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  • Portrait of a Kayah Red Karen ethnic minority woman on 18th January 2016 in Kayah State, Myanmar. Myanmar is one of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia with 135 different indigenous ethnic groups with over a dozen ethnic Karenni subgroups in the Kayah region. Kayah women wear a simple red tunic worn with a broad white sash decorated with coloured tassles and a striped hand-woven head-cloth  tunic worn with a broad white sash decorated with coloured tassles and a striped hand-woven head-cloth photo by Tessa Bunney/In Pictures via Getty Images tunic worn with a broad white sash decorated with coloured tassles and a striped hand-woven head-cloth photo by Tessa Bunney/In Pictures via Getty Images
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  • Rhubarb competition after judging at Farndale Show on 28th August 2017 in North Yorkshire, United Kingdom. Farndale Show is a small traditional agricultural show in the heart of the North York Moors photo by Tessa Bunney/In Pictures via Getty Images
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  • Daw Mu Htan picking cotton and removing the seeds in the ethnic Kayan village of Lo Ka Na village, Panpet, Kayah State, Myanmar on 13th November 2016. Myanmar is one of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia with 135 different indigenous ethnic groups. There are over a dozen ethnic Karenni subgroups in the region including the Kayan who are perhaps the best known due to the traditional practice of the Kayan women extending their necks with brass rings . Myanmar is one of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia with 135 different indigenous ethnic groups. There are over a dozen ethnic Karenni subgroups in the region including the Kayan who are perhaps the best known due to the traditional practice of the Kayan women extending their necks with brass rings photo by Tessa Bunney/In Pictures via Getty Images
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  • Fish for sale at an early morning street market in Yangon, Myanmar on 18th May 2016.  A large variety of local products are available for sale in fresh markets all over Yangon, all being sold on small individual stalls  for sale at an early morning street market in Yangon, Myanmar on 17th May 2016.  A large variety of local products are available for sale in fresh markets all over Yangon, all being sold on small individual stalls photo by Tessa Bunney/In Pictures via Getty Images
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  • Portrait of PaO ethnic minority children at the PaO National Day on 24th March 2016 in Kayah State, Myanmar  at the PaO National Day on 24th March 2016 in Kayah State, Myanmar. The PaO origin story states that they are derived from a shaman, Zawgyu, and a female dragon so the women fashion their turban to resemble a dragons head photo by Tessa Bunney/In Pictures via Getty Images
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  • Tessa; Bunney; The; Philippines; Southeast; Asia; Bantayan; Island; Tamiao; Oxfam; NGO; non-governmental; organisation; organization; charity; Typhoon; Haiyan; Yolanda; Cebu; province; powerful; storm; fish; fishing; industry; income; vendor; sell; selling; buy; buying; purchase; purchasing; market; for; sale; food; local; produce; catch
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  • Harvested sunflower seeds in the ethnic Kayan village of Daw Thawe, Kayah State, Myanmar on 14th November 2016  photo by Tessa Bunney/In Pictures via Getty Images
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  • Harvesting rice in the ethnic Kayan village of Panpet, Kayah State, Myanmar on 14th November 2016  photo by Tessa Bunney/In Pictures via Getty Images
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  • The judge checks the teeth of a Swaledale sheep at Farndale Show on 28th August 2017 in North Yorkshire, United Kingdom. Farndale Show is a small traditional agricultural show in the heart of the North York Moors photo by Tessa Bunney/In Pictures via Getty Images
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  • Close up of a Kayan Padaung ethnic minority womans brass leg rings on 23rd January 2016 in Kayah State, Myanmar. Myanmar is one of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia with 135 different indigenous ethnic groups. There are over a dozen ethnic Karenni subgroups in the region including the Kayan who are perhaps the best known due to the traditional practice of the Kayan women extending their necks with brass rings. It is very unusual to see a woman wearing brass leg rings  It is very unusual to see a woman wearing brass leg rings photo by Tessa Bunney/In Pictures via Getty Images
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  • Curtain naturally dyed with indigo at a window in studio of master dyer Juana Gutierrez Contreras in the Zapotec village of Teotitlan del Valle, Oaxaca, Mexico on 24 November 2018.   November 2018.  photo by Tessa Bunney/In Pictures via Getty Images
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  • Phublham making 'datse', a small handmade cheese made from cow's milk in her farmhouse kitchen, Bayta village, Phobjikha valley, Bhutan. Datse is used in almost every Bhutanese dish including the national dish 'ema datse', chillies with cheese.
