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  • A roadside memorial, presumably to a loved one who had been killed along this rural road, is painted purple and white, and made of concrete, and is situated just at the edge of the road, on a grassy section just before the thicket and trees.
    DRF11267-170.tif
  • A roadside memorial, presumably to a loved one who had been killed along this rural road, is painted purple and white, and made of concrete, and is situated just at the edge of the road, on a grassy section just before the thicket and trees.
    DRF11267-139.tif
  • A roadside memorial, presumably to a loved one who had been killed along this rural road, is painted purple and white, and made of concrete, and is situated just at the edge of the road, on a grassy section just before the thicket and trees.
    DRF11267-137.tif
  • A roadside memorial, presumably to a loved one who had been killed along this rural road, is painted purple and white, and made of concrete, and is situated just at the edge of the road, on a grassy section just before the thicket and trees.
    DRF11267-141.tif
  • Small, weather-worn houses, and shacks show the desolation of the harsh, arid, living conditions in San Simon, Arizona.
    DRF11245-8064-Edit.tif
  • Gene Seneca sits in his workshop, in Bayou Grosse Tete, Louisiana talking about life as a Cajun.
    DF11134-58466.tif
  • A rural laundermat, with a heavily weathered wooden ficade, in the rural Tennessee town of Boiling Springs.
    DF11015-573.tif
  • Early in the morning, with the sun bright, and still low in the sky, people begin to gather at a house is the rural part of Oxkutzcab, Yucatan, Mexico, to begin preparations of Dia de los Muertos.
    DRF_11304-21.tif
  • In the parking lot of Fall Creek Falls Satate Park, in Tennessee, a pickup sits parked. Its bed is filled with life-size plastic deer.
    DF11070_ 30118-Edit.tif
  • Every pueblo has its own church, and each dates back to the time of the Spanish occupation of Yucatan. This church, painted a pale yellow, with white trim, is located in the pueblo of Komchen.
    DRF11267-238.tif
  • Every pueblo has its own church, and each dates back to the time of the Spanish occupation of Yucatan. This church, painted a pale yellow, with white trim, is located in the pueblo of Komchen.
    DRF11267-234.tif
  • Every pueblo has its own church, and each dates back to the time of the Spanish occupation of Yucatan. This church, painted a pale yellow, with white trim, is located in the pueblo of Komchen.
    DRF11267-220.tif
  • The classroom, of this one-room schoolhouse, in Taylor County, West Virgina, it appears as it did on the very day that the school closed. This is the preserved schoolhouse of the Lincoln Grade School - a black school, that had been established by the mining company, at the time, to educate the children of the black miners who worked for the company.
    DRF11296-32.dng
  • Every pueblo has its own church, and each dates back to the time of the Spanish occupation of Yucatan. This church, painted a pale yellow, with white trim, is located in the pueblo of Komchen.
    DRF11267-247.tif
  • Every pueblo has its own church, and each dates back to the time of the Spanish occupation of Yucatan. This church, painted a pale yellow, with white trim, is located in the pueblo of Komchen.
    DRF11267-223.tif
  • A Motorcycle taxi, in the pueblo of Tixkokob, in Yucatan, Mexico, carrying passengers. Motorcycle taxis, and bicycle taxis, are more prevalent in the pueblo of Tixkokob, than in any other pueblo of Yucatan.
    DRF11267-190.tif
  • A brightly painted magenta house, along the edge of a side street that passes through the pueblo of Tixkokob, Yucatan, Mexico.
    DRF11267-156.tif
  • A brightly painted magenta house, along the edge of a side street that passes through the pueblo of Tixkokob, Yucatan, Mexico.
    DRF11267-151.tif
  • A brightly painted magenta house, along the edge of a side street that passes through the pueblo of Tixkokob, Yucatan, Mexico.
    DRF11267-150.tif
  • A brightly painted magenta house, along the edge of a side street that passes through the pueblo of Tixkokob, Yucatan, Mexico.
    DRF11267-153.tif
  • The old rusting sign for the Ranch House Cafe in Tucumcari
    DRF11231-258.tif
  • An Rv parked in the dirt yard next to a wooden, weathered house in San Simon, Arizona.
    DRF11245-8073-Edit.tif
  • A remenant of days gone by: a faded, and peeling mural on the side of a building in Tucumcari, New Mexico, promoting the glory of Route 66.
    DRF11231-333.tif
  • Motel signs, left over from the glory days of Route 66, and towns like Tucumcari, New Mexico
    DRF11231-191.tif
  • Tipi Curios is a souvenir shop located along Main Street (Route 66) as it passes through Tucumcari, New Mexico.
