Monday, 29 June 2015

Travel Photography from Vietnam

Floating Market, Mekong Delta

Meat market

Floating market, Mekong Delta

Market Day

Bucolic life

Danang City Beach


Sifting grain

Lantern festival Hoi An

Motherly moment

Market wares

Mountain girl

Horse on a hill

Market ladies

Mother and child

Pensive moment

Farmgirl

Dog sellers

Sapa rice terraces

Smiling mama

Top of the world

Sunday best



Sunday, 26 April 2015

You want a picture of me?!

As resident videographer and general “camera” person at Warm Heart since March, I have found myself in many an interesting situation, usually surrounded by unique and inspiring people. This is what attracted me to video, photography and, in fact, travelling in the first place. Discovering the people, places and cultures of the world and uncovering the stories they have to tell will never get old for me.

My experience so far at Warm Heart has been as challenging as it has been rewarding. As I’ve experienced with other small non-profits that have big ideas and limited resources, you really have to be a proactive volunteer to make your time worthwhile. Everyone’s busy so you’re not helping anyone if you sit in a corner waiting to be told what to do. So I had to ram my assertive hat onto my head when I arrived, albeit begrudgingly. It took me about a week to stop tiptoeing around all the busy people in the office and start asking how I could be useful. But the rewards reaped were immediate. I have now completed two videos, have two more almost done, and a further two in the pipeline. Not to mention all the photography projects I’ve been involved in. It’s not an exaggeration to say I have had a new experience or learned a new skill every day of my time here. 

Once word got out that I had a camera and an interest in photography the requests came in thick and fast. I have attended graduation ceremonies, New Year blessings, Hill tribe visits, school openings, summer camps, fashion shoots and more, all from behind the lens of my trusty camera. At first I found being the designated photographer at events pretty stressful, still being in the learning stage of photography and worrying that I might miss certain vital moments. But it certainly made my skills and confidence improve the more I did it.



Village chief's daughters at a new hill tribe school called Little Smiles Centre


Grumpy monkey
The fashion shoot for micro-enterprise was another first for me, taking pictures of the new products for the eagle-eyed manager Josephine. Luckily for me I was teamed up with the equally eagle-eyed marketing volunteer Nara who set up the shoots and inspected the products and photographs stringently. Luckily passed the test. Phew! The photos are now published on the online shop. Thanks Nara, you rock.



Bracelet for sale at www.discovered.us
Apple in action making laptop cases out of old rice sacks
One of Britta's bracelet in a fashion shoot
When travelling I find photography a great way to interact with people you might normally be too shy to approach. The best part of the whole thing is showing an eager kid or a bemused elder their own face peering out from my camera screen and seeing the look of (usually) pleasure they get from my simple desire to photograph them. “You want a picture of me?!” Thanks to Warm Heart I’ve had access to photograph aspects of Thai society I may never have been privy to as a mere tourist.


While filming corn pickers for an environment
video we bonded over laughter and their bemusement atme wanting to film them





A visit to the hill tribes was particularly poignant. Nestled in the hills amidst coffee plantations and bamboo forests most of the Hill tribe villages can only be reached by terrible (at times impassable) dirt roads. Life is isolated and basic. People generally survive hand to mouth, with farming and manual labour the main source of income. Despite the hardships the sense of community is strong and it was clear that the Warm Heart kids (or at least the ones I was with) still have very strong ties with their respective villages. Photographing the hill tribes was definitely a highlight of my stint here and the smiles I captured say it all about the spirit and energy of the people living there.



Joy


Girls love to pose
Strike a pose, Asia style!
Another memorable event was my first ever Thai Boxing match, and an entirely local one at that, which made it all the more special. The temple down the road from us was putting on a fundraiser complete with live music, bouncy castles and, incongruously for pacifist Buddhist monks, a Muay Thai boxing ring! I stood out like a sore thumb of course but I surprised myself at how much I enjoyed it, awed by the level of skill and discipline required. I’ve now actually started learning the sport myself!



