The photographs featured here were made in Dahshour, an area located on the west bank of the Nile River about 40 kilometers south of Cairo. Egypt is known for being one of the largest exporters of dates worldwide.

To the inexperienced eye, all palm trees look the same, however each wood pattern, frond leaf shape, date colour and even texture of the palm fibers are incredibly diverse. Egypt is home to over twenty varieties of dates, each region and community having developed their own method of harvesting and production of foods which contain dates. Every year in September, Egyptian villages bustle with harvest and processing activities, fully immersing themselves in the peak of date season. The fruiting palms have beautiful bunches of dates, colours ranging from bright yellow, red, purple to dark brown. Local farmers who grew up in date palm groves, like those in Dahshour, can differentiate each date palm by the texture of the palm tree’s trunk.

I spent a day photographing Ibtisam and Ashraf harvesting in Dahshour. The ‘manshar’ is an area that is set aside as the seasonal harvesting workspace located on the rooftop of one of their buildings in the grove. For almost two months a year the family farm is converted into a small scale processing plant where colourful dates turn the rooftop into a carpet of date patchwork. Dates are carefully separated by colour depending on their ripening stage, then dried and pressed into baskets made from palm fronds. Those are later sold as ‘Agwa’- a thick date paste that is easily stored and therefore sold all year round. Small scale farmers such as Ashraf and Ibtisam rely almost entirely on products derived from dates as their primary source of income.

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