Show Navigation

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 22 images found }

Loading ()...

  • Portrait of two Akha Nuquie women wearing traditional clothing on their way to back to the village of Ban Peryenxangmai carrying firewood collected from the surrounding forest, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. The forest around an Akha village provides its inhabitants with a number of essential products including firewood, food and building materials.
    DSCF4697cc_1.jpg
  • An elderly Romanian peasant farmer carries tree branches home to use as firewood, Poienile Izei, Maramures, Romania
    174-06_1.jpg
  • Logs for firewood and a pair of dirty wellies on the doorstep outside a peasant farmer's home in Botiza, Maramures, Romania.
    41-16_1.jpg
  • An Akha Nuquie woman carries firewood home along the new road to the remote village of Ban Chakhampa, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. Whilst not affected directly by the Nam Ou Cascade Hydropower Dam 6 construction project, the village of Ban Chakhampa has benefitted from the new road passing by on the way to Ban Watai, a village which has recently been relocated due to the dam construction.
    DSCF4639cc_1.jpg
  • An elderly peasant farmer carries a tree branches home to use as firewood, Poienile Izei, Maramures, Romania
    174-03_1.jpg
  • A bundle of pine wood for sale as firewood at a roadside stall in Xieng Khouang Province, Lao PDR.
    A_8982_1_1.jpg
  • The Jungle, Centre for migrants Calais. A Sudanese refugee collects firewood to make fires for cooking and keeping warm at night.
    calais-9857_1.jpg
  • A Laoseng ethnic minority woman returns to the old village to collect firewood after her village of Ban Watai has been temporarily relocated away from the Nam Ou river, during the construction of the Nam Ou Cascade Hydropower Project Dam 6, Phongsaly Province, Lao PDR. The Nam Ou river connects small riverside villages and provides the rural population with food for fishing. It is a place where children play and families bathe, where men fish and women wash their clothes. But this river and others like it, that are the lifeline of rural communities and local economies are being blocked, diverted and decimated by dams. The Lao government hopes to transform the country into “the battery of Southeast Asia” by exporting the power to Thailand and Vietnam.
    A0024675cc_1.jpg
  • Central African Republic. August 2012. Road to Bouar -  man walking and transporting firewood
    car5_4134_1.jpg
  • The Jungle, Centre for migrants Calais. Sudanese refugees collect firewood to make fires for cooking and keeping warm at night.
    calais-9854_1.jpg
  • An elderly man chopping up a tree with an axe for firewood in the morning sunshine, on the 3rd of March 2020 in  the village of Raniswara, Ghairung, Gorkha, Nepal.
    Nepal-Gorkha-Region-6344.jpg
  • A Laoseng ethnic minority woman carries firewood in a traditional bamboo basket to the new village from the old village of Ban Phoumeuang  which is being temporarily relocated away from the Nam Ou river, during the construction of the Nam Ou Cascade Hydropower Project Dam 6. The Nam Ou river connects small riverside villages and provides the rural population with food for fishing. It is a place where children play and families bathe, where men fish and women wash their clothes. But this river and others like it, that are the lifeline of rural communities and local economies are being blocked, diverted and decimated by dams. The Lao government hopes to transform the country into “the battery of Southeast Asia” by exporting the power to Thailand and Vietnam.
    L1080130cc_1.jpg
  • Central African Republic. August 2012.  Bouar. Man and boy walking firewood to market
    car7_4257_1.jpg
  • A boy carrying firewood walks past the high rise blocks of Rajuk Uttara Apartment Project in section 16 of Uttara residential model town district on the 30th of September 2018 in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Agricultural land is slowly being taken over in the districts around Dhaka for housing development.
    Bangladesh-Dhaka-Housing-Development...jpg
  • An elderly man chopping up a tree with an axe for firewood in the morning sunshine, on the 3rd of March 2020 in  the village of Raniswara, Ghairung, Gorkha, Nepal.
    Nepal-Gorkha-Region-6326.jpg
  • A Laoseng ethnic minority woman returns to the old village to collect firewood after her village of Ban Watai has been temporarily relocated away from the Nam Ou river, during the construction of the Nam Ou Cascade Hydropower Project Dam 6, Phongsaly Province, Lao PDR. The Nam Ou river connects small riverside villages and provides the rural population with food for fishing. It is a place where children play and families bathe, where men fish and women wash their clothes. But this river and others like it, that are the lifeline of rural communities and local economies are being blocked, diverted and decimated by dams. The Lao government hopes to transform the country into “the battery of Southeast Asia” by exporting the power to Thailand and Vietnam.
    A0024666cc_1.jpg
  • Central African Republic. August 2012.  Village near Bouar. Boy with catapault next to pile of firewood.
    car7_4247_1.jpg
  • A Khmu woman cooks lunch over an open wood fire in the field shelter on her upland rice field, Ban Chaleunsouk, Luang Namtha Province, Lao PDR.
    40-01_1_1.jpg
  • Young man cutting wood with a chainsaw with no shirt on next to a pile of timber, community farm, Devon, UK
    IMG_9734_1.jpg
  • Dongria Kondh Tribal women search for firewood in the forest near their village on the hills around Niyamgiri. Kankasarpa, Orissa, India. The Dongria Kondh are a protected 'Scheduled' Caste of Original (aboriginal) people that practice animism and live a settled rural life. Their deity is a mountain from which a mining company, Vedanta is seeking to extract bauxite which will largely destroy the mountain and the Kondh's traditional way of life.
    SFE_070301_0196.jpg
  • An Akha Nuquie woman wearing her traditional costume on her way to back to the village of Ban Peryenxangmai with a roll of banana leaves collected from the forest, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. The forest around an Akha village provides its inhabitants with a number of essential products including firewood, food and building materials.
    DSCF4676cc_1.jpg
  • Early morning mist in the trees along a footpath through the forest between remote and roadless Akha Nuquie villages of Ban Chakhampa and Ban Peryenxangkao in Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. Forest around an Akha village provides its inhabitants with a number of essential products including firewood, food and building materials.
    DSCF4674cc_1.jpg
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

In Pictures

  • About
  • Contact
  • Join In Pictures
  • Archive
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area