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The Debate
Taken on: May 1, 2013
Larkollen
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Mother & Daughter
Taken on: May 1, 2013
Moss, Xmas Eve.
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Young Lovers
Taken on: Apr 28, 2013
London
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Grandfather & Granddaughter
Taken on: Apr 16, 2013
Xmas 2005
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Father & Daughter
Taken on: Apr 15, 2013
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Skating Train
Taken on: Apr 15, 2013
Narvisen Rink, Oslo
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Look Both Ways before Crossing
Taken on: Apr 15, 2013
Oslo
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Wild Hot Dog Stand
Taken on: Apr 15, 2013
Washington DC
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very young rikki
Taken on: Apr 15, 2013
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Trio
Taken on: Apr 15, 2013
Music trio, Warsaw restaurant.
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Summer Parade 2
Taken on: Apr 14, 2013
Oslo
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Summer Parade, Oslo
Taken on: Apr 14, 2013
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The Sleepy-eyed Tourist Guide
Taken on: Apr 14, 2013
Barcelona
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Les Anciens de Fitou
Taken on: Apr 14, 2013
Fitou, France
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Street Fiddler
Taken on: Apr 14, 2013
Dublin
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Flower Waterer
Taken on: Apr 13, 2013
Dublin
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El Cantinero
Taken on: Apr 13, 2013
Mercat de la Boqueria, Barcelona
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Eyes #5
Taken on: Mar 4, 2013
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Seaweed farming
Taken on: Mar 3, 2013
One of Zanzibar's biggest foreign-exchange earners is seaweed (mwani), of which over ten thousand tons are exported annually to East Asia. The seaweed cultivation was introduced two decades ago as an income-generating project for local women. The seaweed is "planted" by tying it to ropes in the shallow intertidal zone of the lagoons. It is not an easy job, as the sacks of wet seaweed weight tens of kilos which have to be moved a few hundred meters before the seaweed is laid out on the sand to dry.
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On the streets of Stone Town
Taken on: Mar 2, 2013
Known locally as Mji Mkongwe ("Old Town"), Stone Town is the old part of Zanzibar City, the main city of Zanzibar. The first stone houses in Stone Town were probably built in the 1830s, gradually replacing an earlier fishing village and trading post established by the Portuguese in 1503. At the time, the Zanzibar Archipelago was controlled by the Sultanate of Oman, that in 1841 moved the Omani capital from Muscat to Zanzibar.
With its labyrinth of narrow twisting streets, bustling bazaars and grand Arab and Indian mansions, the center in many ways resembles the medinas of North Africa and the Arabian Peninsula -- a place where the time seems to go on its own slow pace.
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