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DUK10070498_007
FEATURE - Schnorchel Wettbewerb in Llanwrtyd Wells
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Graham M. Lawrence/LNP/REX/Shutterstock (9028251a)
The 32nd annual World Bog Snorkelling Championships, conceived over 30 years ago in a Welsh pub by landlord Gordon Green, are held at the Waen Rhydd Bog.
World Bog Snorkelling Championship in Llanwrtyd Wells, Wales, UK - 27 Aug 2017
Using unconventional swimming strokes, participants swim two lengths of a 55 metre trench cut through a peat bog wearing snorkel mask and flippers.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10070498_006
FEATURE - Schnorchel Wettbewerb in Llanwrtyd Wells
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Graham M. Lawrence/LNP/REX/Shutterstock (9028251e)
Australian truck driver Steve Kelly has travelled from Australia to do the Bog Snorkelling. The 32nd annual World Bog Snorkelling Championships, conceived over 30 years ago in a Welsh pub by landlord Gordon Green, are held at the Waen Rhydd Bog.
World Bog Snorkelling Championship in Llanwrtyd Wells, Wales, UK - 27 Aug 2017
Using unconventional swimming strokes, participants swim two lengths of a 55 metre trench cut through a peat bog wearing snorkel mask and flippers.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10070498_005
FEATURE - Schnorchel Wettbewerb in Llanwrtyd Wells
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Graham M. Lawrence/LNP/REX/Shutterstock (9028251c)
Sam Bradley from Cape Town South Africa does the bog wearing and elephant mask. The 32nd annual World Bog Snorkelling Championships, conceived over 30 years ago in a Welsh pub by landlord Gordon Green, are held at the Waen Rhydd Bog.
World Bog Snorkelling Championship in Llanwrtyd Wells, Wales, UK - 27 Aug 2017
Using unconventional swimming strokes, participants swim two lengths of a 55 metre trench cut through a peat bog wearing snorkel mask and flippers.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10070498_004
FEATURE - Schnorchel Wettbewerb in Llanwrtyd Wells
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Graham M. Lawrence/LNP/REX/Shutterstock (9028251g)
The water in the bog is very cold! The 32nd annual World Bog Snorkelling Championships, conceived over 30 years ago in a Welsh pub by landlord Gordon Green, are held at the Waen Rhydd Bog.
World Bog Snorkelling Championship in Llanwrtyd Wells, Wales, UK - 27 Aug 2017
Using unconventional swimming strokes, participants swim two lengths of a 55 metre trench cut through a peat bog wearing snorkel mask and flippers.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10070498_003
FEATURE - Schnorchel Wettbewerb in Llanwrtyd Wells
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Graham M. Lawrence/LNP/REX/Shutterstock (9028251b)
The 32nd annual World Bog Snorkelling Championships, conceived over 30 years ago in a Welsh pub by landlord Gordon Green, are held at the Waen Rhydd Bog.
World Bog Snorkelling Championship in Llanwrtyd Wells, Wales, UK - 27 Aug 2017
Using unconventional swimming strokes, participants swim two lengths of a 55 metre trench cut through a peat bog wearing snorkel mask and flippers.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10070498_002
FEATURE - Schnorchel Wettbewerb in Llanwrtyd Wells
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Graham M. Lawrence/LNP/REX/Shutterstock (9028251f)
The water in the bog is very cold! The 32nd annual World Bog Snorkelling Championships, conceived over 30 years ago in a Welsh pub by landlord Gordon Green, are held at the Waen Rhydd Bog.
World Bog Snorkelling Championship in Llanwrtyd Wells, Wales, UK - 27 Aug 2017
Using unconventional swimming strokes, participants swim two lengths of a 55 metre trench cut through a peat bog wearing snorkel mask and flippers.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10070498_001
FEATURE - Schnorchel Wettbewerb in Llanwrtyd Wells
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Graham M. Lawrence/LNP/REX/Shutterstock (9028251d)
Angel Jones who is being filmed swimming the length of the River Wye by the BBC takes time out to complete the Bog Snorkelling event with her Jack, her Jack Russel dog. The 32nd annual World Bog Snorkelling Championships, conceived over 30 years ago in a Welsh pub by landlord Gordon Green, are held at the Waen Rhydd Bog.
