
Articles
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Oct 21, 2024 |
dialogue.earth | Iván Hernández Carrillo |Ivan carrillo
As a teenager in 1970, Patricio Robles Gil and his family travelled from Mexico to Tanzania, where he shot an elephant and claimed its tusks as trophies. He recalls tracking the animal’s footprints for hours before even seeing it. “Imagine the excitement this process can cause for a 16-year-old,” he says. “It’s a ritual that has no comparison.”It was a life-changing experience for Robles Gil, who today shoots wildlife only with his camera.
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Oct 21, 2024 |
dialogue.earth | Iván Hernández Carrillo |Ivan carrillo
Cuando era adolescente, en 1970, Patricio Robles Gil y su familia viajaron de México a Tanzania, donde disparó a un elefante y reclamó sus colmillos como trofeo. Recuerda haber seguido las huellas del animal durante horas antes de verlo. “Imagínate la emoción que puede causar este proceso a un chico de 16 años”, dice. “Es un ritual que no tiene comparación”. Fue una experiencia que cambió la vida de Robles Gil, que hoy en día solo fotografía animales salvajes con su cámara.
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Jul 9, 2024 |
tucsonsentinel.com | Iván Hernández Carrillo |Ivan carrillo
Knowable Magazine En la vastedad del desierto sonorense, entre las poblaciones de San Luis Río Colorado y Sonoyta, se encuentra la fonda La Liebre del Desierto. Situada al pie de la carretera dentro de la Reserva de la Biosfera del Pinacate y Gran Desierto de Altar, recibe su nombre del apodo de su propietaria, Elsa Ortiz Ramos, quien lleva más de veinte años atendiendo el establecimiento.
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Jul 9, 2024 |
tucsonsentinel.com | Iván Hernández Carrillo |Ivan carrillo
Knowable Magazine In a vast stretch of the Sonoran Desert, between the towns of San Luis Río Colorado and Sonoyta in northern Mexico, sits a modest building of cement, galvanized sheet metal and wood — the only stop along 125 miles of inhospitable landscape dominated by thorny ocotillo shrubs and towering saguaro cactuses up to 50 feet high.
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Jul 9, 2024 |
tucsonsentinel.com | Iván Hernández Carrillo |Ivan carrillo
Knowable Magazine In a vast stretch of the Sonoran Desert, between the towns of San Luis Río Colorado and Sonoyta in northern Mexico, sits a modest building of cement, galvanized sheet metal and wood — the only stop along 125 miles of inhospitable landscape dominated by thorny ocotillo shrubs and towering saguaro cactuses up to 50 feet high.
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