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  • Phublham making 'datse', a small handmade cheese made from cow's milk in her farmhouse kitchen, Bayta village, Phobjikha valley, Bhutan. Datse is used in almost every Bhutanese dish including the national dish 'ema datse', chillies with cheese.
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  • Tan, a Tai Lue ethnic minority man holds a fish he has caught in the river and then smoked over an open fire, Ban Bo Ha village, Luang Prabang province, Lao PDR.  For families living away from the main roads and markets, food caught or collected from the wild, especially edible plants and small animals still make up fifty per cent of their diet.  Nature’s bounty in providing for the Lao may be plentiful, but this does not mean that the task of growing and finding enough food for family subsistence and maintenance is easy. It is a major preoccupation of rural families and takes the bulk of time and energy of every man, woman and child.
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  • Phublham making 'datse', a small handmade cheese made from cow's milk in her farmhouse kitchen, Bayta village, Phobjikha valley, Bhutan. Datse is used in almost every Bhutanese dish including the national dish 'ema datse', chillies with cheese.
    DSCF1578cc_1.jpg
  • Phublham making 'datse', a small handmade cheese made from cow's milk in her farmhouse kitchen, Bayta village, Phobjikha valley, Bhutan. Datse is used in almost every Bhutanese dish including the national dish 'ema datse', chillies with cheese.
    DSCF1573cc_1.jpg
  • Phublham making 'datse', a small handmade cheese made from cow's milk in her farmhouse kitchen, Bayta village, Phobjikha valley, Bhutan. Datse is used in almost every Bhutanese dish including the national dish 'ema datse', chillies with cheese.
    DSCF1543cc_1.jpg
  • Smallholder/farmer Karma holds a bucket of milk after hand milking one of his 11 cows in the Tang Valley, Bumthang, Central Bhutan. Rural Bhutanese farmers make butter and cheese partly for storage or as a preserved form of milk for self consumption, with any excess being sold for cash.
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  • Portrait of smallholder/farmer Karma holding a bucket of milk after hand milking one of his 11 cows in the Tang Valley, Bumthang, Central Bhutan. Rural Bhutanese farmers make butter and cheese partly for storage or as a preserved form of milk for self consumption, with any excess being sold for cash.
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  • Portrait of 2 male climbers wearing safety equipment and carrying ropes at Sutton Bank, North York Moors, North Yorkshire, UK
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  • Portrait of a Iu Mien (Yao) ethnic minority woman wearing her traditional clothing in Ban Hom Phan village, Houaphan province, Lao PDR. One of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia, Laos has 49 officially recognised ethnic groups although there are many more self-identified and sub groups. These groups are distinguished by their own customs, beliefs and rituals.
