpg
  • A oversized Caterpiller  and dragon leaves a warehouse to enter the "Bumbodromo", the stadium where the "Boi Bumba" Carnival takes place, Parintins, Brazil. The carnival serves to celebrate and re-enact Indian traditions and perpetuate myths and legends. It has evolved over time and involves the battle between to opposing bulls, known as Garantido and Caprichoso.
    CPA-10126520_1.jpg
  • Building a huge allegorical float inside a large warehouse for the "Boi Bumba" Amazon Carnival in Parintins, Brazil. The carnival serves to celebrate and re-enact Indian traditions and perpetuate myths and legends. It has evolved over time and involves the battle between to opposing bulls, known as Garantido and Caprichoso.
    CPA-10126517_1.jpg
  • Building a huge allegorical float inside a large warehouse for the "Boi Bumba" Amazon Carnival in Parintins, Brazil. The carnival serves to celebrate and re-enact Indian traditions and perpetuate myths and legends. It has evolved over time and involves the battle between to opposing bulls, known as Garantido and Caprichoso.
    CPA-10126510_1.jpg
  • Man construct the numerous large floats for the celebrations of the Boi Bumba carnival in Parintins along the Amazon river on Tupinambarana island. The carnival serves to celebrate and re-enact Indian traditions and perpetuate myths and legends. It has evolved over time and involves the battle between to opposing bulls, known as Garantido and Caprichoso.
    CPA-10126509_1.jpg
  • During the "Boi Bumba" Amazon Carnival, a float representing a giant ant heap exploads into life with a rite of passage known as the dance of the "tucandeira", Parintins Stadium, Brazil.
    cp_bra_0093_1.jpg
  • Building a huge allegorical float inside a large warehouse for the "Boi Bumba" Amazon Carnival, Parintins, Brazil.
    cp_bra_0088_1.jpg
  • George Rodgers, 63, a Cornish farmer of at least three generations grows giant vegetables on a quarter acre plot. The seed for his cabbages comes from his father and he provides the seed he says for 85 percent of the cabbages at the main Bath and West Show, which he is preparing for now. Giant vegetable growing is not a hobby for the faint hearted. The growers have to tend to the vegetables almost every day (including Christmas) with a commitment varying from  2-3 hours an evening to the most committed spending up to 80 hours a week, tending, nurturing, growing and spending thousands on fertilisers, electricity and green houses.  The reward is to be crowned world record holder of largest, longest or heaviest in class, cabbages weighing in at 100lb, carrots stretching 19 ft and pumpkins tipping the scales at 800lb. it’s a competitive business though and global; some times the record may stand for only hours before a fellow competitor somewhere in the world knocks a grower off the coveted spot.
    IMG_9641_1139_1.jpg
  • George Rodgers, 63, a Cornish farmer of at least three generations grows giant vegetables on a quarter acre plot. The seed for his cabbages comes from his father and he provides the seed he says for 85 percent of the cabbages at the main Bath and West Show, which he is preparing for now. Giant vegetable growing is not a hobby for the faint hearted. The growers have to tend to the vegetables almost every day (including Christmas) with a commitment varying from  2-3 hours an evening to the most committed spending up to 80 hours a week, tending, nurturing, growing and spending thousands on fertilisers, electricity and green houses.  The reward is to be crowned world record holder of largest, longest or heaviest in class, cabbages weighing in at 100lb, carrots stretching 19 ft and pumpkins tipping the scales at 800lb. it’s a competitive business though and global; some times the record may stand for only hours before a fellow competitor somewhere in the world knocks a grower off the coveted spot.
    IMG_9469_1.jpg
  • David Thomas,42, spends his days producing perfectly proportioned vegetables for supermarkets but in the evening he devotes himself to his hobby growing outsized vegetables. Giant vegetable growing is not a hobby for the faint hearted. The growers have to tend to the vegetables almost every day (including Christmas) spending up to 80 hours a week, tending, nurturing, growing and spending thousands on fertilisers, electricity and green houses. The reward is to be crowned world record holder of largest, longest or heaviest in class, cabbages weighing in at 100lb, carrots stretching 19 ft and pumpkins tipping the scales at 800lb. It’s a competitive business though and global; some times the record may stand for only hours before a fellow competitor, somewhere,  knocks a grower off the coveted spot.
    IMG_2808_1.jpg
  • David Thomas,42, pictured here with his daughter, spends his days producing perfectly proportioned vegetables for supermarkets but in the evening he devotes himself to his hobby growing outsized vegetables. Giant vegetable growing is not a hobby for the faint hearted. The growers have to tend to the vegetables almost every day (including Christmas) spending up to 80 hours a week, tending, nurturing, growing and spending thousands on fertilisers, electricity and green houses. The reward is to be crowned world record holder of largest, longest or heaviest in class, cabbages weighing in at 100lb, carrots stretching 19 ft and pumpkins tipping the scales at 800lb. It’s a competitive business though and global; some times the record may stand for only hours before a fellow competitor, somewhere,  knocks a grower off the coveted spot.
    IMG_2798_1.jpg
  • Ian Neale, 67, retired,  seen here with his marrow, takes his hobby extremely seriously; He works up 80 hours a week on his land and spends a  £1000 a year on fertilisers. He once held a world record for a swede weighing in at 81.5lb but lost it eight hours later to someone in Alaska. Giant vegetable growing is not a hobby for the faint hearted. The growers have to tend to the vegetables almost every day (including Christmas) tending, nurturing, growing and spending thousands on fertilisers, electricity and green houses. The reward is to be crowned world record holder of largest, longest or heaviest in class, cabbages weighing in at 100lb, carrots stretching 19 ft and pumpkins tipping the scales at 800lb. It’s a competitive business though and global; some times the record may stand for only hours before a fellow competitor, as in Ian’s case, knocks a grower off the coveted spot.
    IMG_2517_1059_1.jpg
  • Ian Neale, 67, retired,  seen here with his swede, takes his hobby extremely seriously; He works up 80 hours a week on his land and spends a  £1000 a year on fertilisers. He once held a world record for a swede weighing in at 81.5lb but lost it eight hours later to someone in Alaska. Giant vegetable growing is not a hobby for the faint hearted. The growers have to tend to the vegetables almost every day (including Christmas) tending, nurturing, growing and spending thousands on fertilisers, electricity and green houses. The reward is to be crowned world record holder of largest, longest or heaviest in class, cabbages weighing in at 100lb, carrots stretching 19 ft and pumpkins tipping the scales at 800lb. It’s a competitive business though and global; some times the record may stand for only hours before a fellow competitor, as in Ian’s case, knocks a grower off the coveted spot.
