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There are [2] photos and [3] stories tagged with "suspension bridge".



Lynn Valley Park - paradise on earth

CANADA | Mon, 12 Mar 2012 | By david_s_punzelt | Views [1994]

Sunday last I woke up and unexpectedly the weather wasn't half as bad as the forecasts had predicted. So I decided to better seize the day and did what I had had in mind since coming to Vancouver - going to one of these thrilling suspension bridges they ... Read more >

Tags: breathtaking, hiking, suspension bridge, waterfall

Taxes, buses and PB & J!

CANADA | Sun, 11 Mar 2012 | By jamesshanks | Views [1053] | Comments [1]

These are three things that have found their way into my daily activities, without fail! Every day before I head out, I make a peanut butter and jam sandwich. They are super delicious and what I would consider a staple food group for any backpacker.... Read more >

Tags: buses, peanut butter and jam, rain, stanley park, starbucks, suspension bridge, taxes

A Walk in the Treetops

GHANA | Tue, 29 Sep 2009 | By chasing_ithaca | Views [1014]

“Don’t worry,” says my guide Aggie. “It is virtually impossible to fall, unless you are trying to commit suicide.” As I peer out across the treetops at the rope and timber walkway on which I am about to place life and limb, I am not so sure. ... Read more >

Tags: forest, national park, suspension bridge

 

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A group of Chepang people congregate on the edge of their Himalayan foothills  village in the Chitwan district of Nepal. On this momentous day, some of them received their citizenship documentation. 

The Chepang are a semi-nomadic indigenous group considered to be the poorest of the poor in Nepal. Isolated from modern facilities and services, and largely lacking in education, they spent their lives without access to basic rights. In absence of citizenship certificates, the Chepang people were not able to vote, access various public services such as electricity, and enroll their children in the local schools. : by magdalena_smieszek, Views[1531]
A group of Chepang people congregate on the edge of their Himalayan foothills village in the Chitwan district of Nepal. On this momentous day, some of them received their citizenship documentation. The Chepang are a semi-nomadic indigenous group considered to be the poorest of the poor in Nepal. Isolated from modern facilities and services, and largely lacking in education, they spent their lives without access to basic rights. In absence of citizenship certificates, the Chepang people were not able to vote, access various public services such as electricity, and enroll their children in the local schools.

by magdalena_smieszek | Views [1531]

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