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"heat-not-burn"

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Kashmir dealers remove water chestnuts with shovels from a road after being unloaded by a vehicle,  on January 05, 2018 in Narbal, north of...

#2416376

Kashmir Harvests Water Chestnuts

10 January 2018

Kashmir dealers remove water chestnuts with shovels from a road after being unloaded by a vehicle,  on January 05, 2018 in Narbal, north of...

#2416376

10 January 2018

Kashmir dealers remove water chestnuts with shovels from a road after being unloaded by a vehicle, on January 05, 2018 in Narbal, north of Srinagar, the summer capital of Indian Administered Kashmir, India. Water chestnuts are a major crop for people living near Wular lake , Asia's second largest freshwater lake. Wular, looks more like a flat marshy plain than a large lake in winters, as the water level recedes entire families collect and extract the marble-sized fruit from its spiky casing . The sun-dried chestnuts are later sold in markets, particularly in summer capital city Srinagar, and are consumed raw or roasted and even ground into a flour which locals say has medicinal properties. Its flour is consumed mostly by the people living around the lake. Now it is also in demand for its anti-diabetic properties, and is used by diabetic patients, because it is free of both cholesterol and fat. Some researchers are even investigating whether the fruit has cancer-fighting properties. Six kilograms of the processed stuff, dealers said, is sold at $4.74 (300 INR), and rates go up as the winter progresses. The shells of the chestnuts do not go waste and are used as cooking fuel. The women take care to store them separately, to later use them as fuel in kangris, an earthenware container with an outer encasement of wickerwork, filled with burning coal and normally carried under the clothing for heat in winter months.


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A Kashmiri Muslim woman boils the water chestnuts on an earthen hearth to make their peeling easier,  on January 05, 2018 in Narbal, north o...

#2416377

Kashmir Harvests Water Chestnuts

10 January 2018

A Kashmiri Muslim woman boils the water chestnuts on an earthen hearth to make their peeling easier,  on January 05, 2018 in Narbal, north o...

#2416377

10 January 2018

A Kashmiri Muslim woman boils the water chestnuts on an earthen hearth to make their peeling easier, on January 05, 2018 in Narbal, north of Srinagar, the summer capital of Indian Administered Kashmir, India. Water chestnuts are a major crop for people living near Wular lake , Asia's second largest freshwater lake. Wular, looks more like a flat marshy plain than a large lake in winters, as the water level recedes entire families collect and extract the marble-sized fruit from its spiky casing . The sun-dried chestnuts are later sold in markets, particularly in summer capital city Srinagar, and are consumed raw or roasted and even ground into a flour which locals say has medicinal properties. Its flour is consumed mostly by the people living around the lake. Now it is also in demand for its anti-diabetic properties, and is used by diabetic patients, because it is free of both cholesterol and fat. Some researchers are even investigating whether the fruit has cancer-fighting properties. Six kilograms of the processed stuff, dealers said, is sold at $4.74 (300 INR), and rates go up as the winter progresses. The shells of the chestnuts do not go waste and are used as cooking fuel. The women take care to store them separately, to later use them as fuel in kangris, an earthenware container with an outer encasement of wickerwork, filled with burning coal and normally carried under the clothing for heat in winter months.


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A Kashmiri Muslim woman boils the water chestnuts on an earthen hearth to make their peeling easier,  on January 05, 2018 in Narbal, north o...

#2416378

Kashmir Harvests Water Chestnuts

10 January 2018

A Kashmiri Muslim woman boils the water chestnuts on an earthen hearth to make their peeling easier,  on January 05, 2018 in Narbal, north o...

#2416378

10 January 2018

A Kashmiri Muslim woman boils the water chestnuts on an earthen hearth to make their peeling easier, on January 05, 2018 in Narbal, north of Srinagar, the summer capital of Indian Administered Kashmir, India. Water chestnuts are a major crop for people living near Wular lake , Asia's second largest freshwater lake. Wular, looks more like a flat marshy plain than a large lake in winters, as the water level recedes entire families collect and extract the marble-sized fruit from its spiky casing . The sun-dried chestnuts are later sold in markets, particularly in summer capital city Srinagar, and are consumed raw or roasted and even ground into a flour which locals say has medicinal properties. Its flour is consumed mostly by the people living around the lake. Now it is also in demand for its anti-diabetic properties, and is used by diabetic patients, because it is free of both cholesterol and fat. Some researchers are even investigating whether the fruit has cancer-fighting properties. Six kilograms of the processed stuff, dealers said, is sold at $4.74 (300 INR), and rates go up as the winter progresses. The shells of the chestnuts do not go waste and are used as cooking fuel. The women take care to store them separately, to later use them as fuel in kangris, an earthenware container with an outer encasement of wickerwork, filled with burning coal and normally carried under the clothing for heat in winter months.