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  • Amado Gutierrez Ruiz weaving a woollen rug with naturally dyed wool in the Zapotec weaving village of  Teotitlan del Valle in Oaxaca, Mexico on 29 November 2018
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  • Master dyer Juana Gutierrez Contreras preparing an indigo dye bath in the Zapotec weaving village of Teotitlan del Valle, Oaxaca, Mexico on 27 November 2018
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  • Master dyer Juana Gutierrez Contreras  preparing indigo using a metate grinding stone in the Zapotec weaving village of Teotitlan del Valle, Oaxaca, Mexico on 27 November 2018
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  • Naturally dyed woollen yarn and natural dye materials in the studio of master dyer Juana Gutierrez Contreras in the Zapotec village of Teotitlan del Valle, Oaxaca, Mexico on 1 December 2018. The natural dye materials are harvested in the Sierra Juarez mountains between October and November and other materials can be found in the courtyard gardens of Teotitlan. The plants are collected to make colourful dyes for blankets and other woven items
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  • A ball of handspun churro sheep wool from the mountain village of Chichicapam in Oaxaca, Mexico. The wool is used to weave blankets and other woven goods in the weaving village of Teotitlan del Valle
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  • Cristina Velasco spinning wool in the Zapotec village of Chichicapam in Oaxaca, Mexico on 30 November 2018. The village of Chichicapam is located in the Sierra Madre del Sur mountains and is an important centre for wool processing. The wool from Churro sheep, first introduced to Mexico by the Spanish, is hand spun using a drop-spindle
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  • Master Dyer Juana Gutierrez Contreras hanging out wool dyed with indigo in the Zapotec weaving village of Teotitlan del Valle in Oaxaca, Mexico on 29 November 2018
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  • Candlemaker Dona Viviana making a wax flower in the Zapotec village of Teotitlan del Valle, Oaxaca, Mexico on 27 November 2018
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  • Dona Viviana, candlemaker, in Teotitlan del Valle, Oaxaca, Mexico on 27 November 2018. In the courtyard of her home Dona Viviana scoops liquid wax from a bucket which is then poured over the wick from above and cools as it falls. Depending on the thickness of the candle, they require from 20 and 100 or more pours. This handicraft is directly linked to ritual acts and religious festivals
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  • Candlemaker Dona Viviana holding a wax flower in the Zapotec village of Teotitlan del Valle, Oaxaca, Mexico on 27 November 2018
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  • A Zapotec woman carries skeins of natural Churro sheep wool in the weaving village of Teotitlan del Valle in Oaxaca, Mexico on 27 November 2018. Weaving blankets has been part of their heritage for thousands of years, the knowledge has been passed down from generation to generation
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  • Master dyer Juana Gutierrez Contreras preparing wool for dyeing in the Zapotec weaving village of Teotitlan del Valle in Oaxaca, Mexico on 27 November 2018. The wool is boiled for three hours in water with potassium alum, a mordant which opens up the fibre to absorb the colour
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  • Concha sweet bread purchased from the morning market in the Zapotec village of Teotitlan del Valle, Oaxaca, Mexico on 26 November 2018
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  • Nopal cactus purchased from the morning market in the Zapotec village of Teotitlan del Valle, Oaxaca, Mexico on 26 November 2018
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  • Fresh cheese wrapped in woven bamboo for sale at the morning market in the Zapotec village of Teotitlan del Valle, Oaxaca, Mexico on 26 November 2018
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  • Edible cactus for sale at the morning market in the Zapotec village of Teotitlan del Valle, Oaxaca, Mexico on 26 November 2018
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  • Juana Gutierrez Contreras spinning churro sheep wool in her natural dyes studio in the Zapotec village of Teotitlan del Valle, Oaxaca, Mexico on 25 November 2018. The handspun yarn comes from the nearby mountain village of Chichicapa
    DSCF4778cc_1.jpg
  • Juana Gutierrez Contreras holding a ball of hand spun churro sheep wool  in the natural dyes studio in the Zapotec village of Teotitlan del Valle, Oaxaca, Mexico on 25 November 2018. The handspun yarn comes from the nearby mountain village of Chichicapam
    DSCF4793cc_1.jpg
  • Cochineal insects on nopal cactus in the natural dyes studio of Porfirio Gutierrez and family in the Zapotec village of Teotitlan del Valle, Oaxaca, Mexico on 24 November 2018. Cochineal is a parasitic insect native to Mexico which lives on the leaves of the prickly pear plant. When ready to harvest, the insects are gently dusted off and left to dry before being ground to crimson dust. In Teotitlan cochineal is still ground by hand on stone metates and used as a natural dye for yarn
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  • Hill farmer showing his Herdwick sheep at the 150th Eskdale Show in Cumbria on 29 September 2018. Herdwick sheep are the native breed of the central and western Lake District and live on the highest of England’s mountains. They are extremely hardy and are managed in the traditional way on the Lake District fells that have been their home for generations.
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  • Hill farmer with a cup of red used for colouring the fleece of Herdwicks at the 150th Eskdale Show in Cumbria on 29 September 2018. Herdwick sheep are the native breed of the central and western Lake District and live on the highest of England’s mountains. They are extremely hardy and are managed in the traditional way on the Lake District fells that have been their home for generations.
