Suri tribe girls take a break from panning for gold by playing in the river in Omo Valley, Ethiopia
More than forty tribes reside in the area and the valley is home to about 200,000 people.
The traditions of the Omo Valley tribes are deeply embedded and each tribe's identity is vividly clear, even to outsiders. 
Trevor said: 'The tribes have many similarities but they also have distinctive differences.
'Young
 men of the Hamar tribe, for example, have to jump a number of bulls to 
'come of age', while the Suri and Mursi tribes compete through stick 
fighting. More pics after cut...
'Many
 of the tribes take pride in their appearance. The women of the Mursi 
and Suri have very distinctive lip plates and several tribes use butter 
and ochre on their hair as a form of adornment.'
The Hamar, Kara, Morsi and Suri tribes all use distinctive paint made from clay to paint their bodies.
Trevor
 added: 'They paint themselves as a form of camouflage when hunting, or 
as decoration at special ceremonies, festivals and when outsiders visit.
'They also wear very distinctive beads and jewellery made from recycled materials - batteries, watch chains, bottle tops.'
Due
 to the development of new road networks and telecommunication networks,
 the area has become more accessible to the outside world and 
globalisation has made its mark on the Omo Valley.
 An old Suri tribe woman lights her pipe
 
A young Suri girl applies red and white make up  using a mirror. Her 
tribe use distinctive paint made from clay to paint their bodies
  
 
 
 
 
  
Trevor said:
 'The Omo Valley is one of the best locations on Earth to see indigenous
 people live as they have done for millennia.
'Although
 these ancient cultures are now affected by globalisation, many 
tribesmen and women remain resolute in being the change that they wish 
to see in themselves.
'The
 area is still remote but more accessible than it was a decade ago due 
to new road networks and the development of telecommunication networks.'
There
 are concerns that the area will be reduced to tourist fodder, 
consequently Trevor advocates using experienced local guides.
He
 said: 'In Ethiopia a very experienced local guide is always necessary 
and it is important to be sensitive to the impacts that tourism can 
have.
'Visits should be sustainable and not promote a human zoo.
'The
 tribes are almost all pastoralists and are, to some extent, nomadic so 
tourism brings them a little extra income although in some cases the 
income is used to buy alcohol or even weapons.'
A group of Hamar women and girls move in unison as they sing at a bull jumping ceremony, where young men 'come of age'
 
Young men wait for a donga (traditional stick fight) in the village of Kibish in Omo Valley, Ethiopia
 They paint themselves as a form of camouflage when hunting, or as 
decoration at special ceremonies, festivals and when outsiders visit
 
As well as make-up, tribeswomen use fresh ochre to stain their hair in 
another layer of showmanship when it comes to the way they look
 
 
 
As well as make-up and hair staining, yhey also wear very distinctive 
beads and jewellery made from recycled materials - batteries, watch 
chains, bottle tops
 
 
 
 
 An old Suri woman enjoys an evening smoke of tobacco from her calabash pipe, captured by Irish photographer Trevor Cole
 
A group of young men line up for the regular market in the village of 
Turmi, where there are concerns the area will be reduced to tourist 
fodder as it becomes more accessible
 
The Ireland-born photographer promotes sustainable tourism in the area and runs photo tours through the valley.
He
 said: 'Here the precedent of paying villages and, or, individuals is 
almost universal. This was something the tour companies seem to have 
instigated decades ago when tourism was in its infancy.
'I
 am sensitive to the impacts that tourism can cause, hence, I will 
always try to make my visit sustainable and not promote 'zoofication!''
For information about Trevor's photo tours, visit www.epicphototours.com/tribes-of-the-omo-valley--jan-5-2017-jan-17-2017.html
 
 
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