    IMG_2416_0394-2_1.jpg
  • Ian Neale, 67, retired,  seen here with his carrots, takes his hobby extremely seriously; He works up 80 hours a week on his land and spends a  £1000 a year on fertilisers. He once held a world record for a swede weighing in at 81.5lb but lost it eight hours later to someone in Alaska. Giant vegetable growing is not a hobby for the faint hearted. The growers have to tend to the vegetables almost every day (including Christmas) tending, nurturing, growing and spending thousands on fertilisers, electricity and green houses. The reward is to be crowned world record holder of largest, longest or heaviest in class, cabbages weighing in at 100lb, carrots stretching 19 ft and pumpkins tipping the scales at 800lb. It’s a competitive business though and global; some times the record may stand for only hours before a fellow competitor, as in Ian’s case, knocks a grower off the coveted spot.
    IMG_2326_1.jpg
  • Jo Atherton, works a part time at nursery, but his passion is for  growing giant vegetables, He has  grown a  record breaking carrot 19’, 2’’ long and is also a devotee of leek growing and onions. He was set back recently when local kids stole a thousand pounds worth of lighting diverted most likely to grow marijuana plants. He is pictured preparing for the biggest giant veg event of the year, the Bath and West show. Giant vegetable growing is not a hobby for the faint hearted. The growers have to tend to the vegetables almost every day (including Christmas) spending up to 80 hours a week, tending, nurturing, growing and spending thousands on fertilisers, electricity and green houses. The reward is to be crowned world record holder of largest, longest or heaviest in class, cabbages weighing in at 100lb, carrots stretching 19 ft and pumpkins tipping the scales at 800lb.
    IMG_1834_0237_1.jpg
  • Peter Glazebrook with a giant onion. He has held eight world records in his time but is currently holder of only two with heaviest parsnip and longest beetroot, 12lb and 21ft. respectively. Giant vegetable growing is not a hobby for the faint hearted. The growers have to tend to the vegetables almost every day (including Christmas) spending up to 80 hours a week, tending, nurturing, growing and spending thousands on fertilisers, electricity and green houses. The reward is to be crowned world record holder of largest, longest or heaviest in class, cabbages weighing in at 100lb, carrots stretching 19 ft and pumpkins tipping the scales at 800lb. it’s a competitive business though and global; some times the record may stand for only hours before a fellow competitor, somewhere,  knocks a grower off the coveted spot.
    IMG_1597_1.jpg
  • Peter Glazebrook with a giant onion. He has held eight world records in his time but is currently holder of only two with heaviest parsnip and longest beetroot, 12lb and 21ft. respectively. Giant vegetable growing is not a hobby for the faint hearted. The growers have to tend to the vegetables almost every day (including Christmas) spending up to 80 hours a week, tending, nurturing, growing and spending thousands on fertilisers, electricity and green houses. The reward is to be crowned world record holder of largest, longest or heaviest in class, cabbages weighing in at 100lb, carrots stretching 19 ft and pumpkins tipping the scales at 800lb. it’s a competitive business though and global; some times the record may stand for only hours before a fellow competitor, somewhere,  knocks a grower off the coveted spot.
    IMG_1493_1.jpg
  • Huge bonfire on bonfire night in Battersea Park, London. This big fire is set for the gathered crowd to celebrate Guy Fawkes Night which is always celebrated on 5th November.
    20101106bonfireB.jpg
  • George Rodgers, 63, a Cornish farmer of at least three generations grows giant vegetables on a quarter acre plot. The seed for his cabbages comes from his father and he provides the seed he says for 85 percent of the cabbages at the main Bath and West Show, which he is preparing for now. Giant vegetable growing is not a hobby for the faint hearted. The growers have to tend to the vegetables almost every day (including Christmas) with a commitment varying from  2-3 hours an evening to the most committed spending up to 80 hours a week, tending, nurturing, growing and spending thousands on fertilisers, electricity and green houses.  The reward is to be crowned world record holder of largest, longest or heaviest in class, cabbages weighing in at 100lb, carrots stretching 19 ft and pumpkins tipping the scales at 800lb. it’s a competitive business though and global; some times the record may stand for only hours before a fellow competitor somewhere in the world knocks a grower off the coveted spot.
    IMG_9448_1.jpg
  • David Thomas,42, pictured here with his daughter, spends his days producing perfectly proportioned vegetables for supermarkets but in the evening he devotes himself to his hobby growing outsized vegetables. Giant vegetable growing is not a hobby for the faint hearted. The growers have to tend to the vegetables almost every day (including Christmas) spending up to 80 hours a week, tending, nurturing, growing and spending thousands on fertilisers, electricity and green houses. The reward is to be crowned world record holder of largest, longest or heaviest in class, cabbages weighing in at 100lb, carrots stretching 19 ft and pumpkins tipping the scales at 800lb. It’s a competitive business though and global; some times the record may stand for only hours before a fellow competitor, somewhere,  knocks a grower off the coveted spot.
    IMG_2622_1.jpg
  • Ian Neale, 67, retired,  seen here with his marrow, takes his hobby extremely seriously; He works up 80 hours a week on his land and spends a  £1000 a year on fertilisers. He once held a world record for a swede weighing in at 81.5lb but lost it eight hours later to someone in Alaska. Giant vegetable growing is not a hobby for the faint hearted. The growers have to tend to the vegetables almost every day (including Christmas) tending, nurturing, growing and spending thousands on fertilisers, electricity and green houses. The reward is to be crowned world record holder of largest, longest or heaviest in class, cabbages weighing in at 100lb, carrots stretching 19 ft and pumpkins tipping the scales at 800lb. It’s a competitive business though and global; some times the record may stand for only hours before a fellow competitor, as in Ian’s case, knocks a grower off the coveted spot.
