Revising the Spice of Life

 

Published in November’s issue of Geographical Magazine, magazine of the Royal Geographical Society, was Bangkok based writer Tom Vater’s story on the reviving of Cambodia’s pepper industry after it was destroyed by the Khmer Rouge. One of Cambodia’s best known exports prior to the Khmer Rouge revolution was pepper, grown for the most part around Kampot, an idyllic French-era seaside town on the kingdom’s south eastern coast.

Chou Ta-Kuan, the Chinese envoy who visited Cambodia in the 13th century made mention of pepper in his book The Customs of Cambodia as part of a list of remarkable Cambodian products. He recommended pepper to be consumed when it’s fresh and blue-green in color. Major production started in the late 19th century and was soon exported all over the world. In France, Kampot Pepper soon became a household name. By 1900, production had reached 8,000 tons a year. In 1960, there were more than a million pepper poles in Kampot Province.

The Khmer Rouge put an end to this, but some surviving farmers returned to their fields in the 1980s, following Vietnamese liberation, and some have begun to grow pepper again. Because most small-scale farmers live more or less from hand to mouth, the pepper vine, which needs to mature for three years before it starts producing any harvestable pepper corns, has been slow to return. And yet, the plant is a good long-term investment. It reaches full maturity after six years and can be harvested for as long as fifteen years. Several hundred farmers are now working with NGOs and foreign investors to rebuild the industry.

In Kampot Province, pepper is grown just once a year and harvested between September and April, depending on the type of pepper. The region produces fresh green pepper, black pepper, white pepper and red pepper. Sometimes it’s possible to purchase bird pepper, which, as the name suggests, has been digested and expelled by birds. Bird pepper is said to have aphrodisiac powers.

You can see more of my pictures on lukeduggleby.photoshelter.com.

 

Sacred Tigray

In December 2011 I worked on a self-funded project about the Orthodox Christian Province of Tigray in Northern Ethiopia. For two weeks with the assistance of the greatest guide EVER called Hayley, I documented the ancient Christian practices and rock-hewn Churchs of the region. Hundreds of churches are carved in to sandstone cliffs and inside are ancient collections of Bilbles and mauscripts all safe guarded by protective bearded Priests. Daily I was confronted with incredible biblical scenes and ceremonies that haven’t changed since the birth of Christ.

Beginning in the provincial capital of Mekele I travel up and down Adigrat road stopping at many places along the way as well as the border with Eritrea, before veering east to spend time in the Gheralta region.

Photographing ancient ceremonies in the dark at 4am, climbing cliffs next to hundred meter sheer drops to find the entrance to a church carved in to the rock and eating copious amounts of meat is how I will remember this trip!

Uploaded on my website www.lukeduggleby.com is the final edit from this trip but the project is ongoing and I shall return again with more time to cover this amazing province.