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  • Littondale is a Yorkshire Dale in the Craven district of North Yorkshire, England, UK. Known for it’s smooth rolling hills and traditional farmhouses that date from the 17th century.
    20150919_littondale lanscape_O.jpg
  • Littondale is a Yorkshire Dale in the Craven district of North Yorkshire, England, UK. Known for it’s smooth rolling hills and traditional farmhouses that date from the 17th century.
    20150919_littondale lanscape_S.jpg
  • Littondale is a Yorkshire Dale in the Craven district of North Yorkshire, England, UK. Known for it’s smooth rolling hills and traditional farmhouses that date from the 17th century.
    20150919_littondale lanscape_N.jpg
  • Littondale is a Yorkshire Dale in the Craven district of North Yorkshire, England, UK. Known for it’s smooth rolling hills and traditional farmhouses that date from the 17th century.
    20150919_littondale lanscape_M.jpg
  • Littondale is a Yorkshire Dale in the Craven district of North Yorkshire, England, UK. Known for it’s smooth rolling hills and traditional farmhouses that date from the 17th century.
    20150919_littondale lanscape_A.jpg
  • Littondale is a Yorkshire Dale in the Craven district of North Yorkshire, England, UK. Known for it’s smooth rolling hills and traditional farmhouses that date from the 17th century.
    20150919_littondale lanscape_C.jpg
  • Littondale is a Yorkshire Dale in the Craven district of North Yorkshire, England, UK. Known for it’s smooth rolling hills and traditional farmhouses that date from the 17th century.
    20150919_littondale traditional farm...jpg
  • Littondale is a Yorkshire Dale in the Craven district of North Yorkshire, England, UK. Known for it’s smooth rolling hills and traditional farmhouses that date from the 17th century.
    20150919_littondale traditional farm...jpg
  • Littondale is a Yorkshire Dale in the Craven district of North Yorkshire, England, UK. Known for it’s smooth rolling hills and traditional farmhouses that date from the 17th century.
    20150919_littondale traditional farm...jpg
  • Littondale is a Yorkshire Dale in the Craven district of North Yorkshire, England, UK. Known for it’s smooth rolling hills and traditional farmhouses that date from the 17th century.
    20150919_littondale traditional farm...jpg
  • Littondale is a Yorkshire Dale in the Craven district of North Yorkshire, England, UK. Known for it’s smooth rolling hills and traditional farmhouses that date from the 17th century.
    20150919_littondale traditional farm...jpg
  • Littondale is a Yorkshire Dale in the Craven district of North Yorkshire, England, UK. Known for it’s smooth rolling hills and traditional farmhouses that date from the 17th century.
    20150919_littondale traditional farm...jpg
  • Littondale is a Yorkshire Dale in the Craven district of North Yorkshire, England, UK. Known for it’s smooth rolling hills and traditional farmhouses that date from the 17th century.
    20150919_littondale traditional farm...jpg
  • Littondale is a Yorkshire Dale in the Craven district of North Yorkshire, England, UK. Known for it’s smooth rolling hills and traditional farmhouses that date from the 17th century.
    20150919_littondale traditional farm...jpg
  • Littondale is a Yorkshire Dale in the Craven district of North Yorkshire, England, UK. Known for it’s smooth rolling hills and traditional farmhouses that date from the 17th century.
    20150919_littondale traditional farm...jpg
  • Littondale is a Yorkshire Dale in the Craven district of North Yorkshire, England, UK. Known for it’s smooth rolling hills and traditional farmhouses that date from the 17th century.
    20150919_littondale traditional farm...jpg
  • Littondale is a Yorkshire Dale in the Craven district of North Yorkshire, England, UK. Known for it’s smooth rolling hills and traditional farmhouses that date from the 17th century.
