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  • Rain makes the paint of a freshly painted stop sign, marked off by cones, run over concrete in a parking lot.
    LMB_cones_62909_0918.jpg
  • Rain makes the paint of a freshly painted stop sign, marked off by cones, run over concrete in a parking lot.
    LMB_cones_62909_0902.jpg
  • Rain makes the paint of a freshly painted stop sign, marked off by cones, run over concrete in a parking lot.
    LMB_cones_62909_0913.jpg
  • Rain makes the paint of a freshly painted stop sign, marked off by cones, run over concrete in a parking lot.
    LMB_cones_62909_0904.jpg
  • Rain makes the paint of a freshly painted stop sign, marked off by cones, run over concrete in a parking lot.
    LMB_cones_62909_0900.jpg
  • During a lighthearted break at a Crop Mob, Beth M smeared mud on her face and searched out other farmers to paint, laughing as she chased them around the field.
    67-CAA-MockL-10.JPG
  • Amanda Egdorf-Sand is a soil specialist who works with small farmers in North Carolina. She and friends jokingly painted their faces with mud while she participated in a Crop Mob - an activity in which farmers from different farms work together to complete a major project at one location.
    67-CAA-MockL-04.JPG
  • CHIANG MAI - FEB 22 2006: An elephant removes a tourist's hat at The Mae Sa Elephant Park. The animals perform tricks such as kicking soccer balls, painting pictures, and giving rides. However, they are usually treated very poorly at such entertainment-based facilities. Many visitors believe the only way to interact with the animals is through the entertainment based shows, when many environmentally based programs provide better experiences for both people and animals. Asian elephants - strong, social, and intelligent - have been trained for thousands of years for use in transportation, labor, and ritual. In Thailand, Elephants are of immense cultural importance, but their numbers are shockingly plummeting. In 1905, there were over 100,000 elephants in this land - now they are estimated at less than 5,000, of which barely half are in the wild.  (Photo by Logan Mock-Bunting)
    TouristHat.jpg
  • CHIANG MAI - FEB 24 2006: An elephant kicking soccer ball at The Mae Sa Elephant Park. The animals perform tricks such as removing tourist's hats, painting pictures, and giving rides. However, they are usually treated very poorly at such entertainment-based facilities. Many visitors believe the only way to interact with the animals is through the entertainment based shows, when many environmentally based programs provide better experiences for both people and animals. Asian elephants - strong, social, and intelligent - have been trained for thousands of years for use in transportation, labor, and ritual. In Thailand, Elephants are of immense cultural importance, but their numbers are shockingly plummeting. In 1905, there were over 100,000 elephants in this land - now they are estimated at less than 5,000, of which barely half are in the wild. (Photo by Logan Mock-Bunting)
    SOCCER.jpg
  • CHIANG MAI - FEB 24 2006: An elephant is chained at The Mae Sa Elephant Park. Every year both tourists and elephants are killed at such entertainment-based facilities. Many visitors believe the only way to interact with the animals is through the entertainment based shows where the animals perform tricks such as kicking soccer balls, painting pictures, and giving rides. However, many environmentally based programs provide better experiences for both people and animals. Asian elephants - strong, social, and intelligent - have been trained for thousands of years for use in transportation, labor, and ritual. In Thailand, Elephants are of immense cultural importance, but their numbers are shockingly plummeting. In 1905, there were over 100,000 elephants in this land - now they are estimated at less than 5,000, of which barely half are in the wild. (Photo by Logan Mock-Bunting)
    CHAIN.jpg

Logan MB - Photography

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