    DRF11231-133-Edit.tif
  • Outside of each room, at the Blue Swallow Motel, in Tucumcari, New Mexico, are two metal lawn chairs - of various colors, and a small metal table - equally colorful. Most of the rooms also have a single-car garage.
    DRF11231-316.tif
  • A mural coveringthe entire side of a building in Tucumcari, New Mexico, depicting a map, and a bit of the ancient history of the area.
    DRF11231-531-Edit.tif
  • The classroom, of this one-room schoolhouse, in Taylor County, West Virginia, it appears as it did on the very day that the school closed. This is the preserved schoolhouse of the Lincoln Grade School - a black school, that had been established by the mining company, at the time, to educate the children of the black miners who worked for the company.
    DRF11296-32.tif
  • The groom-to-be waits in the main lobby area of the Route 66 Wedding Chapel, talking to Flora Max Cordova, " the  marrying preacher", while his wife-to-be is in the dressing room fixing her hair in the mirror.
    DRF11231-388.tif
  • The interior of the Route 66 Wedding Chapel, in  Tucumcari, New Mexico.
    DRF11231-387.tif
  • The single-car garages, built into the Blue Swallow Motel, have painted murals covering the walls, which provides a wonderfully aesthetic to the contrast of the dirt floor.
    DRF11231-302.tif
  • DRF11231-288.tif
  • DRF11231-287-Edit.tif
  • Tipi Curios is a souvenir shop located along Main Street (Route 66) as it passes through Tucumcari, New Mexico.
    DRF11231-153-Edit.tif
  • The Blue Swallow Motel is a refurbished vintage hotel from the glory days of Tucumcari, and Route 66. It has been restored to its original splendor, including the abundance of neon lights, which cast a beautiful glow against the backdrop pf a night sky.
    DRF11231-110-Edit.tif
  • Roadsigns for Tucumcari, as well as Interstate 40 West - both with arrows pointing to the left, break the flat, desolate landscape.
    DRF11231-100.tif
  • DRF11231-287-Edit.tif
  • Tipi Curios is a souvenir shop located along Main Street (Route 66) as it passes through Tucumcari, New Mexico.
    DRF11231-153-Edit.tif
  • Tipi Curios is a souvenir shop located along Main Street (Route 66) as it passes through Tucumcari, New Mexico.
    DRF11231-133-Edit.tif
  • Vendor's table set up for the Memorial Day celebrations, in Grafton, West Virginia.
    DRF11257-12189.tif
  • The Blue Swallow Motel is a refurbished vintage hotel from the glory days of Tucumcari, and Route 66. It has been restored to its original splendor, including the abundance of neon lights, which cast a beautiful glow against the backdrop pf a night sky.
    DRF11231-110-Edit.tif
  • The Blue Swallow Motel is a refurbished vintage hotel from the glory days of Tucumcari, and Route 66. It has been restored to its original splendor, including the abundance of neon lights, which cast a beautiful glow against the backdrop pf a night sky.
    DRF11231-104-2.tif
  • A roadsign marking the "Pre - 1937" section of Historic Route 66 in New Mexico.
    DRF11252-331.tif
  • DRF11231-288.tif
  • The single-car garages, built into the Blue Swallow Motel, have painted murals covering the walls, which provides a wonderfully aesthetic contrast with the dirt floor.
    DRF11231-302.tif
  • The groom-to-be waits in the main lobby area of the Route 66 Wedding Chapel, talking to Flora Max Cordova, " the  marrying preacher", while his wife-to-be is in the dressing room fixing her hair in the mirror.
    DRF11231-388.tif
  • DRF11231-359.tif
  • Motel signs, left over from the glory days of Route 66, and towns like Tucumcari, New Mexico
    DRF11231-191.tif
  • Roadsigns for Tucumcari, as well as Interstate 40 West - both with arrows pointing to the left, break the flat, desolate landscape.
    DRF11231-100.tif
  • A small house, painted a bright burnt orange, and set against a deep blue sky with white cumulus clouds, is situated along a dirt road through the pueblo of Komchen, in Yucatan, Mexico.
    DRF11267-265.tif
  • The single-car garages, built into the Blue Swallow Motel, have painted murals covering the walls, which provides a wonderfully aesthetic to the contrast of the dirt floor.
    DRF11231-310.tif
  • DRF11231-359.tif
  • The Blue Swallow Motel is a refurbished vintage hotel from the glory days of Tucumcari, and Route 66. It has been restored to its original splendor, including the abundance of neon lights, which cast a beautiful glow against the backdrop pf a night sky.
    DRF11231-115-Edit.tif
  • Outside of each room, at the Blue Swallow Motel, in Tucumcari, New Mexico, are two metal lawn chairs - of various colors, and a small metal table - equally colorful. Most of the rooms also have a single-car garage.