    DSCF8865cc.jpg
  • Hill farmer showing his Herdwick tup ram at Borrowdale Shepherds Meet in Rosthwaite village, Cumbria on 16 September 2018. Herdwick sheep are the native breed of the central and western Lake District and live on the highest of England’s mountains. They are extremely hardy and are managed in the traditional way on the Lake District fells that have been their home for generations.
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  • The landscape of Coverdale in The Yorkshire Dales on 12th September 2018
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  • Herdwick sheep at Buttermere Shepherds Meet in Cumbria on 28 October 2018. Herdwick sheep are the native breed of the central and western Lake District and live on the highest of England’s mountains. They are extremely hardy and are managed in the traditional way on the Lake District fells that have been their home for generations
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  • Autumn light on the fells in Buttermere, Cumbria on 28 October 2018.
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  • Caution Red Squirrels sign on the roadside near Sedburgh in the Yorkshire Dales on 29 September 2018. The Yorkshire Dales is widely recognised as an important habitat for red squirrels
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  • Herdwick sheep at Buttermere Shepherds Meet in Cumbria on 28 October 2018. Herdwick sheep are the native breed of the central and western Lake District and live on the highest of England’s mountains. They are extremely hardy and are managed in the traditional way on the Lake District fells that have been their home for generations
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  • Portrait of a member of Ripon City Morris Dancers at the 31st York Festival of Traditional Dance on 8th September 2018. Ripon City Morris Dancers are a North West Morris dancing team from Ripon in North Yorkshire instantly recognisable by their patriotic costume and fresh flowered hats
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  • Portrait of a member of Ripon City Morris Dancers at the 31st York Festival of Traditional Dance on 8th September 2018. Ripon City Morris Dancers are a North West Morris dancing team from Ripon in North Yorkshire instantly recognisable by their patriotic costume and fresh flowered hats
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  • Portrait of a member of Ripon City Morris Dancers at the 31st York Festival of Traditional Dance on 8th September 2018. Ripon City Morris Dancers are a North West Morris dancing team from Ripon in North Yorkshire instantly recognisable by their patriotic costume and fresh flowered hats
    DSCF3204cc.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of Ripon City Morris Dancers at the 31st York Festival of Traditional Dance on 8th September 2018. Ripon City Morris Dancers are a North West Morris dancing team from Ripon in North Yorkshire instantly recognisable by their patriotic costume and fresh flowered hats
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  • Oatcake competition at the North Harris Agricultural Show, Urgha, Isle of Harris, Outer Hebrides, Scotland on 19 July 2018
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  • Harris Tweed competition at the North Harris Agricultural Show, Urgha, Isle of Harris, Outer Hebrides, Scotland on 19 July 2018
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  • Donald MacDonald, Harris Tweed weaver, Shawbost, Isle of Lewis, Outer Hebrides, Scotland on 19 July 2018. Harris Tweed must be made from pure virgin wool which has been dyed and spun on the islands and handwoven at the home of the weaver in the Outer Hebrides of Scotland.
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  • Donald MacDonald, Harris Tweed weaver, Shawbost, Isle of Lewis, Outer Hebrides, Scotland on 19 July 2018. Harris Tweed must be made from pure virgin wool which has been dyed and spun on the islands and handwoven at the home of the weaver in the Outer Hebrides of Scotland.
