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  • A mother in Dubai cooks her family's lunch in their new kitchen building that is separate from the rest of the house. Her hands are adorned with henna in honor of the wedding she will attend this afternoon. She is covered from head to toe in her home today, as she is when out in public because she is entertaining guests from outside her family. As an indigenous citizen of the United Arab Emirates her family is entitled to a substantial subsidy from the government and jobs for the males in the household. Their high standard of living is a far cry from her parents' life as nomadic Bedouin camel herders of the desert. Dubai, United Arab Emirates. (From a photographic gallery of images of kitchen images, in Hungry Planet: What the World Eats, p. 54) (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE).
    DUB_030521_019_x.jpg
  • Dubai, United Arab Emirates. Portrait of a housewife at home. Her hands are adorned with henna in honor of the wedding she will attend this afternoon. She is covered from head to toe in her home today, as she is when out in public, because she is entertaining guests from outside her family.
    DUB_030521_012_x.jpg
  • Downtown shopping district in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. A man in shorts, polo shirt and sunglasses walks with his wife who is covered from head to toe in black with only her eyes visible.
    DUB_030520_007_x.jpg
  • Freshly picked saffron crocus flowers in Consuegra, La Mancha, Spain. Saffron has been the world's most expensive spice by weight for decades. The flower has three stigmas, which are the distal ends of the plant's carpels. These are separated from the petals by hand and dried to make saffron spice.
    SPA_061_xs.jpg
  • The afternoon sun weakly shines though the smoke of the burning Magwa oil fields near Ahmadi in Kuwait after the end of the Gulf War. (May, 1991). More than 700 wells were set ablaze by retreating Iraqi troops creating the largest man-made environmental disaster in history.
    KUW_064_xs.jpg
  • Portrait of young Palestinian woman in Dubai, United Arab Emirates..
    DUB_030521_008_x.jpg
  • Sayers covered bridge in Thetford, VT. Haupt Truss with arch, 80', spanning Ompompanoosuc River on Tucker Hill Road, west off Route 133. The only Haupt in Vermont (as well as the Northeast) and one of only three in the US. (http://www.virtualvermont.com/coveredbridges/sayers.html)
    USA_101118_46_x.jpg
  • Tall trees covered with butterflies at the Monarch butterfly reserve. Rosario, Mexico.
    MEX_048_xs.jpg
  • A path through the woods covered with butterflies at the Monarch butterfly reserve. Rosario, Mexico.
    MEX_046_xs.jpg
  • Armed guard covered with butterflies at Monarch butterfly reserve at site Alpha, near Rosario, Mexico.
    MEX_042_xs.jpg
  • An exhausted Wild Well Control Inc. worker takes a break while capping an oil well after they extinguished the fire. The burning Al Burgan oil fields in Kuwait after the end of the Gulf War in May of 1991 were covered in oil that rained down from the clouds of oil smoke and oil shooting into the air after a fire had been extinguished. More than 700 wells were set ablaze by retreating Iraqi troops creating the largest man-made environmental disaster in history. Photo taken on July 8, 1991.
    KUW_043_xs.jpg
  • Snow covered downtown street during Winter Carnival. Quebec, Canada.
    CAN_12_xs.jpg
  • Tall trees covered with butterflies at the Monarch butterfly reserve. Rosario, Mexico.
    MEX_054_xs.jpg
  • Fill flashed view at dusk of tall trees covered with butterflies at the Monarch butterfly reserve. Rosario, Mexico.
    MEX_052_xs.jpg
  • Tall trees covered with butterflies at the Monarch butterfly reserve. Rosario, Mexico.
    MEX_051_xs.jpg
  • Tall trees covered with butterflies at the Monarch butterfly reserve. Rosario, Mexico.
    MEX_050_xs.jpg
  • Tall trees covered with butterflies at the Monarch butterfly reserve. Rosario, Mexico.
    MEX_049_xs.jpg
  • Tall trees covered with butterflies at the Monarch butterfly reserve. Rosario, Mexico.
    MEX_047_xs.jpg
  • The Red Adair Company capping an oil well after they extinguished the fire. The burning Al Burgan oil fields in Kuwait after the end of the Gulf War in May of 1991 were covered in oil that rained down from the clouds of oil smoke and oil shooting into the air after a fire had been extinguished. More than 700 wells were set ablaze by retreating Iraqi troops creating the largest man-made environmental disaster in history.
