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  • Freshly netted fish in a red plastic bucket in a blue boat on the beach at Zihuatanejo, Mexico.
    MEX_072_xs.jpg
  • June Lake Loop off Route 395: Eastern Sierra Nevada Mountains of California.
    USA_CA_ES_17_xs.jpg
  • Russ Bassett and his father Dale who share a family business of raising crickets and mealworms, called Basset's Cricket Ranch. The insects they raise are used mostly for bait and pet shops (lizard food) but they do occasionally  supply the HotLix Candy Company with its crickets and mealworms. Visalia, California, United States. (Man Eating Bugs page 180 Top)
    USA_meb_34_cxxs.jpg
  • Samuel Tucker, a lobsterman, with his typical day's worth of food in front of his boat at the Great Diamond Island dock in Maine.   (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) The caloric value of his day's worth of food in March was 3,800 kcals. He is 50 years of age; 6 feet, 1.5 inches tall; and 179 pounds. Sam works the lobster boat by himself, saving on labor, but in the summertime his son Scout comes along. ?He's a blast,? says Sam. ?I take him and some of his friends out; they're all just leaning over the rail in their life preservers looking to see what's in the trap when it comes up. They're pretty good at saying, 'He's got a keeper.'? Sam's state license restricts his traps to the bay, where he averages only one lobster for every two traps. After paying for fuel and bait, there's not much profit. He supplements his income with fish auction commissions, and his family's diet with venison culled from the island's deer population.  MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_070324_341_xxw.jpg
  • Two little girls leave their parent's table to marvel at the fresh catches in the Nan Hei (South Sea City Seafood) Restaurant which resemble the bins of various catches at a fish market; some of the selections include flesh-colored marine worms, plump pink silkworm pupae, and shiny black hard shelled water beetles, all sold not as bait, but as food. Clients choose their fish or insects and tell the staff how to prepare them. Ten minutes later they are on the table. Guangzhou province, China. (Man Eating Bugs, page 88-89)
    Chi_meb_158_xxs.jpg
  • Squirming flesh-colored marine worms for sale in a plastic tub in the Qing Ping Market. They are sold (not as bait) but as food, along with plump pink silkworm pupae and shiny black hard-shelled water beetles.   Guangzhou Province, China. (Man Eating Bugs page 86,87)
    CHI_meb_135_cxxs.jpg
  • (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE). Emil and Erika Madsen's nephew Julian bites down on an Arctic char, half in jest, for the camera because the fish is large, but locals say that children often eat small fish raw. It's said to "tickle their bellies." After chopping holes in the ice with a pike, family members lower down hooks baited with seal fat. When the char bite, they yank them out of the hole with a practiced motion. (From a photographic gallery of fish images, in Hungry Planet: What the World Eats, p. 204).
    GRE04_0013_xxf1.jpg
  • (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE). After a day of dogsled travel, Emil, Erika, and the children head out to fish for arctic char. After chopping holes in the ice with a pike, family members lower down hooks baited with seal fat. When the char bite, Erika yanks them out of the hole with a practiced motion.  Hungry Planet: What the World Eats (p. 149).
    GRE04_0004_xxf1.jpg
  • Arctic char caught in a glacial lake near Cap Hope village, Greenland. The steel pikes on poles are used to chop holes in the ice.   After a day of dogsled travel, seal hunter Emil Madsen, his wife Erika, and the children head out to fish for arctic char.  (Emil Madsen is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)  After chopping holes in the ice with a pike, family members lower down hooks baited with seal fat. When the char bite, Erika yanks them out of the hole with a practiced motion.
    GRE_BEAV0590_001_xw.jpg
  • Arctic char caught in a glacial lake near Cap Hope village, Greenland. The steel pikes on poles are used to chop holes in the ice.   (Emil Madsen is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)    After a day of dogsled travel, seal hunter Emil Madsen, his wife Erika, and the children head out to fish for arctic char. After chopping holes in the ice with a pike, family members lower down hooks baited with seal fat. When the char bite, Erika yanks them out of the hole with a practiced motion.
    GRE04_9194_xf1brww.jpg

Peter Menzel Photography

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