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A sugar cane nursery at high enough altitude to induce flowering
Traffic on a shady road beneath the casuarine trees
Going north from Rawalpindi and ever higher, we came to the Murree Hills, an important retreat from the summer heat in the days of empire.
Cow dung, which would be so valuable as a fertiliser, is the principal fuel. The pattern on the pats is made by the hand which stuck them on to the wall.
When dry, the pats were scraped off and heaped and some of them were later made into conical stacks surfaced with mud, to keep them dry for the winter.
This ancient land was an archaeologist’s paradise. Excavations at Udigram in the Swat Valley.
The second city at Taxila
Buddhist monks’ cells at Taxila
A defaced Buddha
Village scenes
Street scene in Peshawar
Signboard in Peshawar
Oxen pulling huge carts of unbaled cotton
Threshing wheat by dragging a heavy sledge round and round
Buffaloes enjoying the water on a hot afternoon
One of them being groomed
Camels in a village street
A bridge of boats over the Indus
Steam trains were still around in 1966
The distillery adjacent to the sugar factory in Mardan. Alcohol burns wonderfully.
West of Lahore, the scene of our experiment in alternating rice and sugar beet crops within a twelve-month span.
Weaver birds’ nests at the roadside
Irrigation
Nicholas Craze getting a safe drink of water from a tube well
A beautiful statue in the museum in Peshawar
The Fort in Peshawar, guarding the Khyber Pass
Wooden effigy from a Chitral chief’s tomb in the Peshawar Museum
A Peshawar street just before election time
Tonga in a Peshawar street
Local arts and crafts
Bill Johnson signing in to the semi-independent frontier state of Swat
An orange seller on the Swati border
Richard Goddard Wilson as we go over the Malakand Pass and enter Swat
More views on the way into Swat
The Swat Valley
The Swat Valley north of Saidu Sharif
Clearing up a landslide north of Bahrain. Each resident man can be called up for a period of free labour for the State. There was a payment of one rupee a day for refreshment.
An interesting bridge over the Swat River near Madjan
The river near Madjan showing the terracing
The tributary Daral River at Bahrain
Bill Johnson, Nicholas Craze and Sydney Ellerton picnicing by the upper Swat River
A tributary valley high in the mountains
Nomads moving with their herds. The calf had sore feet.
Mountain house built of rocks and logs
In the village near the trial we were entertained in full public view
In the lower valley it was early summer but at high altitude it was still spring, with alpine plants flowering
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