    20150919_littondale traditional farm...jpg
  • Drying corn outside a traditional Slovenian Barn at the Rogatec Open Air Museum, very close to the Croatian border, on 24th June 2018, in Rogatec, Slovenia. The museum of relocated and restored 19th and early 20th century farming buildings and houses represents folk architecture in the area south of the Donacka Gora and Boc mountains.
    slovenia-301-24-06-2018.jpg
  • A traditional Polish mountain shepherds hut selling cheeses to visitors, on 21st September 2019, in Jaworki, near Szczawnica, Malopolska, Poland. Log cabins houses such as these often sell Oszczypek, a smoked cheese made of salted sheep milk exclusively in the Tatra Mountains region of Poland.
    poland-215-21-09-2019.jpg
  • The wine press in the traditional Slovenian Barn at the Rogatec Open Air Museum, very close to the Croatian border, on 24th June 2018, in Rogatec, Slovenia. The museum of relocated and restored 19th and early 20th century farming buildings and houses represents folk architecture in the area south of the Donacka Gora and Boc mountains.
    slovenia-294-24-06-2018.jpg
  • A farmer holding a freshly harvested potato at a Newburgh Estate farm, Coxwold, North Yorkshire, UK. After harvesting the potatoes are sent to the McCains factory in Cayton Bay to make chips. Coxwold village is in the Howardian Hills AONB, a landscape with well-wooded rolling countryside, patchwork of arable and pasture fields, scenic villages and historic country houses with classic parkland landscapes.
    64-16_1_1.jpg
  • Vegetable grower Doug Stark holding bunch of freshly dug carrots, Coulton, North Yorkshire, UK. Doug sells his vegetables from a wall outside his house and  at local farmers markets. Coulton village is in the Howardian Hills AONB, a landscape with well-wooded rolling countryside, patchwork of arable and pasture fields, scenic villages and historic country houses with classic parkland landscapes.
    76-09_1_1.jpg
  • Snowy winter landscape view of Magura village in the remote Carpathian Mountains, Romania
    38-10_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a Vermont farmer, USA
    cp_usa_0229_1.jpg
  • A net curtain hangs at a farmhouse window, Botiza, Maramures, Romania
    112-16_1.jpg
  • Mu Ze Latso, a Mo Suo minority girl returns home with a large basket strapped to her back containing the algae from the lake which she will then feed to her animals.<br />
<br />
Mo Suo people live along LuGu lake, northwest  Yunnan province. Since the population is not big enough, the Chinese government did not assign them as an independent minority. Mo Suo people belongs to the NaXi minority of LiJiang region. Mo Suo people have their own distinctive culture, religion and customs. Most significantly: Mo Suo people do not have a marriage System. Locally, they call their relationships a "walking marriage". <br />
A girl has her ADULT ceremony when she is 14, then she can start to wear the Mo Su costume and the family will give her a room that is called “Flower room”.<br />
Logically, she is allowed to take her boyfriend, since Mo Su family carries on by the mother's name, the son and the daughter stay with mother their whole lifes.<br />
When they are adults, the girl chooses her boyfriend. The boyfriend come to sleep in her room in the evening and leave for his mother's home in the morning. He belongs to his mother's family. She belongs to her mother's family, her children will be taken care of by her family: her mother, uncle, aunts, or sisters and brothers. Her children do not belongs to the boyfriend's family.<br />
Normally, the mother will pass her "power" to her eldest daughter when she is old and thus perpetuate the Mo Suo traditions.
    chilugu_033_1.jpg
  • Mu Ze Latso feeds algae from Lugu lake to her chickens, donkey, and cows.<br />
<br />
Mo Suo people live along LuGu lake, northwest  Yunnan province. Since the population is not big enough, the Chinese government did not assign them as an independent minority. Mo Suo people belongs to the NaXi minority of LiJiang region. Mo Suo people have their own distinctive culture, religion and customs. Most significantly: Mo Suo people do not have a marriage System. Locally, they call their relationships a "walking marriage". <br />
A girl has her ADULT ceremony when she is 14, then she can start to wear the Mo Su costume and the family will give her a room that is called “Flower room”.<br />
Logically, she is allowed to take her boyfriend, since Mo Su family carries on by the mother's name, the son and the daughter stay with mother their whole lifes.<br />
When they are adults, the girl chooses her boyfriend. The boyfriend come to sleep in her room in the evening and leave for his mother's home in the morning. He belongs to his mother's family. She belongs to her mother's family, her children will be taken care of by her family: her mother, uncle, aunts, or sisters and brothers. Her children do not belongs to the boyfriend's family.<br />
Normally, the mother will pass her "power" to her eldest daughter when she is old and thus perpetuate the Mo Suo traditions.
