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The best travel photos in the world: National Geographic announces winners
of its prestigious 2013 Traveler Photo Contest
By Daily Mail 
Reporter<http://www.dailymail.co.uk/home/search.html?s=&authornamef=Daily+Mail+Reporter>
 *PUBLISHED:* 06:17 GMT, 2 August 2013 | *UPDATED:* 06:32 GMT, 2 August
2013

   -

National Geographic Traveler
Magazine<http://travel.nationalgeographic.com/travel/traveler-magazine/photo-contest/2013/>
has
announced the winners of its 2013 photo contest, featuring breathtaking
images that celebrate the earth’s incredible diversity.
This year, more than 15,500 professional and amateur photographers from
around the globe entered their works in the prestigious competition.
Photographer Wagner Araujo won the winner of the 2013 National Geographic
Traveler Photo 
Contest<http://travel.nationalgeographic.com/travel/traveler-magazine/photo-contest/2013/entries/gallery/winners-winners/>
, now in its 25th year, and was awarded a 10-day Galápagos Expedition with
National Geographic Expeditions for himself and a guest.
The winning entry featured the Brazilian Aquathlon championship in Manaus,
Brazil, in which the participants had to swim and run in the Rio Negro, or
Black River, so named due to the dark color of its waters.
‘I photographed it from the water and my lens got completely wet, but there
was so energy in this boys that I just didn't worry about that,’ Araujo
wrote in his submission.
Besides the exciting trip, Araujo’s prized photo will be published in the
Dec. 2013/Jan. 2014 issue of National Geographic Traveler magazine, and he
will also receive a one-year subscription to the publication.
The range of entries is inspiring and shows just how diverse the world is,
from an owl hiding in a tree to traditional Taiwanese performers painting
their faces in preparation for a show.
‘Every year the task of judging the contest gets tougher,’ Keith Bellows,
National Geographic Traveler magazine's editor in chief, said in a press
release. ‘The quality of photos increasingly gets better — and the range of
imagery more diverse. It’s exciting to see the emergence of such huge
numbers of imaginative photographers.’
The second prize - a seven-day National Geographic Photography Workshop in
Santa Fe – was awarded this year to Max Seigal, who hiked out to
Canyonlands National Park, Utah, at night hoping to photograph ruins with
the milky way in the backdrop, but instead captured a dramatic
thunderstorm.
Yahai Bonneh became the lucky recipient of the third prize - a six-day
cruise for two from Schooner American Eagle and Heritage - for his photo of
cheetahs jumping on a jeep  in  Masai Mara National Park, Kenya.
The contest features images divided into four categories: Travel Portraits,
Outdoor Scenes, Sense of Place and Spontaneous Moments. Judges review the
submissions over two rounds, choosing the top three images along with seven
merit choices. Another photo is selected by readers.

 [image: Money shot: The top prize went to photographer Wagner Araujo, who
captured this incredible image while attending the Brazilian Aquathlon
(swimming and running) championship in Manaus]
Money shot: The top prize went to photographer Wagner Araujo, who captured
this incredible image while attending the Brazilian Aquathlon (swimming and
running) championship in Manaus
  [image: Mystic haze: Max Seigal hiked out to these ruins at Canyonlands
National Park at night hoping to photograph them with the milky way, but
instead a thunderstorm rolled through creating this dramatic image]
Mystic haze: Max Seigal hiked out to these ruins at Canyonlands National
Park at night hoping to photograph them with the milky way, but instead a
thunderstorm rolled through creating this dramatic image
  [image: Wild things: Cheetahs jumped on the vehicle of tourists in Masai
Mara National Park, Kenya, and Yanai Bonneh was in the right place to
capture the big cats in action]
Wild things: Cheetahs jumped on the vehicle of tourists in Masai Mara
National Park, Kenya, and Yanai Bonneh was in the right place to capture
the big cats in action
  [image: Merit prize: Marcelo Salvador captured this poetic image of a
woman drawing water from a river near Bagan, Myanmar]
Merit prize: Marcelo Salvador captured this poetic image of a woman drawing
water from a river near Bagan, Myanmar
  [image: What a hoot: The Eastern Screech Owl is seen here doing what they
do best: blending into their surroundings]
What a hoot: The Eastern Screech Owl is seen here doing what they do best:
blending into their surroundings
  [image: Little helper: Mikael Ande, a child of Sami reindeer herders,
takes a break indoors after a long, cold day of rounding up the animals for
vaccinations and slaughter]
Little helper: Mikael Ande, a child of Sami reindeer herders, takes a break
indoors after a long, cold day of rounding up the animals for vaccinations
and slaughter
  [image: Timeless: Hideyuki Katagiri captured the blossoming of cherry
trees, or Sakura, in Japan]
Timeless: Hideyuki Katagiri captured the blossoming of cherry trees, or
Sakura, in Japan
  [image: Inside man: Gergely Lantai-Csont was allowed to photograph women
of the secretive Tatahonda in the Democratic Republic of the Congo as they
prepared for a religious ceremony]
Inside man: Gergely Lantai-Csont was allowed to photograph women of the
secretive Tatahonda in the Democratic Republic of the Congo as they
prepared for a religious ceremony
  [image: Moment of peace: Queenstown, New Zealand, known as 'The Adventure
Capital of The World,' draws adrenaline junkies who spend their days
skydiving and and zip-lining, one of whom decided to take a break from all
the action by playing a doleful tune]
Moment of peace: Queenstown, New Zealand, known as 'The Adventure Capital
of The World,' draws adrenaline junkies who spend their days skydiving and
and zip-lining, one of whom decided to take a break from all the action by
playing a doleful tune
  [image: True colors: Guanjiang Shou troupes are one of Taiwan most
popular activities that may be seen all over the country at traditional
folk religion gatherings. With their fiercely painted faces, fangs and
choreographed performances, they are easily recognized]
True colors: Guanjiang Shou troupes are one of Taiwan most popular
activities that may be seen all over the country at traditional folk
religion gatherings. With their fiercely painted faces, fangs and
choreographed performances, they are easily recognized
  [image: As old as time: A fisherman is seen casting a net at Bira Beach,
Indonesia, like generations of his ancestors]
As old as time: A fisherman is seen casting a net at Bira Beach, Indonesia,
like generations of his ancestors




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