    KUW_038_xs.jpg
  • The Red Adair Company Capping an oil well after they extinguished the fire. The burning Al Burgan oil fields in Kuwait after the end of the Gulf War in May of 1991 were covered in oil that rained down from the clouds of oil smoke and oil shooting into the air after a fire had been extinguished. More than 700 wells were set ablaze by retreating Iraqi troops creating the largest man-made environmental disaster in history.
    KUW_022_xs.jpg
  • A Himba chief stands with his two wives outside his home in the small village of Okapembambu in northwestern Namibia, during the rainy season in March.  The Himba culture is polygamous. The Himba diet consists of corn meal porridge and sour cow's milk.  Like most traditional Himba women, they covers themselves from head to toe with an ochre powder, cow butter blend.
    NAM_090308_617_xw.jpg
  • An exhausted Wild Well Control Inc. worker takes a break while capping an oil well after they extinguished the fire. The burning Al Burgan oil fields in Kuwait after the end of the Gulf War in May of 1991 were covered in oil that rained down from the clouds of oil smoke and oil shooting into the air after a fire had been extinguished. More than 700 wells were set ablaze by retreating Iraqi troops creating the largest man-made environmental disaster in history. Photo taken on July 8, 1991.
    KUW_044_xs.jpg
  • The burning Al Burgan oil fields in Kuwait after the end of the Gulf War in May of 1991 were covered in oil that rained down from the clouds of oil smoke and oil shooting into the air after a fire had been extinguished. More than 700 wells were set ablaze by retreating Iraqi troops creating the largest man-made environmental disaster in history.
    KUW_012_xs.jpg
  • Combatants playing war at "Quest" paintball combat park, Malibu, California, USA.
    USA_MILT_10_xs.jpg
  • Mohammad Riahi, a part time restaurant manager and taxi driver eats breakfast with his family at their home in the city of Yazd, Iran.  (Mohammad Riahi is one of the people interviewed for the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)  He lives with his father and mother, and will until he marries. Even then, he and his bride will be offered the second floor of his parent's home. At the restaurant he eats whatever he feels like eating. At home though, he eats what his mother puts on the tablecloth on the floor in the middle of their living room. Many of their meals are vegetable and starch-based although they have lamb or chicken occasionally, and sheep's head soup on the weekend. As Muslims, they never eat pork.
    IRN_061211_056_xxw.jpg
  • Faith D'Aluisio, one of the authors of the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets in front of the Imam Mosque in Isfahan, Iran, during a December snow storm. MODEL RELEASED.
    IRN_061217_106_xw.jpg
  • People walk across the forecourt of the Sheikh Lotfollah Mosque in the city of Isfahan, Iran. The  extravagantly tiled and decorated private mosque is in Imam Square, also known as Naghsh-i Jahan Square in Isfahan.
    IRN_061217_108_xw.jpg
  • Atefeh Fotowat, a high school student and aspiring fashion designer (second from left in blue jeans), enjoys dinner with her family in their elegant four-story home in Isfahan, Iran.  (Atefeh Fotowat is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)
    IRN_061216_119_xw.jpg
  • Atefeh Fotowat's mother, walks from the kitchen, about to sit down to a dinner with her family in their elegant four-story home in Isfahan, Iran. With her husband, a renowned miniaturist painter, they exemplify the educated Iranian upper middle class in Isfahan, Iran's third largest city, famous for art and Islamic architecture.
    IRN_061216_115_xw.jpg
  • Diners at table at the Shahzad Restaurant in Isfahan, Iran.
    IRN_061215_212_xw.jpg
  • Diners at table at the Shahzad Restaurant in Isfahan, Iran.
    IRN_061215_205_xw.jpg
  • Widow of Iraq War veteran at memorial for her husband.
    IRN_061208_21_xw.jpg
  • Shielded from the sun and strangers' eyes, and wrapped up against the chilly December air, a woman cloaked in a black chador wends her way through the ancient streets in the old market district of Yazd, Iran. (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)
    IRN_061213_129_xxw.jpg
  • Faith D'Aluisio and Peter Menzel, award-winning authors of the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets, at the Jameh Mosque in the city of Yazd, Iran. (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) MODEL RELEASED.