    chilugu_034_1.jpg
  • Mu Ze Latso working in  the family's courtyard with mother and father and a neighbour's child, close to  Lugu lake, northwest Yunnan province.<br />
<br />
Mo Suo people live along LuGu lake, northwest  Yunnan province. Since the population is not big enough, the Chinese government did not assign them as an independent minority. Mo Suo people belongs to the NaXi minority of LiJiang region. Mo Suo people have their own distinctive culture, religion and customs. Most significantly: Mo Suo people do not have a marriage System. Locally, they call their relationships a "walking marriage". <br />
A girl has her ADULT ceremony when she is 14, then she can start to wear the Mo Su costume and the family will give her a room that is called “Flower room”.<br />
Logically, she is allowed to take her boyfriend, since Mo Su family carries on by the mother's name, the son and the daughter stay with mother their whole lifes.<br />
When they are adults, the girl chooses her boyfriend. The boyfriend come to sleep in her room in the evening and leave for his mother's home in the morning. He belongs to his mother's family. She belongs to her mother's family, her children will be taken care of by her family: her mother, uncle, aunts, or sisters and brothers. Her children do not belongs to the boyfriend's family.<br />
Normally, the mother will pass her "power" to her eldest daughter when she is old and thus perpetuate the Mo Suo traditions.
    chilugu_028_1.jpg
  • A traditional alpine chalet in the Austrian ski resort of Altenmarkt. Seen in a shaft of low sunlight and with snow on the pavements and local roads, the house is constructed from old wooden boarding in the traditional way of Tyrolean architecture. High on one exterior wall is a crucifix telling us that this family are Christian, probably Catholic in this Austrian village. The Chalet Many chalets in the European Alps were originally used as seasonal farms for dairy cattle that would be brought up from the lowland pastures during the summer months. With the emergence of the Alpine travel business, chalets were transformed into vacation houses used by ski and hiking enthusiasts. Over the years the term chalet transformed to its modern general meaning of a vacation house built in an Alpine style
    austrian_chalet01-07-01-1993_1.jpg
  • Namu's Palace, house belongs to Namu a now famous Mo Suo minority  woman whom is a big star on Chinese TV. Lugu Lake, northwest Yunnan province.
    chilugu_056_1.jpg
  • Wedding party band play in the village of Chang Qu outside a cave house (dwelling), Shaanxi, China
    chiocave_036_1.jpg
  • Chang Lin and Du Mei  mill corn in their courtyard with  their Cave house in the background, Chang Qu village, Shaanxi, China
    chiocave_015_1.jpg
  • Chang Lin and Du Mei  mill corn in their courtyard with  their Cave house in the background, Chang Qu village, Shaanxi, China
    chiocave_013_1.jpg
  • The cave house of farmer Chang Lin’s and family in the village of Chang Qu in northern Shaanxi province, China.
    chiocave_001_1.jpg
  • Farming villager A Hua, weaving a cloth on a traditional loom, Zha Lu Village, Yunnan Province, China.
    chitea_049_1.jpg
  • A Ukrainian farming family at home and their chickens, outside Kiev.
    cp_ukr_0251_1.jpg
  • Eight year old school girl Xiao Chen,  plays a game of cards with a friend, whilst her grandmother finishes off the lunch they have just enjoyed. Chen's grandfather returns from farm chores (in background), Dong Da Jian village, Shaanxi province.                       Chen's grandparents are farmers and own a minute plot of land from which they derive a subsistence income. As a consequence of this        Chen's parents are migrant workers whom live and work in the factories of Guangzhou city . Since her birth they have seen Chen four short times, therefore she is largely brought up by the grandparents a phenomenon that affects millions of working families in China's rapid industrial expansion
    chischochi_046_1.jpg
  • A crucifix located on the edge of a vineyard in the South Tyrolean town of Klausen-Chiusa in northern Italy. South Tyrol is a very religious and traditional country. The weekly walk to Mass and the celebration of religious festivals and processions are part of the culture and tradition in South Tyrol. In almost every house you will find a cross on a corner with consecrated palm branches over there. Also in the stable there are consecrated palm branches to keep away every disaster. South Tyroleans are almost all Catholics and quite conservative.
