Sunday, October 14, 2018

Global Food and Agriculture Photos October 14, 2018

This roundup of global food, farming, and agricultural photos appears every Sunday on Big Picture Agriculture.

NEW ZEALAND
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Government Announces Recovery Package For Farmers Affected By Mycoplasma Bovis. MASTERTON, NEW ZEALAND. OCTOBER 09. Replacement cattle graze in a field during a visit by Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern and Biosecurity Minister Damien O'Connor to Julie and Bryce StevensonÕs beef farm on October 9, 2018 in Masterton, New Zealand. The Mycoplasma Bovis is a bacterial disease that affects cattle, causing mastitis and arthritis in adult cattle and pneumonia in calves. It is found around the world, but New Zealand was one of the last disease-free countries until the detection of infected cows on a dairy farm in July 2017. Photo credit: Hagen Hopkins / Getty Images.

JAPAN
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This photograph shows inside the closed Tsukiji fish market in Tokyo on October 11, 2018, on the same day that new fish market in Toyosu was opened and hold its first auction. - For 83 years, the Tsukiji fish market in Tokyo was a head-spinning hive of activity. All that is now over, as the market moved to a spanking new, sanitised site that is just two kilometres to the east but a world away in terms of atmosphere, according to many traders. Photo credit: Karyn NISHIMURA-POUPEE / AFP / Getty Images.
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DOUNIAMAG-JAPAN-FISH-FOOD-MARKET. Buyers, workers and auctioneers attend the first tuna auction at the new Toyosu fish market, the first day of the market's opening in Tokyo on October 11, 2018. Photo credit: Toshifumi KITAMURA / AFP / Getty Images.

E.U.
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Good fruit harvest brings good business to farms. 10 October 2018, Brandenburg, Werder Germany. Freshly pressed apple juice being bottled in the Thierschmann fruit press. No more customers can be accepted at present without an appointment. The employees of the Lohnmosterei in Werder are working up to 16 hours pressing the delivered fruit. Photo credit: Bernd Settnik / dpa-Zentralbild / dpa / Getty Images.
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09 October 2018, Saxony, Förstgen: Dead sheep of the herd of the nature conservation station 'Östliche Oberlausitz' lie on a meadow. Wolves attacked a flock of sheep near the East Saxon village of Förstgen and probably tore several dozen animals apart. According to the MDR, residents had seen wandering sheep and some wolves among the torn animals. Photo credit: Benno Bilk / picture alliance / Getty Images.
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09 October 2018, Lower Saxony, Lüdersen: A Röbenroder is standing on a field between Springe and Pattensen in the Hanover region after a collision with a power pylon of a high-voltage power line. Accident with the sugar beet harvest: A sugar beet harvester collided on the weekend with a power pylon and caused a power failure in the region. The rescue of the harvester and the repair of the high-voltage line are dragging on. Photo credit: Julian Stratenschulte / picture alliance / Getty Images.
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GRIMSBY, ENGLAND - OCTOBER 08: Dave Berry who has been working at Alfred Enderby Ltd fish smokers for 42 years, prepares fish for smoking on October 8, 2018 in Grimsby, England. Alfred Enderby have been curing and smoking fish over smoldering wood shavings in their original tar lined brick smokehouses for over a hundred years. Grimsby was once home to the largest fleet of fishing trawlers in the UK, but now sees most of it's fish arriving for daily auction on lorries from Faroe Islands, Norway, Iceland and the North Sea via ports such as Peterhead in Scotland. The fish, predominantly Cod and Haddock makes it's way to processing plants before being prepared for sale to customers including restaurants and supermarkets across the UK and European Union. A proportion is bought by curers in the Grimsby area to be smoked. Grimsbys 'traditionally smoked fish', cured in these smokehouses since the mid-19th century, enjoys Protected Geographical Indication, (PGI) Status by EU law, similar to Champagne or Roquefort Cheese in France. The fate of such protections is uncertain in light of Britain's impending exit from the EU, which was supported by around 70% of voters in the surrounding North East Lincolnshire region. Photo credit: Dan Kitwood / Getty Images.

TURKEY
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Production of 'Ney' Instrument in Turkey's Hatay. OCTOBER 09. Cemil Kahilogullari, 61 years old ney player and a producer, collects reeds in Samandag district of Turkey's southern province Hatay on October 09, 2018. The reed flute known as 'Ney' is a key instrument in Sufism. Neys produced in Samandag are distributed to U.S, Italy, Germany, Spain, France, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, Australia, Scotland, Norway, Sweden and Egypt. Reeds are put through a series of process before reaching the ney players. At first reeds are brought to the workshop, sorted by size then left for drying. Next process begins a year after with drilling a row of equidistant holes. After whittling and grinding, reed is oil-quenched before turning into a 'Ney'. Photo credit: Cem Genco / Anadolu Agency / Getty Images.
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Cemil Kahilogullari, 61 years old ney player and a producer, makes the sixth hole on a reed in Samandag district of Turkey's southern province Hatay on October 09, 2018. The reed flute known as 'Ney' is a key instrument in Sufism. Neys produced in Samandag are distributed to U.S, Italy, Germany, Spain, France, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, Australia, Scotland, Norway, Sweden and Egypt. Reeds are put through a series of process before reaching the ney players. At first reeds are brought to the workshop, sorted by size then left for drying. Next process begins a year after with drilling a row of equidistant holes. After whittling and grinding, reed is oil-quenched before turning into a 'Ney'. Photo credit: Cem Genco / Anadolu Agency / Getty Images.
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Hard living conditions of seasonal worker Gulten Yildirim. Seasonal agricultural worker Gulten Yildirim (R) works at a cotton field with her children in Adana, Turkey on October 09, 2018. Yildirim of Sanliurfa works on the cotton, watermelon and potato fields alongside mandarin and orange groves of Adana since she was 10 to provide her children. Photo credit: Ibrahim Erikan / Anadolu Agency / Getty Images.

INDIA
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Indian labourers pick up sacks of rice after flooding due to heavy rains at a grain distribution point in Amritsar on October 11, 2018. Photo credit: NARINDER NANU / AFP / Getty Images.
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An Indian farmer dries jute: a long, soft, shiny vegetable fibre that can be spun into coarse strong threads, at Dolapani village in Sonitpur district, some 185 kms from Guwahati, the capital city of Indias north-eastern state of Assam on October 8, 2018. Photo credit: Biju BORO / AFP / Getty Images.

VIETNAM
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This photo taken on October 7, 2018 shows an ethnic Hmong tribesman walking by the hillside rice fields in Vietnam's northern agricultural province of Yen Bai. Photo credit: TRAN THI MINH HA / AFP / Getty Images.

RUSSIA
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MOSCOW, RUSSIA - OCTOBER 11, 2018: A camel at the 20th Golden Autumn Russian agricultural exhibition at the VDNKh exhibition centre. Photo credit: Alexander Shcherbak / TASS / Getty Images.

BELARUS
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BREST REGION, BELARUS - OCTOBER 8, 2018: Cabbage harvested at the Lorinik farm in the village of Plotnitsa in southwestern Belarus. Photo credit: Viktor Drachev / TASS / Getty Images.