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I don't know the specific details of the case that you had in mind but there have been several instances of airlines damaging instruments, especially stringed ones.
I notice when Mischa Maisky was sat in front of me on a plane his cello was on a seat next to him. Paying for a seat is the custom now as I cant imagine any top cellist wanting to place a Stradivarius or Goffriller in the hold.
I notice when Mischa Maisky was sat in front of me on a plane his cello was on a seat next to him. Paying for a seat is the custom now as I cant imagine any top cellist wanting to place a Stradivarius or Goffriller in the hold.
True, but airlines have still managed to damage violins, violas, cellos and double basses in transit and there have been quite widespread reports of this kind of thing.
True, but airlines have still managed to damage violins, violas, cellos and double basses in transit and there have been quite widespread reports of this kind of thing.
Slipped Disc is the place to find heartbreaking reports of these 'incidents'!
True, but airlines have still managed to damage violins, violas, cellos and double basses in transit and there have been quite widespread reports of this kind of thing.
My FB is full of tales of woe from musicians who have had their instruments trashed at airports
and there is this
I'm not keen on anyone dressing up animals even if it's to promote an animal welfare cause.
I feel much the same way about dogs and horses with 'raincoats'. What particularly struck me re the photograph in question was that it could be considered to fall into a "wildlife" category. It was clearly of a domesticated/captive orangutan. How much more aposite[sic] would have been an image such as that captured here.
Last edited by Bryn; 13-02-20, 11:24.
Reason: Typos
George Orwell was ahead of his time. As Snowball says in Animal Farm: "Ribbons should be considered as clothes, which are the mark of a human being. All animals should go naked."
I'm not keen on anyone dressing up animals even if it's to promote an animal welfare cause.
I think there may be some misunderstanding here. I don't think the orangutan was dressed up for the purposes of the photo or to promote animal welfare; the photo is documenting the degrading practices at Safari World in Bangkok, and the orangutan would have been dressed like that whether or not the photographer was there. It is a piece of photojournalism, and not a staged photo.
According to his website, the photographer "is an award-winning environmental photojournalist, film-maker and TV presenter, specialising in human-animal conflict …. [he] has spent years documenting animals in captivity and is founder and lead investigator at Raise the Red Flag, a global campaign to end cruelty in the Wildlife Tourism industry".
You could argue that the Wildlife photographer of Year should only feature positive images of animals in the wild, but it seems to me to be Ok to include photojournalism in the types of photos to be considered for this award.
"I do not approve of anything that tampers with natural ignorance. Ignorance is like a delicate exotic fruit; touch it and the bloom is gone. The whole theory of modern education is radically unsound. Fortunately in England, at any rate, education produces no effect whatsoever. If it did, it would prove a serious danger to the upper classes, and probably lead to acts of violence in Grosvenor Square."
Lady Bracknell The importance of Being Earnest
I think there may be some misunderstanding here. I don't think the orangutan was dressed up for the purposes of the photo or to promote animal welfare; the photo is documenting the degrading practices at Safari World in Bangkok, and the orangutan would have been dressed like that whether or not the photographer was there. It is a piece of photojournalism, and not a staged photo.
According to his website, the photographer "is an award-winning environmental photojournalist, film-maker and TV presenter, specialising in human-animal conflict …. [he] has spent years documenting animals in captivity and is founder and lead investigator at Raise the Red Flag, a global campaign to end cruelty in the Wildlife Tourism industry".
You could argue that the Wildlife photographer of Year should only feature positive images of animals in the wild, but it seems to me to be Ok to include photojournalism in the types of photos to be considered for this award.
Yes it’s clear it’s a documentary capture of a real event rather than staged. It’s hardly going to win a wildlife award if it’s the latter. I think it’s an excellent insight into the lives of these benighted creatures that Homo Sapiens is doing his best to destroy ..
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