news, articles, pictures, etc. related to environmental ethics, ecological linguistics, and ecological communities. 🤓📸: #oc
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I hate when bird parents get mad at me for rescuing their children.
Don’t want me touching your kid? Fine, YOU crawl down there and use YOUR super-dexterous hands with opposable thumbs to gently lift your son out of this window-well. Oh, you can’t do that? Then shut up and stop swooping me, you ungrateful leftover dinosaurs.
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Eighth Generation is what modern Native American design looks like without cultural appropriation
Louie Gong describes his company, Eighth Generation, as “a Native-owned, community-engaged small business that began when I started putting cultural art on shoes.” It’s true, in 2008, Gong began decorating sneakers and skateboarding apparel with indigenous Nooksack patterns — a move that, as a Nooksack himself, set him apart from the non-Native designers who’d been doing so for years. As demand grew, so did Gong’s ambition.
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this book is worth more than a dozen restaurants that grow their own microgreens on the roof
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Just a little video I made for fun of some of the reasons I love this tiny guy so very much.
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Tentacles and Beaks of Cephalopods | December, 2015 Investigating the anatomical differences of cephalopod beaks and tentacles with regards to their diet.
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To close off the week - this beauty. Come good into Monday!
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Montana Fall Reflection
@jakeelko
instagram.com/lordelko
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Fall vibes turned up to 💯 in Yosemite 🍁 | alex_broadstock
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Karen and Flemming Abrahamsson works from the slogan “building with consciousness”, and this is their adorable little cob cottage. “The cob-technique is a building method where clay, sand, soil and straw are kneaded together into a sort of “bread”. These “breads” are put together in the wall, which after drying becomes very strong. COB-walls allow that one can create some amazing shapes, they accumulate the heat and they can breathe.”
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