World Bog Snorkelling Championship in Llanwrtyd Wells, Wales, UK - 27 Aug 2017
Using unconventional swimming strokes, participants swim two lengths of a 55 metre trench cut through a peat bog wearing snorkel mask and flippers.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10031096_014
REPORTAGE - Südafrika: Urbane Gebiete aus der Vogelschau
MANDATORY CREDIT: Johnny Miller/Millefoto/Rex Shutterstock. Editorial use only. Only for use in context of 'Unequal Scenes' photo project. Please link to website if possible: www.unequalscenes.com. Strictly no stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Johnny Miller/Millefoto/REX/Shutterstock (5733931a)
Nomzamo/Lwandle is a township bordered by the communities of Strand and Somerset West, about 40km east of Cape Town. Originally it was conceived of as an area to house ?single male workers? during the apartheid years, in a type of accommodation known as ?hostels?. It is now a sizable suburb with a population of over 60,000 people, In 2014 the City of Cape Town forcibly removed many people from their shacks along the N2 highway in a violent confrontation, but then soon changed course, and rebuilt some of the shacks on another plot of land. There is a clear land buffer (supplemented with fencing) separating the wealthier housing of Strand from Nomzamo/Lwandle. Many of the rebuilt shacks exist within this land buffer
Unequal Scenes: Segregation of urban spaces in South Africa - 2016
FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/sgkr
A photographer has captured a stark view of the urban economic segregation in South Africa.
Johnny Miller has used drone technology to take an aerial view of the divide in standards of living between the poor and the wealthy.
His work highlights how the manicured suburbs of the middle classes sit only several hundred metres away from the ramshackle shanty towns of the poorest members of society.
An example include a God's-eye view of the picturesque suburbs looking out onto the glistening waters of Lake Michelle, 20km from Cape Town?s city centre. Separated by wetlands, a guard house and an electrified fence, the 38,000 inhabitants of the neighbouring tin shacks of Masiphumelele are a world away.
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_66962839_REX
Unequal Scenes: Segregation of urban spaces in South Africa - 2016
MANDATORY CREDIT: Johnny Miller/Millefoto/Rex Shutterstock. Editorial use only. Only for use in context of 'Unequal Scenes' photo project. Please link to website if possible: www.unequalscenes.com. Strictly no stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Johnny Miller/Millefoto/REX/Shutterstock (5733931a)
Nomzamo/Lwandle is a township bordered by the communities of Strand and Somerset West, about 40km east of Cape Town. Originally it was conceived of as an area to house ?single male workers? during the apartheid years, in a type of accommodation known as ?hostels?. It is now a sizable suburb with a population of over 60,000 people, In 2014 the City of Cape Town forcibly removed many people from their shacks along the N2 highway in a violent confrontation, but then soon changed course, and rebuilt some of the shacks on another plot of land. There is a clear land buffer (supplemented with fencing) separating the wealthier housing of Strand from Nomzamo/Lwandle. Many of the rebuilt shacks exist within this land buffer
Unequal Scenes: Segregation of urban spaces in South Africa - 2016
FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/sgkr
A photographer has captured a stark view of the urban economic segregation in South Africa.
Johnny Miller has used drone technology to take an aerial view of the divide in standards of living between the poor and the wealthy.
His work highlights how the manicured suburbs of the middle classes sit only several hundred metres away from the ramshackle shanty towns of the poorest members of society.
An example include a God's-eye view of the picturesque suburbs looking out onto the glistening waters of Lake Michelle, 20km from Cape Town?s city centre. Separated by wetlands, a guard house and an electrified fence, the 38,000 inhabitants of the neighbouring tin shacks of Masiphumelele are a world away.
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
DUKAS/REX -
DUK10031096_018
REPORTAGE - Südafrika: Urbane Gebiete aus der Vogelschau
MANDATORY CREDIT: Johnny Miller/Millefoto/Rex Shutterstock. Editorial use only. Only for use in context of 'Unequal Scenes' photo project. Please link to website if possible: www.unequalscenes.com. Strictly no stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Johnny Miller/Millefoto/REX/Shutterstock (5733931i)
Nomzamo/Lwandle is a township bordered by the communities of Strand and Somerset West, about 40km east of Cape Town. Originally it was conceived of as an area to house ?single male workers? during the apartheid years, in a type of accommodation known as ?hostels?. It is now a sizable suburb with a population of over 60,000 people, In 2014 the City of Cape Town forcibly removed many people from their shacks along the N2 highway in a violent confrontation, but then soon changed course, and rebuilt some of the shacks on another plot of land. There is a clear land buffer (supplemented with fencing) separating the wealthier housing of Strand from Nomzamo/Lwandle. Many of the rebuilt shacks exist within this land buffer
Unequal Scenes: Segregation of urban spaces in South Africa - 2016
FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/sgkr
A photographer has captured a stark view of the urban economic segregation in South Africa.
Johnny Miller has used drone technology to take an aerial view of the divide in standards of living between the poor and the wealthy.