In terms of videos, I’ve had my work cut out. On day one, while the rest of the video team were in Laos on a visa run, I was tasked with making an orientation video for new volunteers, to give them a realistic view of where they will be working and living (spiders, geckos and all!).  This doubled up as my orientation tour from Volunteer Coordinator Sahara so I was quickly au fait with the lifestyle and inner workings of Warm Heart. 


Warm Heart kids and some children from the neighbouring village enjoying
the English Summer Camp immensely

Next up was a project close to Founder and Director Michael’s heart – Project Biochar. I’m sure many of you are wondering what this is (as I did only a few months ago) and you will soon be enlightened by the near complete video. But in short, it’s an environmentally friendly method of burning the millions of tons of agricultural waste left over from harvest every year that is usually burned in open fields by the farmers, at great environmental and health cost to the locals and the planet. Biochar not only reduces smoke and greenhouse gas emissions considerably but also creates an organic fertiliser that can be used on the fields. Sounds like a win win situation huh? We think so too.  

The challenge with this video was whittling the overwhelming amount of facts and statistics down into digestible laymen’s chunks. Which involved many a hair-pulling brainstorming session with my team mate Nara (again, thanks!)

Soon after my arrival we had a visit from the German designer Britta Von Wedel, who works with Warm Heart’s micro-enterprise project, creating beautiful bracelets made by local women, and sold internationally.  Since she was only visiting for a week we were on a strict time schedule to create our “Sponsor a Design” video, which can be seen here. It was fantastic experience in efficient use of time, pre-planning shoots and editing on the fly in order to get all the content we needed in the short time Britta was here. What could have been a stressful experience was actually made enjoyable and feasible thanks again to Nara’s help and Britta’s amazing cooperation and unflusterable on-camera presence.


Britta and Apple discuss bracelet designs
Bracelet makers working hard
I am also currently working on two more videos for the new website – a light-hearted one about “Volunteer Life ” and a more sobering one about Warm Heart’s program for the elderly and disabled of Phrao – “Project Access”. Keep an eye out, they’re coming soon!

Songkran kicks off with water splashings and blessings


Blessings for Songkran







Tuesday, 7 April 2015

A bit about Warm Heart Worldwide and its people


I spent Easter weekend visiting some of the remote hill tribe villages that the kids of Warm Heart call home. It was en eye opening experience in more ways than one. The lives led here are extremely basic. The roads are impassable during rainy season leaving the communities almost entirely cut off for months at a time. People live basically hand to mouth, with farming and manual labour the main source of income, but on the steep hillsides farmland is limited and labour jobs are only available for seven months of the year.

It is a life with little opportunity other than following in the parents footsteps, since there are few schools and those that are in place are poorly equipped and if not completely teacher-less. If kids from these communities make it to a Thai run school they are far behind in formal education, and often cannot speak Thai – purely their own tribal language. The skill base among the adults in the villages is limited, so finding work in the affluent south is almost impossible. As a result problems with alcohol, child, domestic and drug abuse are rife, as well as TB, HIV, and diabetes.


The welcoming committee
In a village with very little I was interested to see a satellite dish.
But no sign of a television as far as I could see...

This old man was snapped by the mini me photographer C
These kids from the village were so happy to pose for snaps once they
warmed up to us. These cheeky grins made my day!

We turned up to this village to find all the kids with make up on! We are yet
 to work out if it's the norm, out of boredom, or in celebration of Thai New year.

This little lady was also all made up

Cheeky chappy

Waiting at the bus stop
Superstar in the making

No one escaped the make up session at this village.
Check out the eyebrows!
These kids were loving the camera

Younger sibling of one of our kids, Viggo


Warm Heart is working in a myriad of ways to change this. Their children’s home offers a nurturing environment for children from broken homes or families unable to support them. They are welcomed into a loving family and provided with opportunities previously unavailable to them. The children enter the Thai schools system and work hard to get their education and Thai language level up to the standard of their peers. They are being given the choice to broaden their future options beyond that of the villages in the hills. The first Warm Heart children are starting to enrol in universities and colleges now, while more and more young children are arriving to join the warm heart family.