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Kashmiri men thrash the water with oars to separate chestnut from the mud and weed,  on January 05, 2018 in Kolhom, north of Srinagar, the s...

#2416382

Kashmir Harvests Water Chestnuts

10 January 2018

Kashmiri men thrash the water with oars to separate chestnut from the mud and weed,  on January 05, 2018 in Kolhom, north of Srinagar, the s...

#2416382

10 January 2018

Kashmiri men thrash the water with oars to separate chestnut from the mud and weed, on January 05, 2018 in Kolhom, north of Srinagar, the summer capital of Indian Administered Kashmir, India. Water chestnuts are a major crop for people living near Wular lake , Asia's second largest freshwater lake. Wular, looks more like a flat marshy plain than a large lake in winters, as the water level recedes entire families collect and extract the marble-sized fruit from its spiky casing . The sun-dried chestnuts are later sold in markets, particularly in summer capital city Srinagar, and are consumed raw or roasted and even ground into a flour which locals say has medicinal properties. Its flour is consumed mostly by the people living around the lake. Now it is also in demand for its anti-diabetic properties, and is used by diabetic patients, because it is free of both cholesterol and fat. Some researchers are even investigating whether the fruit has cancer-fighting properties. Six kilograms of the processed stuff, dealers said, is sold at $4.74 (300 INR), and rates go up as the winter progresses. The shells of the chestnuts do not go waste and are used as cooking fuel. The women take care to store them separately, to later use them as fuel in kangris, an earthenware container with an outer encasement of wickerwork, filled with burning coal and normally carried under the clothing for heat in winter months.


Restricted to Editorial Use Only.
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Please contact us for more information.


Kashmiri men thrash the water with oars to separate chestnut from the mud and weed,  on January 05, 2018 in Kolhom, north of Srinagar, the s...

#2416383

Kashmir Harvests Water Chestnuts

10 January 2018

Kashmiri men thrash the water with oars to separate chestnut from the mud and weed,  on January 05, 2018 in Kolhom, north of Srinagar, the s...

#2416383

10 January 2018

Kashmiri men thrash the water with oars to separate chestnut from the mud and weed, on January 05, 2018 in Kolhom, north of Srinagar, the summer capital of Indian Administered Kashmir, India. Water chestnuts are a major crop for people living near Wular lake , Asia's second largest freshwater lake. Wular, looks more like a flat marshy plain than a large lake in winters, as the water level recedes entire families collect and extract the marble-sized fruit from its spiky casing . The sun-dried chestnuts are later sold in markets, particularly in summer capital city Srinagar, and are consumed raw or roasted and even ground into a flour which locals say has medicinal properties. Its flour is consumed mostly by the people living around the lake. Now it is also in demand for its anti-diabetic properties, and is used by diabetic patients, because it is free of both cholesterol and fat. Some researchers are even investigating whether the fruit has cancer-fighting properties. Six kilograms of the processed stuff, dealers said, is sold at $4.74 (300 INR), and rates go up as the winter progresses. The shells of the chestnuts do not go waste and are used as cooking fuel. The women take care to store them separately, to later use them as fuel in kangris, an earthenware container with an outer encasement of wickerwork, filled with burning coal and normally carried under the clothing for heat in winter months.


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An elderly man weighs water chestnuts after extracting them from Wular lake,  on January 05, 2018 in Narbal, north of Srinagar, the summer c...

#2416384

Kashmir Harvests Water Chestnuts

10 January 2018

An elderly man weighs water chestnuts after extracting them from Wular lake,  on January 05, 2018 in Narbal, north of Srinagar, the summer c...

#2416384

10 January 2018

An elderly man weighs water chestnuts after extracting them from Wular lake, on January 05, 2018 in Narbal, north of Srinagar, the summer capital of Indian Administered Kashmir, India. Water chestnuts are a major crop for people living near Wular lake , Asia's second largest freshwater lake. Wular, looks more like a flat marshy plain than a large lake in winters, as the water level recedes entire families collect and extract the marble-sized fruit from its spiky casing . The sun-dried chestnuts are later sold in markets, particularly in summer capital city Srinagar, and are consumed raw or roasted and even ground into a flour which locals say has medicinal properties. Its flour is consumed mostly by the people living around the lake. Now it is also in demand for its anti-diabetic properties, and is used by diabetic patients, because it is free of both cholesterol and fat. Some researchers are even investigating whether the fruit has cancer-fighting properties. Six kilograms of the processed stuff, dealers said, is sold at $4.74 (300 INR), and rates go up as the winter progresses. The shells of the chestnuts do not go waste and are used as cooking fuel. The women take care to store them separately, to later use them as fuel in kangris, an earthenware container with an outer encasement of wickerwork, filled with burning coal and normally carried under the clothing for heat in winter months.