His work highlights how the manicured suburbs of the middle classes sit only several hundred metres away from the ramshackle shanty towns of the poorest members of society.
An example include a God's-eye view of the picturesque suburbs looking out onto the glistening waters of Lake Michelle, 20km from Cape Town?s city centre. Separated by wetlands, a guard house and an electrified fence, the 38,000 inhabitants of the neighbouring tin shacks of Masiphumelele are a world away.
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_66962847_REX
Unequal Scenes: Segregation of urban spaces in South Africa - 2016
MANDATORY CREDIT: Johnny Miller/Millefoto/Rex Shutterstock. Editorial use only. Only for use in context of 'Unequal Scenes' photo project. Please link to website if possible: www.unequalscenes.com. Strictly no stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Johnny Miller/Millefoto/REX/Shutterstock (5733931i)
Nomzamo/Lwandle is a township bordered by the communities of Strand and Somerset West, about 40km east of Cape Town. Originally it was conceived of as an area to house ?single male workers? during the apartheid years, in a type of accommodation known as ?hostels?. It is now a sizable suburb with a population of over 60,000 people, In 2014 the City of Cape Town forcibly removed many people from their shacks along the N2 highway in a violent confrontation, but then soon changed course, and rebuilt some of the shacks on another plot of land. There is a clear land buffer (supplemented with fencing) separating the wealthier housing of Strand from Nomzamo/Lwandle. Many of the rebuilt shacks exist within this land buffer
Unequal Scenes: Segregation of urban spaces in South Africa - 2016
FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/sgkr
A photographer has captured a stark view of the urban economic segregation in South Africa.
Johnny Miller has used drone technology to take an aerial view of the divide in standards of living between the poor and the wealthy.
His work highlights how the manicured suburbs of the middle classes sit only several hundred metres away from the ramshackle shanty towns of the poorest members of society.
An example include a God's-eye view of the picturesque suburbs looking out onto the glistening waters of Lake Michelle, 20km from Cape Town?s city centre. Separated by wetlands, a guard house and an electrified fence, the 38,000 inhabitants of the neighbouring tin shacks of Masiphumelele are a world away.
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
DUKAS/REX -
DUK10031096_017
REPORTAGE - Südafrika: Urbane Gebiete aus der Vogelschau
MANDATORY CREDIT: Johnny Miller/Millefoto/Rex Shutterstock. Editorial use only. Only for use in context of 'Unequal Scenes' photo project. Please link to website if possible: www.unequalscenes.com. Strictly no stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Johnny Miller/Millefoto/REX/Shutterstock (5733931h)
Nomzamo/Lwandle is a township bordered by the communities of Strand and Somerset West, about 40km east of Cape Town. Originally it was conceived of as an area to house ?single male workers? during the apartheid years, in a type of accommodation known as ?hostels?. It is now a sizable suburb with a population of over 60,000 people, In 2014 the City of Cape Town forcibly removed many people from their shacks along the N2 highway in a violent confrontation, but then soon changed course, and rebuilt some of the shacks on another plot of land. There is a clear land buffer (supplemented with fencing) separating the wealthier housing of Strand from Nomzamo/Lwandle. Many of the rebuilt shacks exist within this land buffer
Unequal Scenes: Segregation of urban spaces in South Africa - 2016
FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/sgkr
A photographer has captured a stark view of the urban economic segregation in South Africa.
Johnny Miller has used drone technology to take an aerial view of the divide in standards of living between the poor and the wealthy.
His work highlights how the manicured suburbs of the middle classes sit only several hundred metres away from the ramshackle shanty towns of the poorest members of society.
An example include a God's-eye view of the picturesque suburbs looking out onto the glistening waters of Lake Michelle, 20km from Cape Town?s city centre. Separated by wetlands, a guard house and an electrified fence, the 38,000 inhabitants of the neighbouring tin shacks of Masiphumelele are a world away.
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_66962848_REX
Unequal Scenes: Segregation of urban spaces in South Africa - 2016
MANDATORY CREDIT: Johnny Miller/Millefoto/Rex Shutterstock. Editorial use only. Only for use in context of 'Unequal Scenes' photo project. Please link to website if possible: www.unequalscenes.com. Strictly no stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Johnny Miller/Millefoto/REX/Shutterstock (5733931h)
Nomzamo/Lwandle is a township bordered by the communities of Strand and Somerset West, about 40km east of Cape Town. Originally it was conceived of as an area to house ?single male workers? during the apartheid years, in a type of accommodation known as ?hostels?. It is now a sizable suburb with a population of over 60,000 people, In 2014 the City of Cape Town forcibly removed many people from their shacks along the N2 highway in a violent confrontation, but then soon changed course, and rebuilt some of the shacks on another plot of land. There is a clear land buffer (supplemented with fencing) separating the wealthier housing of Strand from Nomzamo/Lwandle. Many of the rebuilt shacks exist within this land buffer
Unequal Scenes: Segregation of urban spaces in South Africa - 2016
FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/sgkr
A photographer has captured a stark view of the urban economic segregation in South Africa.