    IMG_2535_1073_1.jpg
  • Ian Neale, 67, retired,  seen here with a parsnip, takes his hobby extremely seriously; He works up 80 hours a week on his land and spends a  £1000 a year on fertilisers. He once held a world record for a swede weighing in at 81.5lb but lost it eight hours later to someone in Alaska. Giant vegetable growing is not a hobby for the faint hearted. The growers have to tend to the vegetables almost every day (including Christmas) tending, nurturing, growing and spending thousands on fertilisers, electricity and green houses. The reward is to be crowned world record holder of largest, longest or heaviest in class, cabbages weighing in at 100lb, carrots stretching 19 ft and pumpkins tipping the scales at 800lb. It’s a competitive business though and global; some times the record may stand for only hours before a fellow competitor, as in Ian’s case, knocks a grower off the coveted spot.
    IMG_2422_1003_1.jpg
  • Brothers Kevin, 32, and Gareth, 30, Fortey.  After their father, one of the founders of competitive giant vegetable growing, died the brothers  decided to continue the tradition and may even pass it on to their children. Kevin’s 4 year old son is growing giant sunflowers. Giant vegetable growing is not a hobby for the faint hearted. The growers have to tend to the vegetables almost every day (including Christmas) spending up to 80 hours a week, tending, nurturing, growing and spending thousands on fertilisers, electricity and green houses. The reward is to be crowned world record holder of largest, longest or heaviest in class, cabbages weighing in at 100lb, carrots stretching 19 ft and pumpkins tipping the scales at 800lb.
    IMG_2222_1.jpg
  • Jo Atherton, works a part time at nursery, but his passion is for  growing giant vegetables, He has  grown a  record breaking carrot 19’, 2’’ long and is also a devotee of leek growing and onions. He was set back recently when local kids stole a thousand pounds worth of lighting diverted most likely to grow marijuana plants. He is pictured preparing for the biggest giant veg event of the year, the Bath and West show. Giant vegetable growing is not a hobby for the faint hearted. The growers have to tend to the vegetables almost every day (including Christmas) spending up to 80 hours a week, tending, nurturing, growing and spending thousands on fertilisers, electricity and green houses. The reward is to be crowned world record holder of largest, longest or heaviest in class, cabbages weighing in at 100lb, carrots stretching 19 ft and pumpkins tipping the scales at 800lb.
    IMG_1837_0240_1.jpg
  • Jo Atherton, works a part time at nursery, but his passion is for  growing giant vegetables, He has  grown a  record breaking carrot 19’, 2’’ long and is also a devotee of leek growing and onions. He was set back recently when local kids stole a thousand pounds worth of lighting diverted most likely to grow marijuana plants. He is pictured preparing for the biggest giant veg event of the year, the Bath and West show. Giant vegetable growing is not a hobby for the faint hearted. The growers have to tend to the vegetables almost every day (including Christmas) spending up to 80 hours a week, tending, nurturing, growing and spending thousands on fertilisers, electricity and green houses. The reward is to be crowned world record holder of largest, longest or heaviest in class, cabbages weighing in at 100lb, carrots stretching 19 ft and pumpkins tipping the scales at 800lb.
    IMG_1776_0179_1.jpg
  • Jo Atherton, works a part time at nursery, but his passion is for  growing giant vegetables, He has  grown a  record breaking carrot 19’, 2’’ long and is also a devotee of leek growing and onions. He was set back recently when local kids stole a thousand pounds worth of lighting diverted most likely to grow marijuana plants. He is pictured preparing for the biggest giant veg event of the year, the Bath and West show. Giant vegetable growing is not a hobby for the faint hearted. The growers have to tend to the vegetables almost every day (including Christmas) spending up to 80 hours a week, tending, nurturing, growing and spending thousands on fertilisers, electricity and green houses. The reward is to be crowned world record holder of largest, longest or heaviest in class, cabbages weighing in at 100lb, carrots stretching 19 ft and pumpkins tipping the scales at 800lb.
    IMG_1746_0149_1.jpg
  • Jo Atherton, works a part time at nursery, but his passion is for  growing giant vegetables, He has  grown a  record breaking carrot 19’, 2’’ long and is also a devotee of leek growing and onions. He was set back recently when local kids stole a thousand pounds worth of lighting diverted most likely to grow marijuana plants. He is pictured preparing for the biggest giant veg event of the year, the Bath and West show. Giant vegetable growing is not a hobby for the faint hearted. The growers have to tend to the vegetables almost every day (including Christmas) spending up to 80 hours a week, tending, nurturing, growing and spending thousands on fertilisers, electricity and green houses. The reward is to be crowned world record holder of largest, longest or heaviest in class, cabbages weighing in at 100lb, carrots stretching 19 ft and pumpkins tipping the scales at 800lb.
    IMG_1741_0144_1.jpg
  • Jo Atherton, works a part time at nursery, but his passion is for  growing giant vegetables, He has  grown a  record breaking carrot 19’, 2’’ long and is also a devotee of leek growing and onions. He was set back recently when local kids stole a thousand pounds worth of lighting diverted most likely to grow marijuana plants. He is pictured preparing for the biggest giant veg event of the year, the Bath and West show. Giant vegetable growing is not a hobby for the faint hearted. The growers have to tend to the vegetables almost every day (including Christmas) spending up to 80 hours a week, tending, nurturing, growing and spending thousands on fertilisers, electricity and green houses. The reward is to be crowned world record holder of largest, longest or heaviest in class, cabbages weighing in at 100lb, carrots stretching 19 ft and pumpkins tipping the scales at 800lb.
    IMG_1739_0142_1.jpg
  • Peter Glazebrook with his wife Mary a giant onion and Swede. Peter Glazebrook has held eight world records in his time but is currently holder of only two with heaviest parsnip and longest beetroot, 12lb and 21ft. respectively. Giant vegetable growing is not a hobby for the faint hearted. The growers have to tend to the vegetables almost every day (including Christmas) spending up to 80 hours a week, tending, nurturing, growing and spending thousands on fertilisers, electricity and green houses. The reward is to be crowned world record holder of largest, longest or heaviest in class, cabbages weighing in at 100lb, carrots stretching 19 ft and pumpkins tipping the scales at 800lb. it’s a competitive business though and global; some times the record may stand for only hours before a fellow competitor, somewhere,  knocks a grower off the coveted spot.
    IMG_1556_1.jpg
  • Peter Glazebrook has held eight world records in his time but is currently holder of only two with heaviest parsnip and longest beetroot, 12lb and 21ft. respectively. Giant vegetable growing is not a hobby for the faint hearted. The growers have to tend to the vegetables almost every day (including Christmas) spending up to 80 hours a week, tending, nurturing, growing and spending thousands on fertilisers, electricity and green houses. The reward is to be crowned world record holder of largest, longest or heaviest in class, cabbages weighing in at 100lb, carrots stretching 19 ft and pumpkins tipping the scales at 800lb. it’s a competitive business though and global; some times the record may stand for only hours before a fellow competitor, somewhere,  knocks a grower off the coveted spot.