    DRF11231-325.tif
  • An older man, wearing a black cowboy hat, with the American Flag just beyond him, sits on the wall at the top edge of the West Virginia Memorial Cemetery, in Grafton, West Virginia, as the Memorial Day Parade passes by.
    DRF11257-2106.tif
  • DRF11231-258.tif
  • Backed by a large, backlit glass block window, inside the chapel of the Route 66 Wedding Chapel, a couple joing hands as Flora Max Cordova, "the marrying preacher", presides over the ceremony.
    DRF11231-376.tif
  • A remenant of days gone by: a faded, and peeling mural on the side of a building in Tucumcari, New Mexico, promoting the glory of Route 66.
    DRF11231-333.tif
  • A young man, with his boogie board, waits along the beach, in Progreso, Yucatan, Mexico, for the perfect wave in the Gulf of Mexico.
    DRF11267-310.tif
  • A young man, with his boogie board, waits along the beach, in Progreso, Yucatan, Mexico, for the perfect wave in the Gulf of Mexico.
    DRF11267-308.tif
  • Motel signs left over from the glory days of Route 66, and towns like Tucumcari, New Mexico
    DRF11231-282-Edit.tif
  • Motel signs, left over from the glory days of Route 66, and towns like Tucumcari, New Mexico
    DRF11231-282-Edit.tif
  • The interior of the Route 66 Wedding Chapel, in  Tucumcari, New Mexico.
    DRF11231-387.tif
  • A young man, with his boogie board, waits along the beach, in Progreso, Yucatan, Mexico, for the perfect wave in the Gulf of Mexico.
    DRF11267-315.tif
  • A young man, with his boogie board, waits along the beach, in Progreso, Yucatan, Mexico, for the perfect wave in the Gulf of Mexico.
    DRF11267-313.tif
  • A young man, with his boogie board, waits along the beach, in Progreso, Yucatan, Mexico, for the perfect wave in the Gulf of Mexico.
    DRF11267-302.tif
  • Large umbrellas cover small groups of tables and chairs along the beach in Progreso, Yucatan, Mexico - within fifteen yards from the Gulf of Mexico.
    DRF11267-301.tif
  • El Angelito Restaurant, a local restaurant, located in the pueblo of Telchac Puerto, in Yucatan, Mexico. They are known for their Pescado Frita (fried fish). This interior view is lit by only one light. Every pueblo has a self-contained economy: restaurants, stores, tortillarias, etc.
    DRF11267-209.tif
  • At a crossroads intersection in the pueblo of Tixkocab, in Yucatan, Mexico, with buildings of white, and green, set against a blue sky with white cumulus clouds. A young man on a bicycle taxi pedals by. Tixkocab has one of the highest concentrations of bicycle taxis, of all of the pueblos in Yucatan State.
    DRF11267-146.tif
  • DRF11231-375.tif
  • DRF11231-375.tif
  • Bud Longbrake's broncs running wild as they make their way to the corral from the pastures.
    DF11220-907549-ps.tif
  • Three ranchers, and a horse stand at the bed of a blue pickup truck, on a ranch in Faith, South Dakota.
    DF11220-905634-Edit.tif
  • Ranchers gather around a pickup truck for lunch as they take a break from a morning of branding calves on a ranch in Faith, South Dakota
    DF11220-905627-Edit.tif
  • Pieces of chicken are cooking in a frying pan over a wood fire, in preparation for the special sauce for the Dia de los Muertos dinner.
    DRF_11304-218-Edit.tif
  • Soaking fresh corn kernels in water is done as the beginning process for making the cornbread dough. The kernels are soaks, squeezed, then place in another pot to be rinsed and soaked again. This process must be repeated several times before the kernels are ready to be ground.
    DRF_11304-203.tif
  • Soaking fresh corn kernels in water is done as the beginning process for making the cornbread dough. The kernels are soaks, squeezed, then place in another pot to be rinsed and soaked again. This process must be repeated several times before the kernels are ready to be ground.
    DRF_11304-199.tif
  • Soaking fresh corn kernels in water is done as the beginning process for making the cornbread dough. The kernels are soaks, squeezed, then place in another pot to be rinsed and soaked again. This process must be repeated several times before the kernels are ready to be ground.
    DRF_11304-196.tif
  • Soaking fresh corn kernels in water is done as the beginning process for making the cornbread dough. The kernels are soaks, squeezed, then place in another pot to be rinsed and soaked again. This process must be repeated several times before the kernels are ready to be ground.
    DRF_11304-193.tif
  • Soaking fresh corn kernels in water is done as the beginning process for making the cornbread dough. The kernels are soaks, squeezed, then place in another pot to be rinsed and soaked again. This process must be repeated several times before the kernels are ready to be ground.