    klausen_italy10-15-07-2015_1.jpg
  • Juana Calfunao Paillalef,  a female Lonko and certainly one of the most outspoken defenders of the Mapuche cause stands in front of her Ruka, the traditional circular wood and straw hut on her ancestral land. Having being inprisoned several times and in all for more then four years, has become an important symbol for the resistence of her indigenous people. She is internationally known and admired both at home and abroad, though her many enemies inside the Chilean state consider her to be a terrorist. She and her family are constantly threatened  and intimidated by the police. They have suffered multpile physical and verbal aggressions over the years as well and continually be under surveillance. Unbowed she continues her resisitance fight.
    20180215_chile_mapuches_073.jpg
  • New concrete houses in a mostly-empty, half-constructed resettlement site situated along a main road in Steung Treng province in north-eastern Cambodia. 5000 people from 20 villages are being evicted from their homes to make way for a controversial huge new hydropower dam: ‘Lower Sesan 2’, which will flood an area of more than 33,000 square hectares. Communities in this rural region are seeing their traditional self-sufficient farming and fishing lifestyle disrupted by dam building and the impact of climate change on crops, water quality and fish stocks.
    A0031740cc_1.jpg
  • Built early 19th century, the restored interior of the Dwelling house Smitova Hisa at the Rogatec Open Air Museum, very close to the Croatian border, on 24th June 2018, in Rogatec, Slovenia. The museum of relocated and restored 19th and early 20th century farming buildings and houses represents folk architecture in the area south of the Donacka Gora and Boc mountains.
    slovenia-291-24-06-2018.jpg
  • New concrete houses in a mostly-empty, half-constructed resettlement site situated along a main road in Steung Treng province in north-eastern Cambodia. 5000 people from 20 villages are being evicted from their homes to make way for a controversial huge new hydropower dam: ‘Lower Sesan 2’, which will flood an area of more than 33,000 square hectares. Communities in this rural region are seeing their traditional self-sufficient farming and fishing lifestyle disrupted by dam building and the impact of climate change on crops, water quality and fish stocks.
    DSCF6081cc_1.jpg
  • New concrete houses in a mostly-empty, half-constructed resettlement site situated along a main road in Steung Treng province in north-eastern Cambodia. 5000 people from 20 villages are being evicted from their homes to make way for a controversial huge new hydropower dam: ‘Lower Sesan 2’, which will flood an area of more than 33,000 square hectares. Communities in this rural region are seeing their traditional self-sufficient farming and fishing lifestyle disrupted by dam building and the impact of climate change on crops, water quality and fish stocks. There is a communal hand pump outside for water, but this is not good for drinking.
    A0031746cc_1.jpg
  • New concrete houses in a mostly-empty, half-constructed resettlement site situated along a main road in Steung Treng province in north-eastern Cambodia. 5000 people from 20 villages are being evicted from their homes to make way for a controversial huge new hydropower dam: ‘Lower Sesan 2’, which will flood an area of more than 33,000 square hectares. Communities in this rural region are seeing their traditional self-sufficient farming and fishing lifestyle disrupted by dam building and the impact of climate change on crops, water quality and fish stocks.
    A0031752cc_1.jpg
  • New concrete houses in a mostly-empty, half-constructed resettlement site situated along a main road in Steung Treng province in north-eastern Cambodia. 5000 people from 20 villages are being evicted from their homes to make way for a controversial huge new hydropower dam: ‘Lower Sesan 2’, which will flood an area of more than 33,000 square hectares. Communities in this rural region are seeing their traditional self-sufficient farming and fishing lifestyle disrupted by dam building and the impact of climate change on crops, water quality and fish stocks.