    IMG_1553_1.jpg
  • Peter Glazebrook with a giant onion. He has held eight world records in his time but is currently holder of only two with heaviest parsnip and longest beetroot, 12lb and 21ft. respectively. Giant vegetable growing is not a hobby for the faint hearted. The growers have to tend to the vegetables almost every day (including Christmas) spending up to 80 hours a week, tending, nurturing, growing and spending thousands on fertilisers, electricity and green houses. The reward is to be crowned world record holder of largest, longest or heaviest in class, cabbages weighing in at 100lb, carrots stretching 19 ft and pumpkins tipping the scales at 800lb. it’s a competitive business though and global; some times the record may stand for only hours before a fellow competitor, somewhere,  knocks a grower off the coveted spot.
    IMG_1505_1.jpg
  • Peter Glazebrook with a giant onion. He has held eight world records in his time but is currently holder of only two with heaviest parsnip and longest beetroot, 12lb and 21ft. respectively. Giant vegetable growing is not a hobby for the faint hearted. The growers have to tend to the vegetables almost every day (including Christmas) spending up to 80 hours a week, tending, nurturing, growing and spending thousands on fertilisers, electricity and green houses. The reward is to be crowned world record holder of largest, longest or heaviest in class, cabbages weighing in at 100lb, carrots stretching 19 ft and pumpkins tipping the scales at 800lb. it’s a competitive business though and global; some times the record may stand for only hours before a fellow competitor, somewhere,  knocks a grower off the coveted spot.
    IMG_1464_1.jpg
  • Huge bonfire on bonfire night in Battersea Park, London. This big fire is set for the gathered crowd to celebrate Guy Fawkes Night which is always celebrated on 5th November.
    20101106bonfireA.jpg
  • George Rodgers, 63, a Cornish farmer of at least three generations grows giant vegetables on a quarter acre plot. The seed for his cabbages comes from his father and he provides the seed he says for 85 percent of the cabbages at the main Bath and West Show, which he is preparing for now. Giant vegetable growing is not a hobby for the faint hearted. The growers have to tend to the vegetables almost every day (including Christmas) with a commitment varying from  2-3 hours an evening to the most committed spending up to 80 hours a week, tending, nurturing, growing and spending thousands on fertilisers, electricity and green houses.  The reward is to be crowned world record holder of largest, longest or heaviest in class, cabbages weighing in at 100lb, carrots stretching 19 ft and pumpkins tipping the scales at 800lb. it’s a competitive business though and global; some times the record may stand for only hours before a fellow competitor somewhere in the world knocks a grower off the coveted spot.
    IMG_9684_1182_1.jpg
  • George Rodgers, 63, a Cornish farmer of at least three generations grows giant vegetables on a quarter acre plot. The seed for his cabbages comes from his father and he provides the seed he says for 85 percent of the cabbages at the main Bath and West Show, which he is preparing for now. Giant vegetable growing is not a hobby for the faint hearted. The growers have to tend to the vegetables almost every day (including Christmas) with a commitment varying from  2-3 hours an evening to the most committed spending up to 80 hours a week, tending, nurturing, growing and spending thousands on fertilisers, electricity and green houses.  The reward is to be crowned world record holder of largest, longest or heaviest in class, cabbages weighing in at 100lb, carrots stretching 19 ft and pumpkins tipping the scales at 800lb. it’s a competitive business though and global; some times the record may stand for only hours before a fellow competitor somewhere in the world knocks a grower off the coveted spot.
    IMG_9579_1.jpg
  • George Rodgers, 63, a Cornish farmer of at least three generations grows giant vegetables on a quarter acre plot. The seed for his cabbages comes from his father and he provides the seed he says for 85 percent of the cabbages at the main Bath and West Show, which he is preparing for now. Giant vegetable growing is not a hobby for the faint hearted. The growers have to tend to the vegetables almost every day (including Christmas) with a commitment varying from  2-3 hours an evening to the most committed spending up to 80 hours a week, tending, nurturing, growing and spending thousands on fertilisers, electricity and green houses.  The reward is to be crowned world record holder of largest, longest or heaviest in class, cabbages weighing in at 100lb, carrots stretching 19 ft and pumpkins tipping the scales at 800lb. it’s a competitive business though and global; some times the record may stand for only hours before a fellow competitor somewhere in the world knocks a grower off the coveted spot.
    IMG_9515_1.jpg
  • George Rodgers, 63, a Cornish farmer of at least three generations grows giant vegetables on a quarter acre plot. The seed for his cabbages comes from his father and he provides the seed he says for 85 percent of the cabbages at the main Bath and West Show, which he is preparing for now. Giant vegetable growing is not a hobby for the faint hearted. The growers have to tend to the vegetables almost every day (including Christmas) with a commitment varying from  2-3 hours an evening to the most committed spending up to 80 hours a week, tending, nurturing, growing and spending thousands on fertilisers, electricity and green houses.  The reward is to be crowned world record holder of largest, longest or heaviest in class, cabbages weighing in at 100lb, carrots stretching 19 ft and pumpkins tipping the scales at 800lb. it’s a competitive business though and global; some times the record may stand for only hours before a fellow competitor somewhere in the world knocks a grower off the coveted spot.
    IMG_9476_1.jpg
  • David Thomas,42, spends his days producing perfectly proportioned vegetables for supermarkets but in the evening he devotes himself to his hobby growing outsized vegetables. Giant vegetable growing is not a hobby for the faint hearted. The growers have to tend to the vegetables almost every day (including Christmas) spending up to 80 hours a week, tending, nurturing, growing and spending thousands on fertilisers, electricity and green houses. The reward is to be crowned world record holder of largest, longest or heaviest in class, cabbages weighing in at 100lb, carrots stretching 19 ft and pumpkins tipping the scales at 800lb. It’s a competitive business though and global; some times the record may stand for only hours before a fellow competitor, somewhere,  knocks a grower off the coveted spot.
