This photographer captures the beauty of Mexico's mountains

Growing up in the remote mountains of Sierra Gorda, Mexico, Roberto Pedraza Ruiz developed a serious case of biophilia. A term coined by biologist Edward O. Wilson, biophilia -- meaning "love of life" -- describes the human need to connect with nature. Pedraza Ruiz -- now a conservationist and photographer -- moved from the bustling central Mexican city of Queretaro to Sierra Gorda, in 1984, when he was nine years old.

A bumblebee humming bird: Photo::Roberto Pedraza Ruiz 

The mountain range covers more than 380,000 hectares -- more than twice the size of Greater London. Its landscapes span rugged mountains, arid deserts and misty cloud forests.

Pedraza Ruiz recalls spending his childhood there collecting mushrooms, looking for salamanders and jaguars and raising horses and cows. Sierra Gorda felt like the place he was meant to be. "I'm a very endemic creature," he tells CNN. "I really think that I belong to these mountains and that's it."…

https://edition.cnn.com/travel/article/roberto-pedraza-ruiz-mexico-photography-c2e-hnk-spc-intl/index.html

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