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  • An abandoned house in the village of  Shawbost on the Isle of Lewis, Outer Hebrides, Scotland on 19 July 2018
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  • Close up of the wall of a restored traditional Hebridian blackhouse at Carloway on the Isle of Lewis, Outer Hebrides, Scotland on 18 July 2018. Blackhouses are the traditional crofting farmhouse of the Isle of Lewis, the double drystone walls, the low profile and the insulating thatch made the houses suitable for the Hebridean weather and all the building materials were natural and found locally
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  • Fresh hand dived scallops at Miavaig Harbour near Uig, Isle of Lewis, Outer Hebrides, Scotland on 18 July 2018
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  • The interior of an abandoned house in Loch Siogport on the Isle of South Uist, Outer Hebrides, Scotland on 23 July 2018
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  • Foraging for cockles on the island of South Uist in the Outer Hebrides, Scotland
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  • Foraging for cockles on the island of South Uist in the Outer Hebrides, Scotland
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  • Foraging for cockles on the island of South Uist in the Outer Hebrides, Scotland
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  • Otters crossing sign on the causeway between Benbecula and South Uist, Outer Hebrides, Scotland on 21 July 2018
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  • An elderly man walking on the beach at Cnip, Isle of Lewis, Outer Hebrides, Scotland on 15 July 2018
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  • An elderly man walking on the beach at Cnip, Isle of Lewis, Outer Hebrides, Scotland on 15 July 2018
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  • England flag hanging on a hedge to celebrate the 2018 World Cup in the village of Topcliffe, North Yorkshire, United Kingdom on 20 June 2018
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  • England flag hanging outside a house to celebrate the 2018 World Cup in the village of Topcliffe, North Yorkshire, United Kingdom on 20 June 2018
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  • Poppy field and the agricultural landscape in the Yorkshire Wolds, the United Kingdom on 17th June 2018. The Yorkshire Wolds is the most northerly chalk upland in the British Isles. The landscape consists of rolling arable land mixed with deep incised dales known locally as slacks
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  • Agricultural landscape in the Yorkshire Wolds, the United Kingdom on 17th June 2018. The Yorkshire Wolds is the most northerly chalk upland in the British Isles. The landscape consists of rolling arable land mixed with deep incised dales known locally as slacks
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  • A roadside stall in Grinton Village, Swaledale, United Kingdom on 28th May 2018. Swaledale is the valley of the river Swale and is one of the northernmost dales valleys in the Yorkshire Dales National Park
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  • Ramsons otherwise known as wild garlic growing in Millington Woods, the Yorkshire Wolds, United Kingdom on 18th May 2018. This beautiful ash wood occupies Lily Dale, a typical dry valley of the Yorkshire Wolds, and has the distinctive features of a chalk karst landscape
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  • Spring landscape near Castleton village in the North York Moors National Park on 17 May 2018. The North York Moors consist of a moorland plateau, intersected by a number of deep dales or valleys containing cultivated land or woodland
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  • Aerial view of the agricultural landscape near Hawnby village, North York Moors National Park, United Kingdom on 24th May 2018. The North York Moors consist of a moorland plateau, intersected by a number of deep dales or valleys containing cultivated land or woodland
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  • A jug of Spring flowers on display at the Bishops Palace, Wells Cathedral in Somerset, United Kingdom on Easter Sunday, 1st April 2018
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  • View of the snowy winter landscape from Sutton Bank, North Yorkshire, UK on 3 March 2018
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  • View of the snowy winter landscape from Osgoodby Bank towards the Vale of Mowbray in North Yorkshire, UK on 28 February 2018
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  • View of the snowy winter landscape from Sutton Bank, North Yorkshire, UK on 3 March 2018
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  • Persephone Womens Morris dancing side performing at the Wakefield Rhubarb festival in Yorkshire, UK on 24th February 2018. Persephone are a North West old Lancashire and Cheshire areas of England Processional Morris side wearing a distinctive black kit with accents of green and yellow
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  • The Rhubarb Tarts Molly Dancing side performing at the Wakefield Rhubarb festival in Yorkshire, UK on 24th February 2018. Molly dancing is a form of English Morris dancing and is primarily associated with the fens of East Anglia. The Rhubarb Tarts hail from the famous Rhubarb Triangle in West Yorkshire and wear the colours of rhubarb - green, pink, red and yellow
    DSCF4812cc_1.jpg
  • View of the snowy Winter landscape of the forest and fells on the edge of Immeljarvi lake near Levi in Finnish Lapland on 14th February 2018
    DSCF4739cc_1.jpg
  • View of the snowy Winter landscape of the forest and fells on the edge of Immeljarvi lake near Levi in Finnish Lapland on 14th February 2018
    DSCF4732cc_1.jpg
  • The landscape of the frozen lake of Jerisjarvi at Kalapirtit fishing village in Finnish Lapland on 14th February 2018. Jerisjarvi lake is situated in Pallas-Yllastunturi National Park, the third largest national park in Finland
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  • Snowy trees and the Winter landscape of Levi Fell in Finnish Lapland on 12th February 2018
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  • Snowy trees and the Winter landscape of Levi Fell in Finnish Lapland on 12th February 2018
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  • Snowy trees and the Winter landscape of Levi Fell in Finnish Lapland on 12th February 2018
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  • Snow shovels and snowy trees in the Winter landscape of Levi Fell in Finnish Lapland on 11th February 2018
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  • Reindeer at Samiland, Levi, Finnish Lapland on 11th February 2018. Samiland is a cultural museum celebrating the culture, history and present day of the Sami, the only indigenous people in the European Union
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  • Portrait of Dame Ruby Rhubarb, queen of all things rhubarb and main attraction at the Wakefield Rhubarb Festival in Yorkshire, UK on 24th February 2018
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  • Briggate Morris dancing side performing at the Wakefield Rhubarb festival in Yorkshire, UK on 24th February 2018.  Briggate are a womens North West Clog morris team based in Leeds.