    IMG_9445_1.jpg
  • Ian Neale, 67, retired,  seen here with his swede, takes his hobby extremely seriously; He works up 80 hours a week on his land and spends a  £1000 a year on fertilisers. He once held a world record for a swede weighing in at 81.5lb but lost it eight hours later to someone in Alaska. Giant vegetable growing is not a hobby for the faint hearted. The growers have to tend to the vegetables almost every day (including Christmas) tending, nurturing, growing and spending thousands on fertilisers, electricity and green houses. The reward is to be crowned world record holder of largest, longest or heaviest in class, cabbages weighing in at 100lb, carrots stretching 19 ft and pumpkins tipping the scales at 800lb. It’s a competitive business though and global; some times the record may stand for only hours before a fellow competitor, as in Ian’s case, knocks a grower off the coveted spot.
    IMG_2471_1035_1.jpg
  • Peter Glazebrook has held eight world records in his time but is currently holder of only two with heaviest parsnip and longest beetroot, 12lb and 21ft. respectively. Giant vegetable growing is not a hobby for the faint hearted. The growers have to tend to the vegetables almost every day (including Christmas) spending up to 80 hours a week, tending, nurturing, growing and spending thousands on fertilisers, electricity and green houses. The reward is to be crowned world record holder of largest, longest or heaviest in class, cabbages weighing in at 100lb, carrots stretching 19 ft and pumpkins tipping the scales at 800lb. it’s a competitive business though and global; some times the record may stand for only hours before a fellow competitor, somewhere,  knocks a grower off the coveted spot.
    IMG_1550_1.jpg
  • Peter Glazebrook with a giant cabbage. He has held eight world records in his time but is currently holder of only two with heaviest parsnip and longest beetroot, 12lb and 21ft. respectively. Giant vegetable growing is not a hobby for the faint hearted. The growers have to tend to the vegetables almost every day (including Christmas) spending up to 80 hours a week, tending, nurturing, growing and spending thousands on fertilisers, electricity and green houses. The reward is to be crowned world record holder of largest, longest or heaviest in class, cabbages weighing in at 100lb, carrots stretching 19 ft and pumpkins tipping the scales at 800lb. it’s a competitive business though and global; some times the record may stand for only hours before a fellow competitor, somewhere,  knocks a grower off the coveted spot.
    IMG_1333_1.jpg
  • Hackney. Broadway market. Gujerati food stall.
    july28-005.jpg
  • The Carnival Cruise ship Fun Ship Ecstasy is anchored at night in Cancun, Mexico mid-way during a weeklong cruise around the Gulf of Mexico. With the green light from a quayside hotel and the orange light from a setting sun, the lights from the vessel make it look like a floating city. The Panamanian-registered MS Ecstasy is a 70,367 ton cruise ship carries 2,052 passengers and 920 crew whose routes are mainly around the Gulf and Caribbean Sea. Carnival's ships are known for their Las Vegas decor and entertainment, calling its vessels Fun Ships. The MS Ecstasy is a Fantasy class cruise ship featuring two pools, whirlpools, a variety of dining options, nightclubs, a casino, and duty-free shopping.
    cruise_ship01-07-05-1996_1.jpg
  • Largely American passengers re-join their cruise holiday voyage around the Gulf of Mexico during a day's stop-over in Cancun, Mexico. Walking back with shopping and tourist trinkets the holidaymakers walk along the port's quayside to have their identity passes checked before being allowed back on board the Fun Ship Ecstasy. The surface is wet and a warning sign in Spanish reads Walk with care and the pedestrians make their way back to their temporary home to continue their voyage. The Panamanian-registered MS Ecstasy is a 70,367 ton cruise ship carrying 2,052 passengers and 920 crew whose routes are mainly around the Gulf and Caribbean Sea.
    cruise_ship-07-05-1996_1.jpg
  • Red volcanic rock formations in the Caldera de Taburiente National Park in La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain. La Palma, also San Miguel de La Palma, is the most north-westerly Canary Island in Spain. La Palma has an area of 706 km2 making it the fifth largest of the seven main Canary Islands. Caldera de Taburiente National Park Spanish: Parque Nacional de la Caldera de Taburiente is a national park on the island of La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain. It contains the enormous expanse of the Caldera de Taburiente, once believed to be a huge crater, but nowadays known to be a mountain arch with a curious crater shape, which dominates the northern part of the island. It was designated as a national park in 1954. The caldera is about 10 km across, and in places the walls tower 2000 m over the caldera floor.
    20170223_la palma red rock_002.jpg
  • View from the Roque de los Muchachos looking south to the Caldera de Taburiente National Park in La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain. La Palma, also San Miguel de La Palma, is the most north-westerly Canary Island in Spain. La Palma has an area of 706 km2 making it the fifth largest of the seven main Canary Islands. Caldera de Taburiente National Park Spanish: Parque Nacional de la Caldera de Taburiente is a national park on the island of La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain. It contains the enormous expanse of the Caldera de Taburiente, once believed to be a huge crater, but nowadays known to be a mountain arch with a curious crater shape, which dominates the northern part of the island. It was designated as a national park in 1954. The caldera is about 10 km across, and in places the walls tower 2000 m over the caldera floor.
    20170223_la palma caldera muchachos_...jpg
  • View from the Roque de los Muchachos above the clouds looking south to the Caldera de Taburiente National Park in La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain. La Palma, also San Miguel de La Palma, is the most north-westerly Canary Island in Spain. La Palma has an area of 706 km2 making it the fifth largest of the seven main Canary Islands. Caldera de Taburiente National Park Spanish: Parque Nacional de la Caldera de Taburiente is a national park on the island of La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain. It contains the enormous expanse of the Caldera de Taburiente, once believed to be a huge crater, but nowadays known to be a mountain arch with a curious crater shape, which dominates the northern part of the island. It was designated as a national park in 1954. The caldera is about 10 km across, and in places the walls tower 2000 m over the caldera floor.
    20170223_la palma caldera muchachos_...jpg
  • View above the clouds looking south to the Caldera de Taburiente National Park in La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain. La Palma, also San Miguel de La Palma, is the most north-westerly Canary Island in Spain. La Palma has an area of 706 km2 making it the fifth largest of the seven main Canary Islands. Caldera de Taburiente National Park Spanish: Parque Nacional de la Caldera de Taburiente is a national park on the island of La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain. It contains the enormous expanse of the Caldera de Taburiente, once believed to be a huge crater, but nowadays known to be a mountain arch with a curious crater shape, which dominates the northern part of the island. It was designated as a national park in 1954. The caldera is about 10 km across, and in places the walls tower 2000 m over the caldera floor.
