1116-47085 - Two Males And One Female Skating Arm In Arm On Freshly Groomed Ice On Pond With Community Centre In The Background, Calgary, Alberta, Canada
1116-44666 - A Young Girl Walks Towards The Camera While A Grandfather And Granddaughter Play In The Background On The Beach In Winter At Stanley Park, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
1116-45270 - Three Generations Of Women In A Family Posing On A Beach, A Grandmother And Eight Granddaughters, Fox Spit, Whidbey Island, Washington, United States Of America
1116-43197 - A Couple And Young Girl In A Red Canoe On Byers Lake With Green Forested Shoreline In Byers Lake Campground, Denali State Park, Alaska, United States Of America
1116-43071 - Couple With Daughter Having A Snack Overlooking A Glacier, Shoup Bay State Marine Park, Prince William Sound, Valdez, Alaska, United States Of America
1116-43196 - A Couple And Young Girl In A Red Canoe On Byers Lake With Green Forested Shoreline In Byers Lake Campground, Denali State Park, Alaska, United States Of America
1116-43198 - Two Women And Young Girl In A Red Canoe On Byers Lake With Green Forested Shoreline And Mount Mckinley Peaking Through The Clouds, Denali State Park, Alaska, United States Of America
1116-43073 - A Family Poses In Front Of Shoup Glacier And Chugach Mountains, Shoup Bay State Marine Park, Prince William Sound, Valdez, Alaska, United States Of America
975-131 - An IDP camp (internally displaced people) in Te-Tugu district of Northern Uganda has been created to accommodate the mass of Ugandan refugees fleeing the LRA (Lords Resistance Army) who are fighting the Ugandan government and its people. With all attempts to be self-sufficient in these camps, Yams are an important vegetable for survival. The tubers can be stored up to six months without refrigeration, which makes them a valuable resource for the yearly period of food scarcity at the beginning of the wet season. Te-Tugu, Uganda, East Africa
975-133 - With such demands for Lake Victoria's Nile perch, the value of the fishery has risen considerably. Labour inflows into the fishery have increased along with growing demand. In 2004, there were 51,712, boats on the lake and 153,066 fishermen. All along the lakeshore, G®?boom townsG®ö have developed in response to the demands of fishing crews with money to spend from a dayG®ös fishing. These towns resemble shanties and have little in the way of services. Jinja, Uganda, East Africa