    IRN_061209_62_xxw.jpg
  • The courtyard of the magnificently tiled Masjed-e Imam (Royal Mosque) and its reflection at night in Imam Square, Isfahan, Iran. (Also referred to as Emam Square). The mosque was built by the Safavid ruler, Shah Abbas 1, as part of the renovation of the central square of Isfahan. The architect was Ostad Abu'l-Qasim.  (Imam Square is also called Naghsh-i Jahan Square).
    IRN_061217_109_xw.jpg
  • Shoppers walk through a bazaar in Isfahan, Iran, with a poster of Ayatollah Khamenei hanging above.
    IRN_061216_082_xw.jpg
  • A woman adjusts  the wedding gown of a bride at a ceremony in the city of Yazd, Iran. MODEL RELEASED.
    IRN_061214_766_xw.jpg
  • Hot springs resort in Teitung, Taiwan.
    TAI_110327_028_x.jpg
  • Ban Saylom Village, just South of Luang Prabang, Laos. Every morning at dawn, barefoot Buddhist monks and novices in orange robes walk down the streets collecting food alms from devout, kneeling Buddhists. They then return to their temples (also known as "wats") and eat together. This procession is called Tak Bat, or Making Merit.
    LAO_120128_088_x.jpg
  • Ban Saylom Village, just South of Luang Prabang, Laos. Every morning at dawn, barefoot Buddhist monks and novices in orange robes walk down the streets collecting food alms from devout, kneeling Buddhists. They then return to their temples (also known as "wats") and eat together. This procession is called Tak Bat, or Making Merit.
    LAO_120125_109_x.jpg
  • Half Moon Island, home to over 3000 pairs of chinstrap penguins, many with chicks at this time of year, late in the Antarctic summer. Off the Antarctic Peninsula.
    ANT_110119_227_x.jpg
  • Faith D'Aluisio, one of the authors of the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets, at Khan al-Khalili souq (market) in Cairo, Egypt.
    EGY_080326_173_xw.jpg
  • Shahnaz Begum, a mother of four, outside her home with her microloan-financed cows and her typical day's worth of food outside her home in the village of Bari Majlish, an hour outside Dhaka. (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) MODEL RELEASED
    BAN_081214_187_xxw.jpg
  • Site Trinity, ground zero, on the White Sands Missile Range in S. New Mexico. Site of the world's first atomic explosiion on August 6, 1945. The atomic bomb was developed by the Manhatten Project. The Manhattan Project refers to the effort during World War II by the United States, in collaboration with the United Kingdom, Canada, and other European physicists, to develop the first nuclear weapons. Formally designated as the Manhattan Engineering District (MED), it refers specifically to the period of the project from 1942-1946 under the control of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, under the administration of General Leslie R. Groves, with its scientific research directed by the American physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer. The project succeeded in developing and detonating three nuclear weapons in 1945: a test detonation on July 16 (the Trinity test) near Alamogordo, New Mexico; an enriched uranium bomb code-named "Little Boy" detonated on August 6 over Hiroshima, Japan; and a plutonium bomb code-named "Fat Man" on August 9 over Nagasaki, Japan. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manhattan_Project)
    USA_101002_134_x.jpg
  • .Animal slaugher and rendering area behind Phousy public market in Ban Saylom Village, just south of Luang Prabang, Laos.
    LAO_120129_135_x.jpg
  • Ban Saylom Village, just South of Luang Prabang, Laos. Every morning at dawn, barefoot Buddhist monks and novices in orange robes walk down the streets collecting food alms from devout, kneeling Buddhists. They then return to their temples (also known as "wats") and eat together. This procession is called Tak Bat, or Making Merit.
    LAO_120125_071_x.jpg
  • Boat trip back from the Thousand Buddha Caves on the Mekong River, Luang Prabang, Laos...
    LAO_120123_628_x.jpg
  • Boat trip back from the Thousand Buddha Caves on the Mekong River, Luang Prabang, Laos...
    LAO_120123_614_x.jpg
  • Boat trip back from the Thousand Buddha Caves on the Mekong River, Luang Prabang, Laos...