    DRF_11304-160.tif
  • Soaking fresh corn kernels in water is done as the beginning process for making the cornbread dough. The kernels are soaks, squeezed, then place in another pot to be rinsed and soaked again. This process must be repeated several times before the kernels are ready to be ground.
    DRF_11304-144.tif
  • Soaking fresh corn kernels in water is done as the beginning process for making the cornbread dough. The kernels are soaks, squeezed, then place in another pot to be rinsed and soaked again. This process must be repeated several times before the kernels are ready to be ground.
    DRF_11304-132.tif
  • The Municiple building in Telchac Pueblo, Yucatan, Mexico
    DRF11267-727.tif
  • A young man, with his boogie board, waits along the beach, in Progreso, Yucatan, Mexico, for the perfect wave in the Gulf of Mexico.
    DRF11267-316.tif
  • A young man, with his boogie board, waits along the beach, in Progreso, Yucatan, Mexico, for the perfect wave in the Gulf of Mexico.
    DRF11267-311.tif
  • A traditional Mayan hammock, inside a typical Yucatan structure. Throughout the State of Yucatan, in fact, throughout the entire Yucatan Peninsula, hammocks are used for sleeping instead of beds. They are far cooler in the heat, and humidity of the tropics.
    DRF_11304-74-Edit.tif
  • Bud Longbrake'sbroncs are being held in a corral at the SDRA Championships in Rapid City, South Dakota.
    DF11220-907490-Edit.tif
  • Soaking fresh corn kernels in water is done as the beginning process for making the cornbread dough. The kernels are soaks, squeezed, then place in another pot to be rinsed and soaked again. This process must be repeated several times before the kernels are ready to be ground.
    DRF_11304-200.tif
  • Soaking fresh corn kernels in water is done as the beginning process for making the cornbread dough. The kernels are soaks, squeezed, then place in another pot to be rinsed and soaked again. This process must be repeated several times before the kernels are ready to be ground.
    DRF_11304-197.tif
  • Soaking fresh corn kernels in water is done as the beginning process for making the cornbread dough. The kernels are soaks, squeezed, then place in another pot to be rinsed and soaked again. This process must be repeated several times before the kernels are ready to be ground.
    DRF_11304-195.tif
  • Soaking fresh corn kernels in water is done as the beginning process for making the cornbread dough. The kernels are soaks, squeezed, then place in another pot to be rinsed and soaked again. This process must be repeated several times before the kernels are ready to be ground.
    DRF_11304-164.tif
  • Soaking fresh corn kernels in water is done as the beginning process for making the cornbread dough. The kernels are soaks, squeezed, then place in another pot to be rinsed and soaked again. This process must be repeated several times before the kernels are ready to be ground.
    DRF_11304-163.tif
  • Soaking fresh corn kernels in water is done as the beginning process for making the cornbread dough. The kernels are soaks, squeezed, then place in another pot to be rinsed and soaked again. This process must be repeated several times before the kernels are ready to be ground.
    DRF_11304-159.tif
  • Soaking fresh corn kernels in water is done as the beginning process for making the cornbread dough. The kernels are soaks, squeezed, then place in another pot to be rinsed and soaked again. This process must be repeated several times before the kernels are ready to be ground.
    DRF_11304-137.tif
  • Soaking fresh corn kernels in water is done as the beginning process for making the cornbread dough. The kernels are soaks, squeezed, then place in another pot to be rinsed and soaked again. This process must be repeated several times before the kernels are ready to be ground.
    DRF_11304-134.tif
  • The church of Saint Francis, in Telchac Pueblo, in the alpen glow of sunset. Each pueblo, in Yucatan, has its own church - which is named after a saint; and therefore becomes the patron saint of that pueblo.
    DRF11267-742.tif
  • The church of Saint Francis, in Telchac Pueblo, in the alpen glow of sunset. Each pueblo, in Yucatan, has its own church - which is named after a saint; and therefore becomes the patron saint of that pueblo.
    DRF11267-736.tif
  • While the chickens hang upside down, waiting to be slaughtered for the day’s meal, the fire is prepared.Cooking the traditional meal of Pib, for Dia de los Muertos is a day-long process.
    DRF_11304-65.tif
  • While the chickens hang upside down, waiting to be slaughtered for the day’s meal, the fire is prepared.Cooking the traditional meal of Pib, for Dia de los Muertos is a day-long process.
    DRF_11304-62.tif
  • A traditional Altar. The celebration of Dia de los Muertos is comprised of a special meal, and an Altar that is constructed to pay homage to the dead loved ones. On the Altar is placed the foods, and beverages that the deceased enjoyed while alive. Photographs of the deceased are also placed on the Altar.
    DRF_11304-1458.tif
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David Robert Farmerie

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