杏吧原创

A garden of my own amid a sea of garbage

In Djenn茅, Mali, a green-fingered local takes some time to tend his garden in this runner-up photo from the Travel Photographer of the Year 2012 competition
A garden of my own amid a sea of garbage

Island of green (Image: Timothy Allen)

YOU can grow food in the unlikeliest of places, it seems. Here in Djenn茅, Mali, a green-fingered local takes some time to look after his garden.

Photographer took the picture while in Mali to photograph the annual restoration of the Great Mosque of Djenn茅. 鈥淏y chance I stumbled across the scene during an evening stroll,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he garden stood out from the very yellowy mudbrick colour of Djenn茅.鈥

During the dry season the Bani river, seen in the background, shrinks back and exposes the mass of litter and debris thrown away by Djenn茅鈥檚 33,000 inhabitants. While the town鈥檚 population normally uses mud from the river banks as a building material, this farmer took advantage of the damp riverbed and nearby water supply to grow some crops. 鈥淭he area he was working in would be underwater during the rainy season,鈥 says Allen.

Many farmers have been displaced by conflict in the north of Mali and the United Nations has emphasised that they must be helped to return to their lands 鈥 though this farmer鈥檚 story is unknown. Allen suggests he could be growing herbs or cassava for himself and his family.

The image won Allen a runner-up prize in the competition. A selection of the photos is now on display at the Royal Geographical Society in London.

Topics: Biology / Environment