    LAO_120123_593_x.jpg
  • Kayaking in Antarctica off the Scandinavian-built ice-breaker Akademik Sergey Vavilov, originally built for the Russian Academy of Science and still used occasionally by scientists, is now predominantly used for adventure touring in both the Arctic and the Antarctic. The ship is currently operated by a Russian crew, and staffed with employees of the adventure touring company Quark Expeditions, and carries around 100 passengers at a time. Skontorp Cove.
    ANT_WL_110117_605.jpg
  • Kayaking off Petermann Island, home to the southernmost breeding colony of gentoo penguins, located below the Lemaire channel, near the Antarctic peninsula
    ANT_WL_110115_593_x.jpg
  • Half Moon Island, home to over 3000 pairs of chinstrap penguins, many with chicks at this time of year, late in the Antarctic summer. Off the Antarctic Peninsula.
    ANT_110119_263_x.jpg
  • Kayaking off Half Moon Island, home to over 3000 pairs of chinstrap penguins, many with chicks at this time of year, late in the Antarctic summer.
    ANT_110119_214_x.jpg
  • An adventure tourism team from the Scandinavian-built ice-breaker, Akademik Sergey Vavilov, watches humpback whales from an inflatable zodiac boat in Wilhelmina Bay, Antarctic Peninsula. The icebreaker was originally built for the Russian Academy of Science and although scientists still use it occasionally, it is now predominantly used for adventure touring in both the Arctic and the Antarctic. The ship is currently operated by a Russian crew, and staffed with employees of the adventure touring company Quark Expeditions, and carries around 100 passengers at a time.
    ANT_110118_467_x.jpg
  • Crabeater seals lie on an ice flow in Wilhelmina Bay, Antarctic Peninsula.
    ANT_110118_245_x.jpg
  • Soldiers lined up in formal uniforms in Guadalajara, Mexico.
    MEX_139_xs.jpg
  • May 1, Worker's Day.  Troops in the Zocolo standing in red confetti and paper below where the president will speak in Mexico City, Mexico.
    MEX_138_xs.jpg
  • A uniformed man seems to enjoy looking at the missiles on display at the Paris Air Show, at Le Bourget Airport, France. Held every other year, the event is one of the world's biggest international trade fairs for the aerospace business.
    FRA_084_xs.jpg
  • Mall of America in Bloomington, Minnesota, near Minneapolis. Largest mall in the USA. No model releases.
    USA_080528_111_xw.jpg
  • Muna Ali  (in white sweater) plays with her siblings in the kitchen of her parents' house in Scarboro, Ontario, Canada. She and her family immigrated from Somalia .
    CAN_080621_281_xw.jpg
  • An elderly neighbor of rice farmer Nguyen Van Theo, in Tho Quang Village, Vietnam.  (Nguyen Van Theo is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)
    VIE_081220_389_xw.jpg
  • A woman speaks to a vendor selling vegetables on the street in Old City, Jerusalem, Israel.
    ISR_081024_143_xw.jpg
  • Shahnaz Hossain Begum milks one of her cows at her home in Bari Majlish village outside Dhaka, Bangladesh. (Shahnaz Hossain Begum is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)  The caloric value of her day's worth of food on a typical day in December was 2000 kcals. She is 38; 5' 2" and 130 pounds.  She got her first micro loan several years ago, from BRAC, Bangladesh Rehabilitation Assistance Committee, to buy cows to produce milk for sale. This mother of four was able to earn enough to build several rental rooms next to her home in her village of Bari Majlish, an hour outside Dhaka. She and her tenants share a companionable outdoor cooking space and all largely cook traditional Bangladeshi foods such as dahl, ruti (also spelled roti), and vegetable curries. She and her family don't drink the milk that helps provide their income. MODEL RELEASED.
    BAN_081213_397_xw.jpg
  • A woman walks on a busy street near the docks in Dhaka, Bangladesh.
    BAN_081210_542_xw.jpg
  • Kayaking in Antarctica off the Scandinavian-built ice-breaker Akademik Sergey Vavilov, originally built for the Russian Academy of Science and still used occasionally by scientists, is now predominantly used for adventure touring in both the Arctic and the Antarctic. The ship is currently operated by a Russian crew, and staffed with employees of the adventure touring company Quark Expeditions, and carries around 100 passengers at a time. Skontorp Cove.
    ANT_WL_110117_568_x.jpg
  • A motorcyclist carries a child in Hanoi, Vietnam.
