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  • Zinha, the owner of the stall that serves delicious Saotomese food.
    170119-LFC-0958.jpg
  • Banana beach seen from Roca(farm) belo Monte lookout. This beach became very famous because Baccardi filmed an advertising in this location.
    170119-LFC-1041.jpg
  • Banana beach seen from Roca(farm) belo Monte lookout. This beach became very famous because Baccardi filmed an advertising in this location.
    170119-LFC-0993.jpg
  • And old worker showing around Roça Agostinho Neto. This old cocoa farm is the largest in São Tomé.
    170124-LFC-3796.jpg
  • Boys showing around Roça Agostinho Neto (Agostinho Neto farm) in São Tomé island.
    170124-LFC-3580.jpg
  • Banana beach. This beach became very famous because Baccardi filmed an advertising in this location.
    170119-LFC-1131.jpg
  • A man in the verandah of his colorful wooden house in Príncipe island, in São TOmé e Príncipe archipelago.
    170118-LFC-0161.jpg
  • A man passing by drying clothe, carrying a machete. Roça Sundy, Príncipe island
    170120-LFC-1881.jpg
  • Banana beach seen from Roca(farm) belo Monte lookout. This beach became very famous because Baccardi filmed an advertising in this location.
    170119-LFC-1023.jpg
  • Women grating coconut while breast feeding at Roça Sundy, in Príncipe island
    170120-LFC-1845.jpg
  • A woman drying clothe at the old slave quarter at  Roça Sundy, in Príncipe island
    170120-LFC-1702.jpg
  • Portrait of Dona Adelaide, living at the old slave quarter in Roça Sundy, Príncipe island.
    170120-LFC-1891.jpg
  • Boys showing around Roça Agostinho Neto (Agostinho Neto farm) in São Tomé island.
    170124-LFC-3510.jpg
  • Cocoa beans at Roça Agostinho Neto. This old cocoa farm is the largest in São Tomé.
    170124-LFC-3788.jpg
  • Boys showing around Roça Agostinho Neto (Agostinho Neto farm) in São Tomé island.
    170124-LFC-3428.jpg
  • A boy dances with Roça Agostinho Neto  main street in the background. This old cocoa farm is the largest in São Tomé island.
    170124-LFC-3611.jpg
  • Banana beach. This beach became very famous because Baccardi filmed an advertising in this location.
    170119-LFC-1107.jpg
  • Boys showing around Roça Agostinho Neto (Agostinho Neto farm) in São Tomé island.
    170124-LFC-3376.jpg
  • Banana beach. This beach became very famous because Baccardi filmed an advertising in this location.
    170119-LFC-1093.jpg
  • Boys showing around Roça Agostinho Neto (Agostinho Neto farm) in São Tomé island.
    170124-LFC-3536.jpg
  • Men pounding millet at Roça Agostinho Neto, in São Tomé island.
    170124-LFC-3680.jpg
  • Banana beach. This beach became very famous because Baccardi filmed an advertising in this location.
    170119-LFC-1142.jpg
  • Children playing soccer at Roça Sundy, in Príncipe island
    170120-LFC-1491.jpg
  • Children having a meal at Zinha's kiosk, in Santo António do Príncipe
    170119-LFC-0907.jpg
  • Banana beach. This beach became very famous because Baccardi filmed an advertising in this location.
    170119-LFC-1077.jpg
  • Children playing at Roça Sundy, in Príncipe island
    170120-LFC-1817.jpg
  • "Bela - Vinhos e Petiscos" bar in Alfama district in Lisbon.
    h_00018028.jpg
  • Fresh vegetables vendor in one of the medinas souks.
    h_00001305.jpg
  • "Tejo Bar" in Alfama district in Lisbon.
    h_00018021.jpg
  • Restaurant Belcanto in Lisbon.
    h_00018121.jpg
  • Restaurant Belcanto in Lisbon.
    h_00018124.jpg
  • Groups of Aboriginal people camped in rock shelters around Ubirr to take advantage of the enormous variety of foods available from the East Alligator River, the Nadab floodplain, the woodlands, and the surrounding stone country. The rock overhang of the main gallery provided an area where a family could set up camp. Food items were regularly painted on the back wall, one on top of the other, to pay respect to the particular animal, to ensure future hunting success, or to illustrate a noteworthy catch. Among the animals painted in the main gallery are barramundi, catfish, mullet, goannas, long-necked turtles, pig-nosed turtles, rock ringtail possums, and wallabies. Although Aboriginal people no longer live in the shelter, the animals depicted are still hunted for food today.
    h_00000900 - Cópia.jpg
  • Groups of Aboriginal people camped in rock shelters around Ubirr to take advantage of the enormous variety of foods available from the East Alligator River, the Nadab floodplain, the woodlands, and the surrounding stone country. The rock overhang of the main gallery provided an area where a family could set up camp. Food items were regularly painted on the back wall, one on top of the other, to pay respect to the particular animal, to ensure future hunting success, or to illustrate a noteworthy catch. Among the animals painted in the main gallery are barramundi, catfish, mullet, goannas, long-necked turtles, pig-nosed turtles, rock ringtail possums, and wallabies. Although Aboriginal people no longer live in the shelter, the animals depicted are still hunted for food today.
    h_00000897.jpg
  • Groups of Aboriginal people camped in rock shelters around Ubirr to take advantage of the enormous variety of foods available from the East Alligator River, the Nadab floodplain, the woodlands, and the surrounding stone country. The rock overhang of the main gallery provided an area where a family could set up camp. Food items were regularly painted on the back wall, one on top of the other, to pay respect to the particular animal, to ensure future hunting success, or to illustrate a noteworthy catch. Among the animals painted in the main gallery are barramundi, catfish, mullet, goannas, long-necked turtles, pig-nosed turtles, rock ringtail possums, and wallabies. Although Aboriginal people no longer live in the shelter, the animals depicted are still hunted for food today.
    h_00000925.jpg
  • Groups of Aboriginal people camped in rock shelters around Ubirr to take advantage of the enormous variety of foods available from the East Alligator River, the Nadab floodplain, the woodlands, and the surrounding stone country. The rock overhang of the main gallery provided an area where a family could set up camp. Food items were regularly painted on the back wall, one on top of the other, to pay respect to the particular animal, to ensure future hunting success, or to illustrate a noteworthy catch. Among the animals painted in the main gallery are barramundi, catfish, mullet, goannas, long-necked turtles, pig-nosed turtles, rock ringtail possums, and wallabies. Although Aboriginal people no longer live in the shelter, the animals depicted are still hunted for food today.
    h_00000904.jpg
  • Guide Foussani Guindo walks by a baobab tree. The fruit of this tree has many usages as the production of musical instruments, food, containers, and its trunk is also used to make ropes. The Dogon Country is the most visited part of Mali with tourists visiting its tipical  villages that can be located on the cliff, on the sandy plain or in the rocky plateau
    080807-LFC-2354.jpg
  • Vendor carrying a bucket full of karité fruit. Besides beeing used as food, karité is also used on the cosmetic industry by processing the butter made with it.
    080807-LFC-2146.jpg
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Luís Filipe Catarino - Photographer

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