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  • Portrait of a member of The Rhubarb Tarts Molly Dancing side at the Wakefield Rhubarb festival in Yorkshire, UK on 24th February 2018. Molly dancing is a form of English Morris dancing and is primarily associated with the fens of East Anglia. The Rhubarb Tarts hail from the famous Rhubarb Triangle in West Yorkshire and wear the colours of rhubarb - green, pink, red and yellow
    A0040087cc_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of The Rhubarb Tarts Molly Dancing side at the Wakefield Rhubarb festival in Yorkshire, UK on 24th February 2018. Molly dancing is a form of English Morris dancing and is primarily associated with the fens of East Anglia. The Rhubarb Tarts hail from the famous Rhubarb Triangle in West Yorkshire and wear the colours of rhubarb - green, pink, red and yellow
    A0040080cc_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of The Rhubarb Tarts Molly Dancing side at the Wakefield Rhubarb festival in Yorkshire, UK on 24th February 2018. Molly dancing is a form of English Morris dancing and is primarily associated with the fens of East Anglia. The Rhubarb Tarts hail from the famous Rhubarb Triangle in West Yorkshire and wear the colours of rhubarb - green, pink, red and yellow
    A0040072cc_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of The Rhubarb Tarts Molly Dancing side at the Wakefield Rhubarb festival in Yorkshire, UK on 24th February 2018. Molly dancing is a form of English Morris dancing and is primarily associated with the fens of East Anglia. The Rhubarb Tarts hail from the famous Rhubarb Triangle in West Yorkshire and wear the colours of rhubarb - green, pink, red and yellow
    A0040076cc_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of The Rhubarb Tarts Molly Dancing side at the Wakefield Rhubarb festival in Yorkshire, UK on 24th February 2018. Molly dancing is a form of English Morris dancing and is primarily associated with the fens of East Anglia. The Rhubarb Tarts hail from the famous Rhubarb Triangle in West Yorkshire and wear the colours of rhubarb - green, pink, red and yellow
    A0040056cc_1.jpg
  • View of the snowy Winter landscape of the forest and fells on the edge of Immeljarvi lake near Levi in Finnish Lapland on 14th February 2018
    A0040018cc_1.jpg
  • Winter at a fishermans summer cottage in Kalapirtit fishing village in Finnish Lapland on 14th February 2018. Kalapirtit is situated on Jerisjarvi lake in Pallas-Yllastunturi National Park, the third largest national park in Finland
    A0039942cc_1.jpg
  • Reindeer fences at the edge of the forest in Rauhala village, Finland on 14th February 2018. Rauhala village is situated on the edge of Pallas-Yllastunturi National Park, the third largest national park in Finland and is located in the Lapland region. The area has been inhabited since the Stone Age and is home to the Sami people, the National Park is an important pasture for reindeer
    A0039929cc_1.jpg
  • Winter at a fishermans summer cottage in Kalapirtit fishing village in Finnish Lapland on 14th February 2018. Kalapirtit is situated on Jerisjarvi lake in Pallas-Yllastunturi National Park, the third largest national park in Finland
    A0039944cc_1.jpg
  • Reindeer fences at the edge of the forest in Rauhala village, Finland on 14th February 2018. Rauhala village is situated on the edge of Pallas-Yllastunturi National Park, the third largest national park in Finland and is located in the Lapland region. The area has been inhabited since the Stone Age and is home to the Sami people, the National Park is an important pasture for reindeer
    A0039922cc_1.jpg
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