    VIE_081222_530_xw.jpg
  • Truck drivers enjoy a mid-morning meal of sheep meat, potato, onion, tomato, and flat bread in a rustic restaurant stall at the Birqash Camel Market outside Cairo, Egypt, where Saleh Abdul Fadlallah works as a broker. (Abdul Fadlallah is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)
    EGY_080322_072_xw.jpg
  • A woman walks past a pile of garbage at Shari Khayyamiya, a tentmakers street and market area in Cairo, Egypt.
    EGY_080326_134_xw.jpg
  • Pre-dawn worshipers with flaming camel dung at the Hindu Rat Temple in Deshnoke, Rajasthan, India. This ornate Hindu temple was constructed by Maharaja Ganga Singh in the early 1900s as a tribute to the rat goddess, Karni Mata..
    IND_026_xs.jpg
  • At the Napa Valley Festival del Sole, Joyce Yang joined violinist Sarah Chang, cellist Nina Kotova, violist Katie Kadarauch and soprano Nino Machaidze in a chamber music program that included the Brahms Piano Quartet in C Minor, at Castello di Amorosa, Napa Valley winery castle built by Dario Sattui.
    USA_110721_035.jpg
  • Village market near the International Airport outside Hanoi, Vietnam
    VIE_120130_916_x.jpg
  • Taipei, Taiwan
    TAI_110327_174_x.jpg
  • Palisade, near Grand Junction, Colorado
    USA_CO_080920_091_x.jpg
  • Rice: Aerial view of rice fields near Biggs, California, USA. Butte County, Northern California, USA. 1990.
    USA_AG_RICE_06_xs.jpg
  • At the Napa Valley Festival del Sole, Joyce Yang joined violinist Sarah Chang, cellist Nina Kotova, violist Katie Kadarauch and soprano Nino Machaidze in a chamber music program that included the Brahms Piano Quartet in C Minor, at Castello di Amorosa, Napa Valley winery castle built by Dario Sattui.
    USA_110721_035_x.jpg
  • Victoria and Albert Museum, London, UK.
    GBR_110219_040_x.jpg
  • Copenhagen, Denmark
    DEN_110217_051_x.jpg
  • Wenceslas Square. Memorial for Velvet Revolution. Prague, Czech Republic.
    CZE_34_xs.jpg
  • An oil well fire specialist of Red Adair, Co. of Texas works to prepare a well for capping by sawing off the damaged well head in the Kuwait oil fields. The fire has already been extinguished but the well is spewing oil and gas into the air under high pressure. The trick is to cut through the metal casing cleanly without causing any sparks that could reignite the well and incinerate the workers. The company was one of those brought in to fight the Kuwait oil well fires after the end of the Gulf War (July, 1991).
    KUW_046_xs.jpg
  • An oil lake and devastated desert landscape in the burning greater Al Burgan oil fields in Kuwait after the end of the Gulf War in May of 1991. More than 700 wells were set ablaze by retreating Iraqi troops creating the largest man-made environmental disaster in history.
    KUW_029_xs.jpg
  • An oil lake and devastated desert landscape in the burning greater Al Burgan oil fields in Kuwait after the end of the Gulf War in May of 1991. More than 700 wells were set ablaze by retreating Iraqi troops creating the largest man-made environmental disaster in history.
    KUW_016_xs.jpg
  • Self Portrait, Peter Menzel, after photographing in the street during the Holi Festival, a Hindu spring festival, also called the Festival of Colors. On the second day, known as Dhulandi, people spend the day throwing colored powder and water at each other. New Delhi, India. New Delhi, India; MODEL RELEASED.
    IND_070_xs.jpg
  • Atefeh Fotowat, a high school student and aspiring fashion designer with her typical day's worth of food at her home in the city of Isfahan, Iran.  (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)  The caloric value of her typical day's worth of food in December was 2400 kcals. She is 17 years of age; 5 feet, 4.5 inches tall; and 121 pounds. Her father, a renowned miniaturist painter, is seated on the couch, along with her mother and her brother, a university student. Together, they exemplify the educated Iranian upper middle class in Isfahan, Iran's third largest city, famous for art and Islamic architecture. Atefeh's relaxed repose and her attire, combining jeans and headscarf, show her ease with foreigners yet respect for tradition. She aspires to turn her fashion designing avocation into a vocation by becoming a designer after college.  MODEL RELEASED.