Brothers B and A are some of my favourites of the Warm Heart kids.
Along with their younger brother C they were dropped off at Warm
Heart without anyone knowing much about them.
They are so caring to each other it is clear they have been left
to fend for themselves on many occasions. I imagine they'll be fiercely loyal
to each other forever and it makes my heart sing.

A and Lom are best buddies and it's a joy to see their
ability to be in each others company for hours at a time
Warm Heart kids Lom, A and Ying riding like pros on
the bumpy roads that lead to the villages



Warm Heart also works closely with the people still living in the mountain villages to work out what help they need, such as skills training, pre-schools, agricultural improvements and basic health services. Their programs are aimed to help people pull themselves out of the cycles of poverty, rather than offering free hand-outs. This is what attracted me to Warm Heart in the first place. I’m thrilled to be here, getting to know the kids, the staff, and the local way of life and best of all, with the opportunity to make videos that (hopefully) matter!

After seeing the isolated, basic and generally impoverished villages where these children started their lives, I better understand the situations that brought them to Warm Heart. There is certainly a lot of love and community spirit in the villages as we saw when we visited, but plenty of hardships too. The houses are bare, and there is little to do or to stimulate young minds.


En route to the first village. The road was being built meaning soon it might
be accessible even during rainy season. The workmen weren't in a rush to move
their truck to let us pass so we took the opportunity to stretch our legs.



The houses are basic, rarely with much furniture
and most certainly sleeping is on the floor
Colourful clothes

Gardening paraphernalia

Handmade baskets


Shell door hanging. One of the few decorations
seen in the villages


Not sure what this contraption is for
All the dogs are macho on the outside but turn to
jelly as soon as you show them some kindness

Shoes off before you enter!

Wide eyed wonder


Welly tree

Home sweet home


Big and little
Water of life
This grandma was wearing fantastic tribal costume




Another dog with bark worse than it's bite,
observing us strangers from a safe distance


This once again reminds me how lucky I am to be born where I was, with the (at times overwhelming) plethora of choices, resources, and opportunities available to me. I also feel lucky to have had the opportunity to get to know these plucky kids, to laugh with them, teach them, learn from them and eventually be let in by them. Many have been abandoned or let down by adults, and they see so many volunteers come and go, so it’s not surprising that many volunteers find them to be cold at first. And so did I. But after spending more time with them I have been accepted and even (I like to think) trusted and liked by most of them. It’s fascinating to observe the idiosyncratic personalities of each child shining through and truly heart warming to observe their interactions and close relationships with each other develop in this unique family set up. And the gleeful smiles on the kids’ faces that greet us every day remind me to find laughter and joy in more things that I do each day.

Whether it’s an alcoholic mother, an absent father, or perhaps an imprisoned one, or simply that the family is unable to sustain all their children in a satisfactory way, these children have found their way to Warm Heart and a loving, supportive adoptive family. One that I’m glad to be a part of if only for a brief time.


A testing out the mulberries after picking

B and one of the village boys taking some time out

A new addition to the Warm Heart clan and a sister of one of the girls here.
This photo was actually taken by B (7 years old!) a photographer in the making

The best swing EVER! Unfortunately broken so
not used to its utmost.
Kids in truck

A favourite backpack

Lom showing off the mulberries 

Picnic lunch with fellow volunteers Yura and Omar up front.
The man on the left is Jing, the house father at the children's home.

Delicious lunch of pork and sticky rice

Lunch

A attempting to shift this dead weight

Mew (sp?) having a moment by the falls


B having a quiet moment. He always strikes me as a thoughtful young man
and can often be seen quietly focused on a task, oblivious of his brothers' distractions
Ying skipping down for lunch


Group shot 

We found these new as can be puppies in one of the
of the villages. Unlike the other dogs they were very
friendly to humans as they had not yet learned to be afraid
Teeny tiny new born pups
This is C, one of the youngest and cutest Warm Heart kids. He really loved
walking around with my camera and snapping hundreds of pics!
C and his new puppy friend
One of our girls, Obchoei with her mother and
baby brother