    A0031744cc_1.jpg
  • Neang Char, 32, is a mother-of-four living in Kbal Romeas village, in Steung Treng province in north-eastern Cambodia. The village lies deep in the forest on the Sesan River, and is home to around 130 families from the Bunong ethnic minority group. As well as feeling the impact of climate change on their traditional self-sufficient farming and fishing lifestyle, 5000 people from 20 villages in the area are being evicted from their homes to make way for a controversial huge new hydropower dam, ‘Lower Sesan 2’, which will flood an area of more than 33,000 square hectares. [pictured Bopha, 3 [*name changed] outside the family home in Kbal Romeas village
    A0031668cc_1.jpg
  • Built early 19th century, the restored interior of the Dwelling house Smitova Hisa at the Rogatec Open Air Museum, very close to the Croatian border, on 24th June 2018, in Rogatec, Slovenia. The museum of relocated and restored 19th and early 20th century farming buildings and houses represents folk architecture in the area south of the Donacka Gora and Boc mountains.
    slovenia-293-24-06-2018.jpg
  • A traditional old croft out-building at Killiemore, Isle of Mull, Scotland. Seen in winter, where the otherwise green bracken is now brown before growth next summer, there is the rusting corrugated roofing and the mossy stone walls that use local materials. The building is only in occasional use for storing farm implements and its small window allows only small amounts of light while retaining what little warmth remains inside.
    isle_of_mull171-19-11-2011_1.jpg
  • Guarani woman cooking in her traditional hut. 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_7138_1.jpg
  • Soo Tou, 29 outside his new home in a relocation village, Steung Treng province, Cambodia. Soo Tou and his wife Ren Way, 26 are from Sre Sronuk Village close to the Sesan River in Steung Treng province, north-eastern Cambodia. 5000 people from 20 villages are being evicted from their homes to make way for a controversial huge new hydropower dam: ‘Lower Sesan 2’, which will flood an area of more than 33,000 square hectares. The young, newly-married couple accepted the dam company’s offer to relocate them in a new concrete house and are among the first few residents of the mostly-empty, half-constructed resettlement site. Communities in this rural region are seeing their traditional self-sufficient farming and fishing lifestyle disrupted by dam building and the impact of climate change on crops, water quality and fish stocks.
    DSCF6094cc_1.jpg
  • Soo Tou, 29, in the living room of his new home. Soo Tou and wife Ren Way, 26, are from Sre Sronuk Village close to the Sesan River in Streung Treng province, north-eastern Cambodia. 5000 people from 20 villages are being evicted from their homes to make way for a controversial huge new hydropower dam: ‘Lower Sesan 2’, which will flood an area of more than 33,000 square hectares. The young, newly-married couple accepted the dam company’s offer to relocate them in a new concrete house and are among the first few residents of the mostly-empty, half-constructed resettlement site. Communities in this rural region are seeing their traditional self-sufficient farming and fishing lifestyle disrupted by dam building and the impact of climate change on crops, water quality and fish stocks.
    A0031764cc_1.jpg
  • Ren Way, 26 in the kitchen of her new home. Ren Way and her husband Soo Tou, 29 are from Sre Sronuk Village close to the Sesan River in Streung Treng province, north-eastern Cambodia. 5000 people from 20 villages are being evicted from their homes to make way for a controversial huge new hydropower dam: ‘Lower Sesan 2’, which will flood an area of more than 33,000 square hectares. The young, newly-married couple accepted the dam company’s offer to relocate them in a new concrete house and are among the first few residents of the mostly-empty, half-constructed resettlement site. Communities in this rural region are seeing their traditional self-sufficient farming and fishing lifestyle disrupted by dam building and the impact of climate change on crops, water quality and fish stocks.
    A0031760cc_1.jpg
  • Soo Tou, 29, and wife Ren Way, 26, are from Sre Sronuk Village close to the Sesan River in Streung Treng province, north-eastern Cambodia. 5000 people from 20 villages are being evicted from their homes to make way for a controversial huge new hydropower dam: ‘Lower Sesan 2’, which will flood an area of more than 33,000 square hectares. The young, newly-married couple accepted the dam company’s offer to relocate them in a new concrete house and are among the first few residents of the mostly-empty, half-constructed resettlement site. Communities in this rural region are seeing their traditional self-sufficient farming and fishing lifestyle disrupted by dam building and the impact of climate change on crops, water quality and fish stocks.