    20170223_la palma caldera muchachos_...jpg
  • Road to nowhere passing through red volcanic rock formations in the Caldera de Taburiente National Park in La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain. La Palma, also San Miguel de La Palma, is the most north-westerly Canary Island in Spain. La Palma has an area of 706 km2 making it the fifth largest of the seven main Canary Islands. Caldera de Taburiente National Park Spanish: Parque Nacional de la Caldera de Taburiente is a national park on the island of La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain. It contains the enormous expanse of the Caldera de Taburiente, once believed to be a huge crater, but nowadays known to be a mountain arch with a curious crater shape, which dominates the northern part of the island. It was designated as a national park in 1954. The caldera is about 10 km across, and in places the walls tower 2000 m over the caldera floor.
    20170223_la palma caldera muchachos_...jpg
  • View looking north to the Caldera de Taburiente National Park in La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain. La Palma, also San Miguel de La Palma, is the most north-westerly Canary Island in Spain. La Palma has an area of 706 km2 making it the fifth largest of the seven main Canary Islands. Caldera de Taburiente National Park Spanish: Parque Nacional de la Caldera de Taburiente is a national park on the island of La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain. It contains the enormous expanse of the Caldera de Taburiente, once believed to be a huge crater, but nowadays known to be a mountain arch with a curious crater shape, which dominates the northern part of the island. It was designated as a national park in 1954. The caldera is about 10 km across, and in places the walls tower 2000 m over the caldera floor.
    20170223_la palma caldera muchachos_...jpg
  • Dungeness Lighthouse floodlit at dusk on the Kent coast, UK. Dungeness lies at the southernmost point of Kent and is an enormous flat of sand and shingle which has been a hazard to shipping for hundreds of years. Lighthouses were first mentioned at Dungeness in 1600 however the present Dungeness lighthouse which is managed by Trinity House Lighthouse Corporation was built in 1961 and was converted to automatic operation in 1991.
    42-06_1.jpg
  • Mayflies hatching in Martley, England, United Kingdom. Mayflies hatch, or emerge as adults, from spring to autumn, not necessarily in May, in enormous numbers. Fly fishermen make use of mayfly hatches by choosing artificial fishing flies that resemble the species in question.
    20190525_martley mayflies_002.jpg
  • A exterior of the now ruined Shildon Engine House, on 29th September 2017, in Blanchland, Northumberland, England. Built around 1805 to house a Cornish pumping engine which kept the network of lead mines operating underneath from flooding. The North Pennines is known for its deposits of lead ore etc., a large part of the areas economy. In the 1840s an enormous steam engine was installed in an attempt to keep the mines dry enough to work. Following decommissioning, the engine house was converted to a series of flats for mining families. It was finally abandoned around 100 years ago and has been derelict ever since. The Engine House is a dramatic reminder of a once thriving lead mining community of 170 people. The population declined after the mid-1800s when cheaper lead began to be imported from abroad, and young Shildon families emigrated to the goldmining areas of Australia and America.
    shildon-01-29-09-2017.jpg
  • Red volcanic rock formations in the Caldera de Taburiente National Park in La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain. La Palma, also San Miguel de La Palma, is the most north-westerly Canary Island in Spain. La Palma has an area of 706 km2 making it the fifth largest of the seven main Canary Islands. Caldera de Taburiente National Park Spanish: Parque Nacional de la Caldera de Taburiente is a national park on the island of La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain. It contains the enormous expanse of the Caldera de Taburiente, once believed to be a huge crater, but nowadays known to be a mountain arch with a curious crater shape, which dominates the northern part of the island. It was designated as a national park in 1954. The caldera is about 10 km across, and in places the walls tower 2000 m over the caldera floor.
    20170223_la palma red rock_006.jpg
  • Red volcanic rock formations in the Caldera de Taburiente National Park in La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain. La Palma, also San Miguel de La Palma, is the most north-westerly Canary Island in Spain. La Palma has an area of 706 km2 making it the fifth largest of the seven main Canary Islands. Caldera de Taburiente National Park Spanish: Parque Nacional de la Caldera de Taburiente is a national park on the island of La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain. It contains the enormous expanse of the Caldera de Taburiente, once believed to be a huge crater, but nowadays known to be a mountain arch with a curious crater shape, which dominates the northern part of the island. It was designated as a national park in 1954. The caldera is about 10 km across, and in places the walls tower 2000 m over the caldera floor.
    20170223_la palma red rock_004.jpg
  • Red volcanic rock formations in the Caldera de Taburiente National Park in La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain. La Palma, also San Miguel de La Palma, is the most north-westerly Canary Island in Spain. La Palma has an area of 706 km2 making it the fifth largest of the seven main Canary Islands. Caldera de Taburiente National Park Spanish: Parque Nacional de la Caldera de Taburiente is a national park on the island of La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain. It contains the enormous expanse of the Caldera de Taburiente, once believed to be a huge crater, but nowadays known to be a mountain arch with a curious crater shape, which dominates the northern part of the island. It was designated as a national park in 1954. The caldera is about 10 km across, and in places the walls tower 2000 m over the caldera floor.
    20170223_la palma red rock_005.jpg
  • Red volcanic rock formations in the Caldera de Taburiente National Park in La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain. La Palma, also San Miguel de La Palma, is the most north-westerly Canary Island in Spain. La Palma has an area of 706 km2 making it the fifth largest of the seven main Canary Islands. Caldera de Taburiente National Park Spanish: Parque Nacional de la Caldera de Taburiente is a national park on the island of La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain. It contains the enormous expanse of the Caldera de Taburiente, once believed to be a huge crater, but nowadays known to be a mountain arch with a curious crater shape, which dominates the northern part of the island. It was designated as a national park in 1954. The caldera is about 10 km across, and in places the walls tower 2000 m over the caldera floor.
    20170223_la palma red rock_001.jpg
  • View above the clouds looking south to the Caldera de Taburiente National Park in La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain. La Palma, also San Miguel de La Palma, is the most north-westerly Canary Island in Spain. La Palma has an area of 706 km2 making it the fifth largest of the seven main Canary Islands. Caldera de Taburiente National Park Spanish: Parque Nacional de la Caldera de Taburiente is a national park on the island of La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain. It contains the enormous expanse of the Caldera de Taburiente, once believed to be a huge crater, but nowadays known to be a mountain arch with a curious crater shape, which dominates the northern part of the island. It was designated as a national park in 1954. The caldera is about 10 km across, and in places the walls tower 2000 m over the caldera floor.
