Wednesday, 9 November 2011

Part 6; depict Wau small Businesses


The market Square with roadside sellers, the shops  look like they have rusty roofs but they were painted to matches the natural earth colour of the town, with amazing products inside them, here pick-up trucks, bicycle riders, motorcycles and rickshaw drivers are waiting for their customers in market to hire their means of transportation .
People playing
An aforementioned means are available for hire to transport people
Shops like this one above are found almost lined up alongside of the streets, selling goods to pedestrians.


This young boy is a street vendor, he sells plastic bags and children's clothes on cheap price, today he made good money, while taking rest and quenching his thirst on a sprit drink that cost only two sudanese pounds.Next to him a man standing by his bicycle scanning the roadside of the market for a customer to hire his bicycle. On the other side of the road some rickshaws are waiting for customers too, here you can see the real competion, the means of transport is cheap and affordable.  

Wau, at evening take a little walk to the Jur river bank  for leisures time, here people watch beautiful sunset, and sometime Crocodiles and hippos during the rain season, these kids above are scare, especially the girl in brown skirt and white blouse is panic and nervous as the hippopotamous going under water, who knows it may emerge nearer to them, so the girl has her reason to scare, but the boys look an unperturbed


Jur River: you can see the patch of reed plants at distance of small island in the middle of the river

Close view of Marial Bai -Wau  murram road that will soon connect with tarmac road at Girirti to Wau centre

Young cousins are playing, while there were pairs of hadada birds making noise nearby 

People are cultivating the acres of land, this is a kind of traditional support network for cultivating large yards in few hours by coming as a group, the seeds are sow then cultivated using hoes attached to long wooden shafts, South Sudanese are hard working people they only buy these hoes and jembes from local blacksmith workshops to make a living with, the Khartoum government from North had been deprived the people of south Sudan for many years. This kind of broadcasting cultivation manifeste many  tasks such as hand weeding after the seeds germinated to the knee-high, later they chasing away of  animals such as goats, sheep, cattles and birds, then finally later on the harvesting task.

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