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Ami Vitale

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  • Mani Yadav, 35, looks after her cousin Maya Yadav, 3, who has a head injury after shrapnel from a bomb blast hit her head in Veri Anachal Hospital in Nepalganj, Nepal March 16, 2005. (Ami Vitale)
    DSC_0072.jpg
  • A child works on the road from Rolpa to Thabang in western Nepal, Nepal March 14, 2005. Nearly every citizen living in the Maoist controlled area must work for 15 days straight, manually digging through the mountaineous region to construct the road.(Ami Vitale)
    DSC_0367.jpg
  • Maya Yadav, 34, right, sits with her cousin Mani Yadav, 35,  recovering after the shrapnel from a bomb blast hit her head in Veri Anachal Hospital in Nepalganj, Nepal March 16, 2005.The Maoist insurgency has claimed over 11,000 lives since 1996.  (Ami Vitale)
    DSC_0081.jpg
  • Nepalese teeangers dance in a nightclub in Katmandu, seemingly unaware of the brutal conflict that lies just outside the city in Nepal March 5, 2005. (Ami Vitale)
    DSC_0186.jpg
  • People visit the victims ward where dozens of recently injured civilians are being treated in Veri Anachal Hospital in Nepalganj, Nepal March 16, 2005. The conflict between government troops and Maoist insurgents has claimed over 11,000 lives since 1996. (Ami Vitale)
    DSC_0084.jpg
  • Maya Yadav, 34, right, sits with her cousin Mani Yadav, 35,  recovering after the shrapnel from a bomb blast hit her head in Veri Anachal Hospital in Nepalganj, Nepal March 16, 2005. The Maoist insurgency has claimed over 11,000 lives since 1996. (Ami Vitale)
    DSC_0077.jpg
  • Hari Prasad, 34, from Kachanpur District recovers in Veri Anachal Hospital in Nepalganj, Nepal March 16, 2005 after he was severely injured and lost a leg when Maoist insurgents blew up a bus near a bicycle he was riding on January 18, 2005. (Ami Vitale)
    DSC_0044.jpg
  • Nepalese police train early in the morning in Nepalganj, Nepal March 16, 2005. (Ami Vitale)
    DSC_0012.jpg
  • A bodyguard for one of the Maoist Central Committee members watches a cultural program along with over 1000 villagers who came from several kilometers walking in the village of Tila, district of Rolpa, Nepal March 14, 2005. (Ami Vitale)
    DSC_0010c.jpg
  • Nepalese teeangers dance in a nightclub in Katmandu, seemingly unaware of the brutal conflict that lies just outside the city in Nepal March 5, 2005. (Ami Vitale)
    DSC_0187.jpg
  • People visit the victims ward where dozens of recently injured civilians are being treated in Veri Anachal Hospital in Nepalganj, Nepal March 16, 2005. The conflict between government troops and Maoist insurgents has claimed over 11,000 lives since 1996. (Ami Vitale)
    DSC_0088.jpg
  • A Nepalese woman and her baby eat the sweet national flower of Nepal outside of a Maoist cutlrual program where thousands of villagers come to hear  traditional song and dance as well as a political speech by one fo the local communist committee members. The Maoists are seeking to overthrow the monarchy and set up a democraticlaly elected Communist regime. Since 1996, over 11,000 people have been killed in the brutal conflict. (Ami Vitale
    DSC_0002.jpg
  • Bud Walsh and Denver Baker modify a fence to make it more wildlife friendly. The design helps eliminate or substantially reduce the number of injuries and deaths to wildlife. The Nature Conservancy is working with ranchers in Eastern Montana on the Matador "grass bank" project. The “grass bank" is an innovative way to leverage conservation gains, in which ranchers can graze their cattle at discounted rates on Conservancy land in exchange for improving conservation practices on their own “home” ranches. In 2002, the Conservancy began leasing parts of the ranch to neighboring ranchers who were suffering from several years of severe drought essentially offering the Matador’s grass to neighboring ranches in exchange for their  participation in conservation efforts. Thirteen ranchers graze their cattle on the Matador and the grassbank has enabled TNC to leverage conservation on more than 225,000 additional acres of private land without the cost of purchase of the land or of easements. The grassbank has helped keep ranchers from “busting sod,” or  plowing up native grassland to farm it; helped remove obstacles to pronghorn antelope migration; improved habitat for the Greater Sage-Grouse and reduced the risk of Sage-Grouse colliding with fences; preserved prairie dog towns (thereby preserving an important food source for the endangered black-footed ferret) and prevented the spread of noxious weeds. (Photo By Ami Vitale, May 9, 2013)
    MON_2796.jpg
  • Bud Walsh, Jacob Folk and Denver Baker modify a fence to make it more wildlife friendly. The design helps eliminate or substantially reduce the number of injuries and deaths to wildlife. The Nature Conservancy is working with ranchers in Eastern Montana on the Matador "grass bank" project. The “grass bank" is an innovative way to leverage conservation gains, in which ranchers can graze their cattle at discounted rates on Conservancy land in exchange for improving conservation practices on their own “home” ranches. In 2002, the Conservancy began leasing parts of the ranch to neighboring ranchers who were suffering from several years of severe drought essentially offering the Matador’s grass to neighboring ranches in exchange for their  participation in conservation efforts. Thirteen ranchers graze their cattle on the Matador and the grassbank has enabled TNC to leverage conservation on more than 225,000 additional acres of private land without the cost of purchase of the land or of easements. The grassbank has helped keep ranchers from “busting sod,” or  plowing up native grassland to farm it; helped remove obstacles to pronghorn antelope migration; improved habitat for the Greater Sage-Grouse and reduced the risk of Sage-Grouse colliding with fences; preserved prairie dog towns (thereby preserving an important food source for the endangered black-footed ferret) and prevented the spread of noxious weeds. (Photo By Ami Vitale, May 9, 2013)
    MON_3802.jpg