    A0031757cc_1.jpg
  • Pumpkins stored in the loft of a Hani ethnic minority farmer's house, Shang Lao Zhai village, Yunnan Province, China.
    66-15_1.jpg
  • Middle aged Guarani woman outside her hut house holding a bag of clothes. 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_7729_1.jpg
  • Neang Char, 32, is a mother-of-four living in Kbal Romeas village, in Steung Treng province in north-eastern Cambodia. The village lies deep in the forest on the Sesan River, and is home to around 130 families from the Bunong ethnic minority group. As well as feeling the impact of climate change on their traditional self-sufficient farming and fishing lifestyle, 5000 people from 20 villages in the area are being evicted from their homes to make way for a controversial huge new hydropower dam, ‘Lower Sesan 2’, which will flood an area of more than 33,000 square hectares. [pictured with daughter Romduol Char, 5 [*name changed]
    A0031723cc_1.jpg
  • Neang Char, 32, is a mother-of-four living in Kbal Romeas village, in Steung Treng province in north-eastern Cambodia. The village lies deep in the forest on the Sesan River, and is home to around 130 families from the Bunong ethnic minority group. As well as feeling the impact of climate change on their traditional self-sufficient farming and fishing lifestyle, 5000 people from 20 villages in the area are being evicted from their homes to make way for a controversial huge new hydropower dam, ‘Lower Sesan 2’, which will flood an area of more than 33,000 square hectares. [pictured with daughter Romduol Char, 5 and son Makary Char 14 [*names changed]
    A0031708cc_1.jpg
  • Neang Char, 32, is a mother-of-four living in Kbal Romeas village, in Steung Treng province in north-eastern Cambodia. The village lies deep in the forest on the Sesan River, and is home to around 130 families from the Bunong ethnic minority group. As well as feeling the impact of climate change on their traditional self-sufficient farming and fishing lifestyle, 5000 people from 20 villages in the area are being evicted from their homes to make way for a controversial huge new hydropower dam, ‘Lower Sesan 2’, which will flood an area of more than 33,000 square hectares.
    A0031702cc_1.jpg
  • Neang Char's daughter asleep in a hammock in the family home in Kbal Romeas village, in Steung Treng province in north-eastern Cambodia. The village lies deep in the forest on the Sesan River, and is home to around 130 families from the Bunong ethnic minority group. As well as feeling the impact of climate change on their traditional self-sufficient farming and fishing lifestyle, 5000 people from 20 villages in the area are being evicted from their homes to make way for a controversial huge new hydropower dam, ‘Lower Sesan 2’, which will flood an area of more than 33,000 square hectares.
    A0031685cc_1.jpg
  • A Swaledale ewe and lamb standing in the road near Breck House farm, Bransdale, North York Moors National Park, North Yorkshire, UK.
    06-07_1.jpg
  • An Akha Nuquie ethnic minority woman, carrying grass in a bamboo basket for making a house roof, spins cotton whilst walking back to the village, Ban Chakhampa, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. Akha women utilise every spare moment of the day to get something accomplished and can often be seen spinning cotton or embroidering a jacket everywhere from working on the farm to foraging in the forest.
    A0016317cc_1.jpg
  • Tools used in the Forge at the Rogatec Open Air Museum, very close to the Croatian border, on 24th June 2018, in Rogatec, Slovenia. The museum of relocated and restored 19th and early 20th century farming buildings and houses represents folk architecture in the area south of the Donacka Gora and Boc mountains.
    slovenia-303-24-06-2018.jpg
  • Interior of the Grocers shop at the Rogatec Open Air Museum, very close to the Croatian border, on 24th June 2018, in Rogatec, Slovenia. The museum of relocated and restored 19th and early 20th century farming buildings and houses represents folk architecture in the area south of the Donacka Gora and Boc mountains.
