A hyena at Abuko

Hyena at Abuko Nature Reserve, The Gambia

Hyena at Abuko

Sally Bowe has added a wonderful new set of images to the Gambia Experience Flickr pool, including this gorgeous young hyena from the Abuko Nature Reserve. As Sally rightly says, the guys at Abuko are doing a great job with very minimal funds. Big cats and mammals in general aren’t a huge feature of The Gambia as there simply isn’t the space for them to roam freely; but at places like Abuko animals are rescued and safely reared and often released into the wild in neighbouring Senegal. All power to them and the excellent work they do.

To see more of Sally’s photography, please visit her Flickr page.

A morning’s bird watching at Abuko with Chris Packham.

Jason Florio’s Gambia photographs

We’ve featured Jason Florio’s brilliant Gambia photography on the blog before now, and followed closely the progress of the walk he undertook with Helen Jones and the 700Miles team on their epic circumnavigation of The Gambia back in November and December of last year.

Well now the fruits of that walk are starting to appear – aside from calf muscles the size of small principality, there is a new suite of photographs taken during the walk now available to view on Jason’s site. And as you can see from the examples below there are some dazzling images. Jason’s style is unique – his use of the black screen has at once something of a distancing effect, yet the images become like naked singularities, events almost. They’re quite something. The first picture below is of Acting Alkalo Herouna Tonkara from Suduwole. He’s a member of the Serra Houle tribe who are renowned in the area as great traders. The couple are Salafo & Penda Bah from Tuba Dabbo. Mr Bah is a marabout and a cattle farmer. You can view the complete set here. (And you can also see their Flickr photos and follow the guys on Twitter too. Plus, don’t forget you can follow us on Flickr, Twitter and Facebook as well!)

Acting Alkalo Herouna Tonkara

Acting Alkalo Herouna Tonkara. Image by Jason Florio

Salafo & Penda Bah from Tuba Dabbo

Salafo & Penda Bah from Tuba Dabbo. Image by Jason Florio

Gambia Smile

A bit of shameless self-promotion here, but we’ve been involved in a joint project with the Gambian Tourist Authority in producing a destination based website to promote The Gambia. Gambia Smile is online now and has some excellent images and different media in its slim pages. Hopefully we’ve gone some way towards making the beauty of the country come through. Please take a look and let us know what you think in the comments below.

Gambia shops and signs – a slide show

It’s near impossible to see this slideshow of photographs of Gambian shops and signs by Nichol Brummer and not smile. The photographs are so evocative of the country – its colourful exuberance and its tattered edges – that in them there is a good deal more truth and honesty than a thousand brochure images. Wherever you travel in The Gambia, be it on foot or in a hulking jalopy, you see, along with (the vaguely unsettling) myriad billboards in praise of President Jammeh, these roadside stalls and shopfronts: selling fruit, sunbright textiles, cheap phonecalls. This evidence of basic commercial transactions, of fundamental survival, is part of the fabric of The Gambia; it seems to emerge from the cracks in the pavement, the paintwork – it’s like an analogue of the bustle and teem of the wildlife.

Looking through these photographs again it feels as though, at times, you might be looking at some encoded message that, if you could only decipher it, might reveal some vast, but simple secret. Which from this vantage point, looking out of old, cold windows at grey Hampshire skies might be as good an explanation of The Gambia as I can think of.

Thanks again to Nichol for letting us host this slide show.