Farhiz: Mechuka. Football game opposite Gebu’s place.
Farhiz: Mechuka. Football game opposite Gebu’s place.
Farhiz: Mechuka. Football game opposite Gebu’s place.
Farhiz: Haridwar. End of a long day.
Farhiz: Haridwar. Madhudas will stay here for a few months before leaving for Kedarnath. There he’ll stay till winter and then go to Delhi.
avwedemeyer: capturing the descent
avwedemeyer: buona notte
Farhiz: Every year at the end of September this spot overlooking the paddy fields in Ziro is the site of the music festival.
Farhiz: Haridwar
Farhiz: Haridwar. A farmer rides his bullock cart early morning.
Farhiz: Rajaji Natl Park, Haridwar. Rashid runs across the courtyard of the mud hut his father built.
Farhiz: Haridwar. Fields of wheat.
avwedemeyer: nocturnal murmurs on a pollença corner
Farhiz: Mechuka. Feral horses still roam freely though in fewer numbers.
Farhiz: Tsokarpu village. Yachak Chije put a few makai bhuttas on to roast while we sat around the fire.
Farhiz: Singbir village. So much had changed. So little had changed. For example this hanging bridge. The rest waited for me to get across before stepping onto it. It doesn’t just sway side to side but bounces too. Not ideal when carrying a Noctilux across.
Farhiz: Singbir village. This house is new. I would have remembered it if it was there on our previous visit.
avwedemeyer: sleeping olive tree I - shootout - please read
avwedemeyer: into the veins of munich
avwedemeyer: silhouettes and luxury's glow
Farhiz: Singbir village. Mechuka.
Farhiz: Jirdin village. Yomeh, Rike’s granddaughter, with a kala tikka on her forehead to ward away nazar, is too shy to join us while we sit sipping on lal chai and chat with her uncle and grandpa.
Farhiz: Aalo. The bakery below the cafe was the only thing still open at night. Everyone else had gone home.
Farhiz: The car needed some servicing after days of driving on terrible roads. While the mechanics were going about fixing it I spotted this bike not far from the Enfield showroom in North Lakhimpur.
E. Elliott Lai: Kandice @ Clyde Hill
Farhiz: The Andaman sea.
Farhiz: A couple of chairs and a desk fan awaiting new owners is all that's left of the old Padmanabham restaurant on Janpath after it closed.
Farhiz: CP.
Farhiz: Kalapathar. Dasai Nag is from Jharkhand. He first came to the Andamans in 1956 and has lived here ever since. Every morning he comes to sit at his favourite spot by the sea.
Farhiz: Havelock.