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Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
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A Kashmiri man grinds water chestnuts to obtain flour at a mill on January 05, 2018 in Kolhom, north of Srinagar, the summer capital of Indi...

#2416385

Kashmir Harvests Water Chestnuts

10 January 2018

A Kashmiri man grinds water chestnuts to obtain flour at a mill on January 05, 2018 in Kolhom, north of Srinagar, the summer capital of Indi...

#2416385

10 January 2018

A Kashmiri man grinds water chestnuts to obtain flour at a mill on January 05, 2018 in Kolhom, north of Srinagar, the summer capital of Indian Administered Kashmir, India. Water chestnuts are a major crop for people living near Wular lake , Asia's second largest freshwater lake. Wular, looks more like a flat marshy plain than a large lake in winters, as the water level recedes entire families collect and extract the marble-sized fruit from its spiky casing . The sun-dried chestnuts are later sold in markets, particularly in summer capital city Srinagar, and are consumed raw or roasted and even ground into a flour which locals say has medicinal properties. Its flour is consumed mostly by the people living around the lake. Now it is also in demand for its anti-diabetic properties, and is used by diabetic patients, because it is free of both cholesterol and fat. Some researchers are even investigating whether the fruit has cancer-fighting properties. Six kilograms of the processed stuff, dealers said, is sold at $4.74 (300 INR), and rates go up as the winter progresses. The shells of the chestnuts do not go waste and are used as cooking fuel. The women take care to store them separately, to later use them as fuel in kangris, an earthenware container with an outer encasement of wickerwork, filled with burning coal and normally carried under the clothing for heat in winter months.


Restricted to Editorial Use Only.
Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
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Replanting of Palm Oil, without burning which more cost but compare to burning  in West Sumatera, Indonesia on 04 September 2016.  Palm oil...

#1419369

Side by Side Palm Oil in West Sumatera

4 September 2016

Replanting of Palm Oil, without burning which more cost but compare to burning  in West Sumatera, Indonesia on 04 September 2016.  Palm oil...

#1419369

4 September 2016

Replanting of Palm Oil, without burning which more cost but compare to burning in West Sumatera, Indonesia on 04 September 2016. Palm oil is a type of edible vegetable oil that is derived from the palm fruit, grown on the African oil palm tree. Oil palms are originally from Western Africa, but can flourish wherever heat and rainfall are abundant. Today, palm oil is grown throughout Africa, Asia, North America, and South America, with 85% of all palm oil globally produced and exported from Indonesia and Malaysia; but most of the time not using sustainable measures. PT. Tidar Kerinci Agung owned by HASIM DJOJOHADIKUSUMO who have a large palm oil at West Sumatera divded into three region : Solok Selatan, Dhamasraya, and Bungo district giving big concern to the environtment by providing estimate 2,400 hectare of Forrest Conservation that fully protected with habitat such as Sumateran Tiger, Elephant, Sumateran Trees Tigers, and many more. For the people who live at the palm oil plantation the company also provide school from Junior to senior high school and bright students have the scholarship to university. Palm Oil Plantation is very complex issues regarding to the destruction of forrest and some use child labor for the production, what PT. TKA provide is a good example where business and human wellfare and the continuing of forrest habitat can live side by side.


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Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
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The Palm oil trees that have been knocked down allowed on the ground without burnt as nature will destroyed by it self  in West Sumatera, In...

#1419370

Side by Side Palm Oil in West Sumatera

4 September 2016

The Palm oil trees that have been knocked down allowed on the ground without burnt as nature will destroyed by it self  in West Sumatera, In...

#1419370

4 September 2016

The Palm oil trees that have been knocked down allowed on the ground without burnt as nature will destroyed by it self in West Sumatera, Indonesia on 04 September 2016. Palm oil is a type of edible vegetable oil that is derived from the palm fruit, grown on the African oil palm tree. Oil palms are originally from Western Africa, but can flourish wherever heat and rainfall are abundant. Today, palm oil is grown throughout Africa, Asia, North America, and South America, with 85% of all palm oil globally produced and exported from Indonesia and Malaysia; but most of the time not using sustainable measures. PT. Tidar Kerinci Agung owned by HASIM DJOJOHADIKUSUMO who have a large palm oil at West Sumatera divded into three region : Solok Selatan, Dhamasraya, and Bungo district giving big concern to the environtment by providing estimate 2,400 hectare of Forrest Conservation that fully protected with habitat such as Sumateran Tiger, Elephant, Sumateran Trees Tigers, and many more. For the people who live at the palm oil plantation the company also provide school from Junior to senior high school and bright students have the scholarship to university. Palm Oil Plantation is very complex issues regarding to the destruction of forrest and some use child labor for the production, what PT. TKA provide is a good example where business and human wellfare and the continuing of forrest habitat can live side by side.


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Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
Please contact us for more information.


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