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  • Curious children inspect the 206 in Nagishot, South Sudan.
    JK_aimiar_31.jpg
  • Kids run down the main street of Nagishot. Due to it's remote location, the village is highly self-sustainable and outside development hasn't overly influenced the area.
    joelkrahn_southsudan_14.jpg
  • Jerry pumps fuel, watched by locals in Nagishot.
    JK_aimiar_32.jpg
  • Children in Nagishot.
    joelkrahn_southsudan_13.jpg
  • Maize is the staple crop up in Nagishot.
    joelkrahn_southsudan_10.jpg
  • Using high-frequency radios, the pilots are able to communicate across vast distances to cooridinate landing times and get updates on runway conditions.
    JK_aimiar_28.jpg
  • Due to landing strips without proper markers or lights, all flights must be done in daylight hours, which sometimes leaves pilots forced to overnight in remote locations.
    JK_aimiar_30.jpg
  • A young Didinga girl in traditional beads and a colourful wrap.
    joelkrahn_southsudan_04.jpg
  • The hills of Southern Sudan are a lush respite from the parched plains below. The village of Nagishot is high in the Didinga mountains and is home to cattle herders and maize growers, and is virtually untouched by the strife of political unrest and war.
    joelkrahn_southsudan_01.jpg
  • The view from Ohilang. Much like Nagishot, Ohilang is removed from the recent civil wars of South Sudan.
    joelkrahn_southsudan_06.jpg
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