Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2015/08/30
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Interesting to see, Adam. I particularly enjoyed the ones of the brick-making. Cheers, Nathan Nathan Wajsman Alicante, Spain http://www.frozenlight.eu <http://www.frozenlight.eu/> http:// <http://www.greatpix.eu/>www.greatpix.eu PICTURE OF THE WEEK: http://www.fotocycle.dk/paws <http://www.fotocycle.dk/paws>Blog: http://nathansmusings.wordpress.com/ <http://nathansmusings.wordpress.com/> Cycling: http://www.crazyguyonabike.com/belgiangator <http://www.crazyguyonabike.com/belgiangator> YNWA > On 24 Aug 2015, at 19:45, Adam Bridge <abridge at mac.com> wrote: > > This is an update post with the correct URLs. I had been in SmugMug?s > ?edit? mode when I took the image info. Won?t do that again?at least not > today. > > My trip to Tanzania was as photo documentarian for a service trip by a > group of students from the College of St. Scholastica, a Benedictine > Catholic college in Duluth, Minnesota. Some of the images will be to > document that trip. I?m posting images here that I feel might be of > interest. Following a link to my SmugMug site will allow you to browse any > of the other images. Many of those will be oriented to the trip > documentary and probably not of wide interest. > > The early part of the trip worked out of Dar es Salaam. We stayed at a > hostel called the TEC Center. > > <https://adam-bridge.smugmug.com/Travel/Tanzania/i-BNcWZNq/A> > > > The college hosts Benedictine sisters from two sister monasteries in the > south-west part of the country. The most recent graduate, with a masters > degree, realized that although public education is free in Tanzania it > doesn?t include disabled students. She set about raising funds to build a > school to help them. > > An early stop on our trip was to visit the site of the new school and to > deliver a bag she hadn?t been able to bring back with her. > > <https://adam-bridge.smugmug.com/Travel/Tanzania/i-T4mWGBv/A> > > > Most of the money goes to make bricks, by hand, on site: > > <https://adam-bridge.smugmug.com/Travel/Tanzania/i-sqJXJL7/A> > > > Drying bricks: > > <https://adam-bridge.smugmug.com/Travel/Tanzania/i-nFNptTM/A> > > > Waiting to greet us, one of four sisters waits for us along a path to > their dwelling: > > <https://adam-bridge.smugmug.com/Travel/Tanzania/i-xFZL944> > > > She didn?t speak a word of English, only Swahili, but she radiated > friendship and while walking with this crutched was determined that we be > comfortable and enjoy a meal with them: > > <https://adam-bridge.smugmug.com/Travel/Tanzania/i-vNBKQrq/A> > > > It takes a fast shutter speed to catch her standing still: > > <https://adam-bridge.smugmug.com/Travel/Tanzania/i-zQ8DNmj/A> > > > The sisters? dwelling. It?s very simple. This is an iphone 6+ panorama: > > <https://adam-bridge.smugmug.com/Travel/Tanzania/i-RmqxWSH/A> > > > The kitchen. There is, of course, no utility connection here: > > <https://adam-bridge.smugmug.com/Travel/Tanzania/i-6PFGH8R/A> > > > Washing oranges: > > <https://adam-bridge.smugmug.com/Travel/Tanzania/i-J3cFdp9/A> > > > Two views of the same set of doors/windows. The first with the Fuji X-T1 > and it?s kit lens, the second with the Sony A7ii & 35mm Loxia: > lens: > > <https://adam-bridge.smugmug.com/Travel/Tanzania/i-4NKQDhd/A> > > <https://adam-bridge.smugmug.com/Travel/Tanzania/i-b3tQnWg/A> > > > A student with Sister Gardenzia: > > <https://adam-bridge.smugmug.com/Travel/Tanzania/i-pnCnKcV/A> > > > After our visit to the school site we went up the coast a bit more to the > town of Bagamoyo site of a 13th century trading outpost. > > This image is from a building built much later, about the time the Germans > were settling East Africa: > > <https://adam-bridge.smugmug.com/Travel/Tanzania/i-HHshLRB/A> > > > From the ruins where coral was quarried and used as building materials. It > has survived remarkably well: > > <https://adam-bridge.smugmug.com/Travel/Tanzania/i-qLtT4ns/A> > > > And, finally, one of the characteristic doorways in the old, now ruined, > part of Bagamoyo: > > <https://adam-bridge.smugmug.com/Travel/Tanzania/i-ntmMRpR/A> > > > Thanks for looking. The images were made with either a Fuji X-T1 or Sony > A7ii. > > Comments/critique/suggestions are most welcome. > > Adam > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information