    IRN_061216_167_xxw.jpg
  • (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE). Sudanese Refugee D'jimia Ishakh Souleymane at the Breidjing Refugee Camp in eastern Chad. Hungry Planet: What the World Eats (p. 65).
    CHA104_0010_xxf1rw.jpg
  • At the Napa Valley Festival del Sole, Joyce Yang joined violinist Sarah Chang, cellist Nina Kotova, violist Katie Kadarauch and soprano Nino Machaidze in a chamber music program that included the Brahms Piano Quartet in C Minor, at Castello di Amorosa, Napa Valley winery castle built by Dario Sattui.
    USA_110721_034.jpg
  • At the Napa Valley Festival del Sole, Joyce Yang joined violinist Sarah Chang, cellist Nina Kotova, violist Katie Kadarauch and soprano Nino Machaidze in a chamber music program that included the Brahms Piano Quartet in C Minor, at Castello di Amorosa, Napa Valley winery castle built by Dario Sattui.
    USA_110721_033.jpg
  • At the Napa Valley Festival del Sole, Joyce Yang joined violinist Sarah Chang, cellist Nina Kotova, violist Katie Kadarauch and soprano Nino Machaidze in a chamber music program that included the Brahms Piano Quartet in C Minor, at Castello di Amorosa, Napa Valley winery castle built by Dario Sattui.
    USA_110721_030.jpg
  • Menzel compound, Napa Vallley, CA
    USA_090513_020_x.jpg
  • Menzel compound, Napa Vallley, CA
    USA_090513_014_x.jpg
  • Preparing to feed the tourist at the openhouse at Site Trinity, ground zero, on the White Sands Missile Range in S. New Mexico. Site of the world's first atomic explosiion on August 6, 1945. The atomic bomb was developed by the Manhatten Project. The Manhattan Project refers to the effort during World War II by the United States, in collaboration with the United Kingdom, Canada, and other European physicists, to develop the first nuclear weapons. Formally designated as the Manhattan Engineering District (MED), it refers specifically to the period of the project from 1942-1946 under the control of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, under the administration of General Leslie R. Groves, with its scientific research directed by the American physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer. The project succeeded in developing and detonating three nuclear weapons in 1945: a test detonation on July 16 (the Trinity test) near Alamogordo, New Mexico; an enriched uranium bomb code-named "Little Boy" detonated on August 6 over Hiroshima, Japan; and a plutonium bomb code-named "Fat Man" on August 9 over Nagasaki, Japan. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manhattan_Project)
    USA_101002_202_x.jpg
  • Village near the international Airport in Hanoi, Vietnam. Market across from Avi Airport Hotel.
    VIE_120119_035_x.jpg
  • Village near the international Airport in Hanoi, Vietnam. Market across from Avi Airport Hotel.
    VIE_120119_003_x.jpg
  • Taipei, Taiwan
    TAI_110327_145_x.jpg
  • Taipei, Taiwan
    TAI_110327_144_x.jpg
  • On Green Island, a former prison island off the coast of SE Taiwan where political prisoners were incarcerated and re-educated during the unnervingly recent White Terror. There's actually still a high-security prison on the island, but it only holds 200 inmates (actual felons, not polital prisoners), as opposed to the couple thousand of earlier decades..Now it's mostly a tourist destination. We visited in the off season in March, thereby avoiding the 5,000-10,000 tourists that inundate the little place daily, though, being the off season, we had to contend instead with intermittent cold rain and high winds.
    TAI_110325_033_x.jpg
  • Taipei, Taiwan
    TAI_110324_236_x.jpg
  • A hooded penitent in a night-time procession during Holy week in Seville, Spain. Street processions are organized in most Spanish towns each evening, from Palm Sunday to Easter Sunday. People carry statues of saints on floats or wooden platforms, and an atmosphere of mourning can seem quite oppressive to onlookers.
    SPA_116_xs.jpg
  • Miguel Fairbanks mud bathing at a natural hot springs near Gerlach, Nevada. MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_NV_6_xs.jpg
  • Slow Food celebration at Ft. Mason, San Francisco
    USA_CA_080829_178_x.jpg
  • Monterey, California
    USA_090720_541_x.jpg
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Peter Menzel Photography

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