    slovenia-302-24-06-2018.jpg
  • Thatched corn rafters of the Barn at the Rogatec Open Air Museum, very close to the Croatian border, on 24th June 2018, in Rogatec, Slovenia. The museum of relocated and restored 19th and early 20th century farming buildings and houses represents folk architecture in the area south of the Donacka Gora and Boc mountains.
    slovenia-296-24-06-2018.jpg
  • Ardvergnish farmhouse (c1800) near Pennyghael, Isle of Mull, Scotland. Ardvergnish Farm is seen overshadowed by the southern slopes of Ben More, the mountain that dominates the Ross of Mull in the Inner Hebrides. This farmhouse is now a self-catering establishment for large groups. For those seeking solitude and with the opportunity for remote exploring of nearby moors and hills, Ardvergnish is sought by those wanting a Scottish experience. 460 metres north Dun Breac (an ancient celtic fort).
    isle_of_mull160-19-11-2011_1.jpg
  • Young Guarani man building the roof of a tradtional wooden hut. 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_6953_1.jpg
  • Young Guarani boy smiling and looking towards his mother with the TV on 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_6633_1.jpg
  • House in a Guarani village with black plastic around the edges to protect it from the elements. 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_6603_1.jpg
  • Guarani family in front of their tradtionally built house. 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_6540_1.jpg
  • Guarani man sitting in a wooden house wearing a straw hat. 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_6121_1.jpg
  • Coffee farm / buldings in the hills. Coorg or Kadagu is the largest coffee growing region of India, in the state of Karnataka, the inhabitants - the Kodavas have been cultivating crops such as coffee, black pepper and cardamon for many generations.
    _MG_4698_1_1_1.jpg
  • Thatched corn rafters of the Barn at the Rogatec Open Air Museum, very close to the Croatian border, on 24th June 2018, in Rogatec, Slovenia. The museum of relocated and restored 19th and early 20th century farming buildings and houses represents folk architecture in the area south of the Donacka Gora and Boc mountains.
    slovenia-297-24-06-2018.jpg
  • Corn maize drying on the ground in a Guarani village. 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_7605_1.jpg
  • Young Guarani man building the roof of a tradtional wooden hut. 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.
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  • Chang Fan Rong, 15, doing her homework on bed inside her family's cave home / dwelling in Chang Qu village, Shaanxi, China
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  • A farmer unloads natural fertilizer into a field, Barroeta village, Baztan, Basque country, Spain.
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  • Portrait of Chen Xiao Sa,  8 years old with parents and grandparents, Dong Da Jian village, Shaanxi Province.<br />
Chen's grandparents are farmers and own a minute plot of land from which they derive a subsistence income. As a consequence of this        Chen's parents are migrant workers whom live and have worked for years in the factories of Guangzhou city . They send back the income from which the grandparents and child live off. Since her birth they have seen Chen four short times, being therefore largely brought up by the grandparents a phenomenon that affects millions of working families across China's rapid industrial expansion.
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  • German architecture in Italian South Tyrolean agricultural region, south-west of Bolzano, northern Italy. Set in the Appiano area and under the rocky hills of lower Dolomites, we see fresh flowers growing in baskets in every window. The Überetsch (Oltradige in Italian) is a hilly section of the Etschtal in South Tyrol, northern Italy. It lies south-west of Bolzano and is a known tourist destination, famous for its wines, castles and lakes (Kalterer See, Montiggler Seen). The municipalities of the Überetsch are Kaltern and Eppan.
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  • Bride Ai Xia and Groom Liu Xiao Ning leave her home in Chang Qu village,  for a new life, Shaanxi, China
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  • Bride Ai Xia is picked up by Groom Liu Xiao Ning leaving her cave home in Chang Qu village,  for a new life, Shaanxi, China
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  • A plastic bowl of dried beans in a farmhouse window, Viscri, Saxon Transylvania, Romania. 90% of vegetable production is grown in small household plots and mainly used for self-consumption and for sale on local markets.
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  • A peasant farmer feeds chickens outside her summer home in the Carpathian Mountains, Romania
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