    20170223_la palma caldera muchachos_...jpg
  • View looking south to the Caldera de Taburiente National Park in La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain. La Palma, also San Miguel de La Palma, is the most north-westerly Canary Island in Spain. La Palma has an area of 706 km2 making it the fifth largest of the seven main Canary Islands. Caldera de Taburiente National Park Spanish: Parque Nacional de la Caldera de Taburiente is a national park on the island of La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain. It contains the enormous expanse of the Caldera de Taburiente, once believed to be a huge crater, but nowadays known to be a mountain arch with a curious crater shape, which dominates the northern part of the island. It was designated as a national park in 1954. The caldera is about 10 km across, and in places the walls tower 2000 m over the caldera floor.
    20170223_la palma caldera muchachos_...jpg
  • The telescopes of the Roque de los Muchachos Observatory in the Caldera de Taburiente National Park in La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain. La Palma, also San Miguel de La Palma, is the most north-westerly Canary Island in Spain. La Palma has an area of 706 km2 making it the fifth largest of the seven main Canary Islands. Caldera de Taburiente National Park Spanish: Parque Nacional de la Caldera de Taburiente is a national park on the island of La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain. It contains the enormous expanse of the Caldera de Taburiente, once believed to be a huge crater, but nowadays known to be a mountain arch with a curious crater shape, which dominates the northern part of the island. It was designated as a national park in 1954. The caldera is about 10 km across, and in places the walls tower 2000 m over the caldera floor.
    20170223_la palma caldera muchachos_...jpg
  • The telescopes of the Roque de los Muchachos Observatory in the Caldera de Taburiente National Park in La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain. La Palma, also San Miguel de La Palma, is the most north-westerly Canary Island in Spain. La Palma has an area of 706 km2 making it the fifth largest of the seven main Canary Islands. Caldera de Taburiente National Park Spanish: Parque Nacional de la Caldera de Taburiente is a national park on the island of La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain. It contains the enormous expanse of the Caldera de Taburiente, once believed to be a huge crater, but nowadays known to be a mountain arch with a curious crater shape, which dominates the northern part of the island. It was designated as a national park in 1954. The caldera is about 10 km across, and in places the walls tower 2000 m over the caldera floor.
    20170223_la palma caldera muchachos_...jpg
  • Fish River Canyon. The Fish River rises in the hills to the north and only flows sporadically, but over the millennia it has carved an enormous canyon 500 metres deep into the unstable surface of Namibia, to form the second deepest canyon in the world. The walls of the canyon are an object lesson in geology: every layer for the last 1000 million years is clearly visible.
    010IMG_2177_1_1.jpg
  • Lilly pond in front of Angkor Wat<br />
Angkor is one of the most important archaeological sites in South-East Asia. Stretching over some 400 km2, including forested area, Angkor Archaeological Park contains the magnificent remains of the different capitals of the Khmer Empire, from the 9th to the 15th century.<br />
The enormous moat surrounding the shrine suggests the oceans at the edge of the world.
    _F3A7020_1_1.jpg
  • During a journey into America's hinterlands, days after the September 11th attacks in New York and Washington DC, a team of New York City Police Department (NYPD) and a US Marshal walks through a barrier after spending a traumatic shift searching for human remains in the 'Pile' of Ground Zero. Making their way through the general public, they have a look of exhaustion and stress. Haunted but still mindful of the enormous task ahead to investigate the crimes committed here, they go towards a welcome rest. The streets are tall above them and the sky a clear blue as the men carry their hard hats with dust masks still around their necks - protection from the then unknown hazardous elements and chemicals in the environment.
    september11th015-17-09_2001_1_1.jpg
  • Specialist Corporal Mal Faulder is an armourer engineer (qualified to handle ejection seats and weaponry on military jets) but here in the elite 'Red Arrows', Britain's prestigious Royal Air Force aerobatic team he is seen polishing the aircraft's flying surfaces using wool and cleaning fluid on the morning of the team's PDA Day. PDA (or 'Public Display Authority'), is a special test flight when their every move and mistake is assessed and graded. Corporal Faulder is to buff up the airplane for an extra special shine on such an important day and we see the UK's Union Jack flag on the side of the diagonal stripes of the tail fin. The Red Arrows ground crew take enormous pride in their role as supporting the aviators whose air displays are known around the world. Blues like Mal outnumber the pilots 8:1. Without them, the Red Arrows couldn't fly.
    Red_Arrows129_RBA_1.jpg
  • Darren Budziszewski is a Junior Technician engineer in the elite 'Red Arrows', Britain's prestigious Royal Air Force aerobatic team. He is seen carefully standing in the cockpit of a Hawk jet closely inspecting the Plexiglass canopy for smears and scratches. Stooping at the open surface while keeping back flat and his knees bent, its posture that the RAF teaches its employees. Darren polishes the aircraft before its pilot emerges from the building at RAF Akrotiri, Cyprus. The Red Arrows ground crew take enormous pride in their role as supporting the team whose air displays are known around the world, cleaning the red airplanes on their day off, so particular are they. The image is backlit and both canopy and man are bottom-weighted to allow us to see space and sky. Specialists like Darren outnumber the pilots 8:1 and without them, the Red Arrows couldn't fly.
