A boy, 8, stands next to a trunk from a Jenga tree which is being used as a supporting pole for tobacco drying sheds. A farmer told us that in order to get the right wood for poles to support tobacco drying sheds, the farmers would walk for three-and-a-half hours to the top of the mountains (in the distance in the photograph) which is the last place where this particular type of tree still grows. The wood is tough and perfect for the job. They would spend all day cutting one tree down and then walk back again while carrying the trunk

Photograph: David Levene/The Guardian