Blue Squared #10 and Color Your World: Blue

Maasai Blue

 

Maasai woman in Kenya. She was a guest at the village we visited. Her vivid blue cloth was lovely. Many of the women in the village we visited all seemed to be wearing shades of blue or purple. The men tended to be wearing oranges and reds. I was surprised at how many of the beads worn were bright white, so different from the ones for sale to tourists.

Join Becky’s July Squares: Blue #22. There are only two rules. The photo must be square and it must somehow be blue (color, theme, concept, etc.)

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Blue Squared #5

Uniform Blues

Uniform Blues, Maasai Village, Tanzania

Join Becki’s July Squares: Blue #13. There are only two rules. The photo must be square and it must somehow be blue (color, theme, concept, etc.)

Views from Abroad: Tanzania

Maasai Village, Ngorongoro Conservation Area Highlands, Tanzania

Ngorongoro Conservation Area Highlands

 

Sunset on Lake Manyara, Tanzania

Lake Manyara

 

Olduvai Gorge or Oldupai Gorge, Tanzania

Olduvai Gorge or Oldupai GorgE

 

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African Cloth

MultiMedia Patterns

Maasai cloth outside arts and crafts store, Kenya

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People, People Who Need People

Maasai Villagers

I went to Kenya and Tanzania on a National Geographic Journey with G Adventures tour. G Adventures, a Canadian travel company, supports community development projects in areas in which they do tours. In Tanzania, we visited a village where brick stoves and chimneys were being installed in homes by the Maasai Stoves and Solar Project. Before the installation of the cleans stoves, houses had no ventilation, and all the smoke from the cooking fires stayed inside, causing a variety of health problems. On most of our 14-day journey we were asked not to take pictures of the local people, who do not appreciate the constant cameras of tourists (except at tourist venues such as Maasai culture shows). In the village, however, we were invited to take photographs.

Meriku, the homeowner who was having a stove installed.

Meriku, the lovely woman who was having a stove installed, did not speak English but we connected with my few words of Swahili and her gracious hospitality. She was amazed at the camera on my cell phone. Our tour leader said that most villagers have never seen themselves because they generally don’t have mirrors. That will probably change with the spread of cell phones. We did see herders with phones but don’t know if they were smart phones or basic cell phones.

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