Traveling is like riding on a mountain road. But among the ups and downs, there will always be those indelible memories that you carry with you all your life. The Press recounts the adventures, big or small, of fearless travellers. Today: a couple in search of remote destinations where few tourists have ever set foot before them.
There is a kind of buzz to go to places where you feel completely out of place, says Ron Gesser. “Of course there is a buzz, adds his wife, Sharleen Young. It’s adrenaline! »
Together, they agree with one voice on one word: “exciting”. Because each of their trips over the past 15 years has been an adventure in itself. A quest where the word “escape” takes on its full meaning. Places, scenes, faces that Ron Gesser, amateur photographer, immortalizes with his lens.
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Stroke of luck
On January 10, they were in Benin, where the national voodoo holiday was celebrated across the country. This time, luck: a niece of Ron Gesser was able to put them in contact with a fixer with whom she had collaborated to make a documentary.
Our guide took us to small villages where we were the only visitors. We could see rituals of sacrifice and facial scarification, people going into a trance…
Sharleen Young
“It was an honor and a privilege to be able to walk around their villages, to be with them, to see how they live and to attend their ceremonies,” she adds.
However, it has already happened that their presence – and especially that of the camera -, in places that have not seen many foreigners, has attracted suspicious eyes. Both remember this trip to Ethiopia where, after long hours on the road with their guide, followed by a short night in a camp in the middle of nowhere under the surveillance of an armed guard, they went to a tribe where they were greeted with some suspicion by the men of the village.
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“It was scary because they had guns — I didn’t tell my mum until I got home! “recalls Sharleen Young. “There were a few men who wondered what we were doing there, but the young people and the children were friendly and laughing”, tempers Ron Gesser for his part.
The birth of a passion
Ron Gesser was 11 years old when he had the chance to learn about travel with his father, armed with his first camera. “For two summers, we went to Israel, then to London, Paris, Athens, Copenhagen. But it was at the age of 50, after seeing a documentary on Machu Picchu, that he had the desire to make a “different” trip to Peru. He therefore offered himself a digital camera – without suspecting that it would be the beginning of a long series of peregrinations with his wife which would allow him to cultivate his passion for photography.
Since this organized group trip, Ron Gesser has however taken charge of the planning of their projects: Argentina, Cambodia, Vietnam, Burma (Myanmar), India – countries they have visited four times. This is also where Ron Gesser drew the portrait of an elderly woman from the Kutia Kondh tribe which earned him a recent ranking among the 10 finalists of the World Photography Cup.
Portraits made by Ron Gesser during his travels
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“Ron started to do extensive research on each destination, looking for the places where most people go – and those where a little less people go, to make sure we go a little further in the country” , says Sharleen Young.
Portraits made by Ron Gesser during his travels
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And if there is a particular festival or something interesting happening on the dates of our stay, we build our trip around it.
Sharleen Young
The advantage of using the services of a local guide who can also serve as their driver, notes Ron Gesser, is that they can build their own itinerary, in addition to having the freedom to change their plans at the last minute. and to be able to stop whenever they want.
If their next destination remains unknown to this day, both would gladly return to India, a country that seduced them and of which they still have so much to discover. There is Thailand, too, of which they only know Bangkok; but the country no longer has so many remote and relatively unspoiled places for tourists to explore, they muse, skeptically. One thing is certain, however, no matter where they go, the change of scenery will have to be there.
Calling all
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