View allAll Photos Tagged cameroon
Portrait of an Mbororo boy at a Gerewol festival - Cameroon.
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Up in smoke. While visiting the Koma tribe; i saw the witchdoctor looking into one of his pouches. He pulled out some paper and tobacco and started making his own cigaret. I deceided to give him some of the tobacco i brought along and he hapilly accepted. He seemed to enjoy it 😉
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Bamenjing Reservoir, Cameroon, Africa on 2-5-2001 taken by Landsat-7
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Cameroon sheep is a resistant, problem free dwarf breed of domestic sheep mainly found in the savanna of Cameroon in West Africa.
The Cameroon sheep is well adapted to hot and humid climates. It has no wool, as this would be a disadvantage to it in the African heat, but thick, tight hair, with an extra undercoat during winter months. This winter coat is shed once spring arrives.
The shoulder height of a male is 25.5 in. (65 cm) with a weigh around 66 lb. (30 kg). Females stand 20 in. (51 cm) at the shoulder and weight around 44 lb. (20 kg). The males have horns and a thicker fur coat than the females. Their most common colour is brown with a black belly, head, and legs.
They live in flocks and their diet consists of grasses, leaves, buds, shoots and herbs
One or occasionally two lambs are born in late winter or early spring after a gestation period of 5 months. Their average lifespan is between 10 to 12 years, but it can be up to 16 years.
It is beleived that there are less than 1,000 of these sheep left in the world but as a domestic breed it is not evaluated by the IUCN.
A rather unusual location - the Cameroon Development Corporation railway. An extensive network of 600mm gauge railways were built in Cameroon starting in 1947.
Hunslet supplied four locomotives in 1952, using the Kerr Stuart "Tamar" design, including the two seen in this photo. At least three of these locomotives survive - or did in 2012.
Photographer unknown (c) Collection of Dan Quine
Taken with the Canon R6 + RF 50mm F1.2
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This animal lives at Jimmy's Farm in Suffolk.
Cameroon sheep is a dwarf breed of domestic sheep mainly found in the savanna of Cameroon in West Africa.
The animal is well adapted to hot and humid climates. It has no wool, as this would be a disadvantage to it in the African heat, but thick, tight hair, with an extra undercoat during winter months. The winter coat is shed once spring arrives.
Adult males are 25.5 in. (65 cm) tall at the shoulder and weigh around 66 lb. (30 kg). Adult females stand 20 in. (51 cm) at the shoulder and weigh around 44 lb. (20 kg). The males have horns and a thicker coat than the females. Their most common colour is brown with a black belly, head, and legs.
Cameroon sheep live in flocks and their diet consists of grasses, leaves, buds, shoots and herbs
One or occasionally two lambs are born in late winter or early spring after a gestation period of 5 months. A lamb can expect an average lifespan of between 10 to 12 years, but it could be up to 16 years.
It is believed that there are less than 1,000 of these sheep left in the world, but as a domestic breed it is not evaluated by the IUCN.
Sculptures in the Cameroon section of the International Friendship Gardens in La Crosse, Wisconsin. Kumbo, Cameroon, has been a sister city of La Crosse since 2013 and these Kumbo garden sculptures represent elements of Cameroon culture and folklore.
ou never know what you 'll see when visiting a market. I was so lucky to come across this beautiful girl shopping for clothes with her friend. I went on to take another picture of her and it became one of my favorite pictures of the whole trip. That one will follow in the future somewhere. 😊😊
Taken with the Canon R6 + RF 50mm F1.2
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This is a young Cameroon sheep, only a few days old. The Cameroon sheep are considered as one of the world's rarest breeds of sheep. They are a dwarf species of domesticated sheep and originate from west Africa.
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Portrait of an elderly Mbororo woman.
When walking around at the Gerewol i noticed this group of elderly women watching the ceremony from a distance as if they were checking if everything was going as planned. Like guardians of tradition. This lady just made an instant impact on me. Like she was THE matriarch. She sure looked like it. How many Gerewols would she have attended through the years... ?
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Close-up on the back of the head of an african man dressed in traditional outfits and wearing a traditional embroidered hat; the green, red and yellow cameroonian flag in the background
Portrait of an Mbororo boy at a Gerewol festival - Cameroon.
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A family supported by a FAO project (GCP/SFC/001/MUL) weeding their lettuce field in Nkolondom, Yaoundé (Cameroon) ©FAO/Gerbert Dossa
Woman working in reforested field in Mandjou, East Cameroon.
Photo by Emily Pinna/CIFOR
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The island of Bioko (Equatorial Guinea) dominates the horizon in this view from a construction site on the outskirts of the city of Limbe, Cameroon.
(October 2007)
larger: View On White
Portrait of a young african girl with regular pattern plaits in her hair, holding her arms at the back of her head, many colourful rubber bracelets on the left arm, looking timidly at the camera