    Red_Arrows099_RBA_1.jpg
  • A shopper laden with shopping bags emerges from the Paris chocolatier shop Pierre Hermé on Rue Vaugirard. Carrying the bags is a chocoholic man who has spent an enormous amount of money on produce from this renowned French chocolatier who specialises in such pastry delicacies as macaroons. Hermé is a French pastry chef and heir to four generations of Alsatian bakery and pastry-making tradition. Pierre Hermé was awarded "Chevalier de la Légion d'honneur" by Jacques Chirac on May 3, 2007, just before Nicolas Sarkozy's election. He owns seven sales outlets in Tokyo, six in Paris, one in London, and an online shop.
    paris_shopper01-14-07-1992.jpg
  • Mothers sit with their babies in pushchairs on park benches in the Silesian industrial town of Zabrze. A mining town known formerly as Hindenburg until 1945, under Stalinist thought, miners were considered a “working class elite” and were rewarded with higher wages and better social benefits but after communism, Zabrze has a high rate among mother of Ovarian Cancer because of the pollution, caused by the large concentration of industry, the triangle of land between Zabrze, Chorzów, and Bytom has locally been known as 'death triangle'. Since the collapse of communism in 1989, the environmental situation has steadily been improving due the restructuring of the Silesian industry although more than 250,000 jobs have been lost in coal mining since the reintroduction of capitalism. At the same time, enterprises are enjoying enormous profits.
    misc_poland10-06-09-2007.jpg
  • Gathered on the Docklands Light Railway track, a group of police investigators and health and safety experts stand beneath the devastation and wreckage caused by the IRA’s docklands bomb on 10th February 1996. Office windows have been blown out and shattered glass lies everywhere making these workplaces unusable for many months afterwards. We see the men under the tall buildings looking tiny in comparison to the chaotic aftermath of this enormous explosion the day before. The bombing marked the end of a 17-month IRA ceasefire during which Irish, British and American leaders worked for a political solution to the troubles in Northern Ireland. 2 people were killed in the half-tonne lorry bomb blast which caused an estimated £85 million damage.
    docklands_bomb_team-11-02-1996_1.jpg
  • En-route to Cancun in Mexico, two lady passengers of Carnival Cruise's Fun Ship Ecstasy are seated at The Neon Bar one evening. Lighting a cigarette that has been duplicated by the action of camera flash and ambient light, one of the girls has a packet of Marlboros on the bar plus an empty cocktail glass that has a Carnival Cruises napkin which has stuck to the glass. The Neon Bar features an enormous circular piano which doubles as a bar for those who like to sing along and neon artwork is lit behind the females, one the shape of another cocktail glass. Carnival’s ships are known for their Las Vegas decor and entertainment. The cruise line calls its ships The Fun Ships and the MS Ecstasy is a Fantasy class cruise ship featuring two pools, whirlpools, a variety of dining options, nightclubs, a casino, and duty-free shopping.
    cruise_cocktails-07-05-1996_1.jpg
  • Rubbish piled up in bags outside the Lyceum Theatre in the West End of London, UK. In this part of town it is a comon sight to see enormous piles of waste sitting, waiting to be collected, and is unsightly in an are where tourism is rife.
    20120922rubbish in west end_A_1.jpg
  • Ta Promh is one of Angkor's most famous temples. Situated to the east of Angkor Thom, this temple is a testement to the jungle surrounding it. Many collapses have taken place and the enormous kapok trees of the encroaching jungle has engulfed many of it's walls. Known as the original "Tomb Raider" temple, it was famously used as a set for the film of the same name. Constructed by Jayavarman VII in 1186, Ta Promh was a Buddhist monastery which was home to 12,000 people. A further 80,000 people were employed locally to service the temple and it's inhabitants.
    2006-11-08_Ta Promh_A_1.jpg
  • Ta Promh is one of Angkor's most famous temples. Situated to the east of Angkor Thom, this temple is a testement to the jungle surrounding it. Many collapses have taken place and the enormous kapok trees of the encroaching jungle has engulfed many of it's walls. Known as the original "Tomb Raider" temple, it was famously used as a set for the film of the same name. Constructed by Jayavarman VII in 1186, Ta Promh was a Buddhist monastery which was home to 12,000 people. A further 80,000 people were employed locally to service the temple and it's inhabitants.
    2006-11-05_Ta Promh_Y_1.jpg
  • Fish River Canyon. The Fish River rises in the hills to the north and only flows sporadically, but over the millennia it has carved an enormous canyon 500 metres deep into the unstable surface of Namibia, to form the second deepest canyon in the world. The walls of the canyon are an object lesson in geology: every layer for the last 1000 million years is clearly visible.
    016Kalahari_0158_1.jpg
  • A couple cuddle at the Neon Bar on the cruise ship Ecstasy, en-route from Miami to Cancun in Mexico, on 15th May 1996, in Miami, Florida, USA. The Neon Bar features an enormous circular piano which doubles as a bar for those who like to sing along and neon artwork is lit behind the females, one the shape of another cocktail glass. Carnival’s ships are known for their Las Vegas decor and entertainment. The cruise line calls its ships The Fun Ships and the MS Ecstasy is a Fantasy class cruise ship featuring two pools, whirlpools, a variety of dining options, nightclubs, a casino, and duty-free shopping.
    cruise_passengers-15-05-1996.jpg
  • Mayflies hatching in Martley, England, United Kingdom. Mayflies hatch, or emerge as adults, from spring to autumn, not necessarily in May, in enormous numbers. Fly fishermen make use of mayfly hatches by choosing artificial fishing flies that resemble the species in question.
    20190525_martley mayflies_001.jpg
  • A man who has just cleaned the floors of a church stands below an enormous image of San Gennaro, the patron saint of Naples.
    SFE_171007_029.jpg
  • View from the Roque de los Muchachos above the clouds looking south to the Caldera de Taburiente National Park in La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain. La Palma, also San Miguel de La Palma, is the most north-westerly Canary Island in Spain. La Palma has an area of 706 km2 making it the fifth largest of the seven main Canary Islands. Caldera de Taburiente National Park Spanish: Parque Nacional de la Caldera de Taburiente is a national park on the island of La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain. It contains the enormous expanse of the Caldera de Taburiente, once believed to be a huge crater, but nowadays known to be a mountain arch with a curious crater shape, which dominates the northern part of the island. It was designated as a national park in 1954. The caldera is about 10 km across, and in places the walls tower 2000 m over the caldera floor.
    20170223_la palma caldera muchachos_...jpg
  • View of the shadow of the mountains onto the cloads below from the Roque de los Muchachos looking south to the Caldera de Taburiente National Park in La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain. La Palma, also San Miguel de La Palma, is the most north-westerly Canary Island in Spain. La Palma has an area of 706 km2 making it the fifth largest of the seven main Canary Islands. Caldera de Taburiente National Park Spanish: Parque Nacional de la Caldera de Taburiente is a national park on the island of La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain. It contains the enormous expanse of the Caldera de Taburiente, once believed to be a huge crater, but nowadays known to be a mountain arch with a curious crater shape, which dominates the northern part of the island. It was designated as a national park in 1954. The caldera is about 10 km across, and in places the walls tower 2000 m over the caldera floor.
    20170223_la palma caldera muchachos_...jpg
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