Johnny Miller has used drone technology to take an aerial view of the divide in standards of living between the poor and the wealthy.
His work highlights how the manicured suburbs of the middle classes sit only several hundred metres away from the ramshackle shanty towns of the poorest members of society.
An example include a God's-eye view of the picturesque suburbs looking out onto the glistening waters of Lake Michelle, 20km from Cape Town?s city centre. Separated by wetlands, a guard house and an electrified fence, the 38,000 inhabitants of the neighbouring tin shacks of Masiphumelele are a world away.
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_24449965_REX
Louise Brown (born 25 July 1978 In Oldham Greater Manchester Uk) Is The First Person To Be Conceived By In Vitro Fertilization Or Ivf. Louise Brown (now Mrs Wesley Mullinder) Return To Oldham Hospital For 1st Time Since Birth Sister Stella Schofield
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Brian Bould / Associated Newspapers / Rex Features (1494424a)
Louise Brown (born 25 July 1978 In Oldham Greater Manchester Uk) Is The First Person To Be Conceived By In Vitro Fertilization Or Ivf. Louise Brown (now Mrs Wesley Mullinder) Return To Oldham Hospital For 1st Time Since Birth Sister Stella Schofield (centre) Sister Celia Harrop (right) And Nurses With The Louise's Parents Lesley Brown And John Brown
Louise Brown (born 25 July 1978 In Oldham Greater Manchester Uk) Is The First Person To Be Conceived By In Vitro Fertilization Or Ivf. Louise Brown (now Mrs Wesley Mullinder) Return To Oldham Hospital For 1st Time Since Birth Sister Stella Schofield
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_16749760_REX
12LVE Destroyed Apple products project, San Francisco, America - Dec 2010
EXCLUSIVE, Editorial Use Only, No merchandising, advertising or books without permission
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Michael Tompert/Paul Fairchild / Rex Features ( 1254205af )
Michael Tompert, digital artist, who conceived and created 12LVE in collaboration with photographer Paul Fairchild is pictured here in front of his piece titled "Must Have."
The Man Who Shot, Burned and Ran A Train Over His Apple Products
If an iPod is on your Christmas list look away now - an artist has shot, burned, hammered and sawed his way through a range of Apple products.
Heartless Michael Tompert even ran over a selection of iPods with a TRAIN.
San Francisco-based Michael spent months purchasing the doomed products, which range from 2008's colourful range of iPods to the sought-after 2010 iPad
He hooked up with photographer friend Paul Fairchild to capture the end results of various kill methods.
Methods of destruction varied by product. A MacBook Air was decorated with nine neat bulletholes courtesy of a 9mm Heckler & Koch handgun, while a Magic Mouse was sliced up with a handsaw.
And Michael even took the drastic action of placing seven iPod Nanos on the tracks in the path of a Caltrain Diesel Locomotive.
But it was the iPad that proved the hardest to kill. Described by Michael as "practically indestructible", it shrugged off blows from an 8lb sledgehammer before finally meeting it's maker (Steve Jobs?) after its insides were heated with a soldering torch until it exploded.
Michael got the idea for the project after he bought his two sons an iPod Touch each for Christmas. The boys started to fight over one of the mp3 players which had a certain game installed.
His patience finally snapping, Michael grabbed one of the iPods and smashed it on the ground, to the amazement of his children.
"I had given my kids an iPod Touch so they would be happy and love me. But when the argumen...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/QCWZMQKNC
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_16450015_REX
Tai Shan, the giant panda cub, plays at the Fujifilm Giant Panda Habitat at the National Zoo, Washington DC, America - 11 Jun 2006
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Rex Features ( 596351c )
Tai Shan, the National Zoois giant panda cub, plays in a tree at his home at the Fujifilm Giant Panda Habitat. The cub turns 1 year old on Sunday, July 9. To celebrate his first birthday, the National Zoo is hosting a public party on Sunday with traditional Chinese dancers and music, special birthday crafts and talks by panda staff. Tai Shan, whose name means 'Peaceful Mountain' in Chinese, was conceived in 2005 through artificial insemination in a procedure performed by National Zoo scientists and veterinarians.
Tai Shan, the giant panda cub, plays at the Fujifilm Giant Panda Habitat at the National Zoo, Washington DC, America - 11 Jun 2006
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
DUKAS/REX