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  • Endangered Species Day: What You Can Do

    Endangered Species Day: What You Can Do

    “[What is the] extinction of a condor
    to a child who has never seen a wren?”

    -Robert Michael Pyle

     

    The Endangered Species Coalition has a Public Service Announcement video embedded on their website that begins by asking,

    “Can you imagine the woods without owls?
    The wetlands without frogs?
    Or the flowers without bees?”

    I think that for most children, the answer is yes.

    They can imagine that pretty easily.

    Because they don’t go into the woods or wetlands.

    And they’ve been taught to stay away from bees. Bees bad.

    green spider on webToday is Endangered Species Day, the day where I remind you that once the intricate ecological web starts losing threads, it’s only a matter of time before an anchoring foundation thread goes and the whole business falls apart. We depend on multitudes of species in ways we don’t even understand fully yet. We have no idea which threads could cause the web to unravel; it’s ultimately in our best interests to protect them all, before humans find themselves on the endangered species list.

    Is that a selfish and self-centered way of approaching the subject? Perhaps. But those are the facts, man. We live in a world of natural checks and balances that have evolved over time, and the more we monkey with pesticides and habitat the more likely it becomes that we will encounter a tipping point to that balance, and cause the infrastructure to collapse like a house of cards.

    The Most Important Thing You Can Do To Protect Endangered Species:

    Take your children outside for broad lengths of unstructured nature time.

    • So they know what they could be missing. Help them to learn the names of the trees, to recognize the calls of the birds, to notice the abundance of life that goes on all around us. Become backyard naturalists.
    • Take them to zoos, unless you can afford to go exploring in the rainforests and the sahara. If the ethics of zoos bother you, then go ahead and talk to your kids about that. But let them look a tiger in the eye.
    • Help them to form a bond and empathy and affinity with nature. I’m going to come right out and say it: teach them to care about something other than themselves and their immediate family.
    • Tell them that the power is in their hands. That their actions, even the little ones, make a difference, for good or for bad.Maybe this will help us all to remember that the same is true for all of us.

    The Second Most Important Thing You Can Do:

    Help preserve animal habitats.

    • Don’t use herbicides or pesticides.
    • Don’t litter.
    • Try to limit chemicals and plastics in your life. As much as you can.
    • Volunteer for cleanups. Or just throw away that random McDonald’s bag at the park. Every little bit helps.
    • Garden for wildlife.

    The Third Most Important Thing You Can Do:

    Advocate.

    The Endangered Species Act does a good job of protecting the plants and wildlife listed as threatened or endangered. But in the U.S. there are 6,500 species that scientists believe are at risk of extinction. Only 1,200 are officially listed.

    Some other good tips from the Endangered Species Coaltion:

    • Slow down when driving
    • Recycle and buy sustainable products
    • Never purchase products made from threatened or endangered species
    • Report any harassment or shooting of threatened and endangered species

     

    One more thing.

    Care.

    endangered animals

    Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot,
    nothing is going to get better.

    It’s not.
    -Dr. Seuss, The Lorax

    StopExtinction.org

  • Victory Garden Posters for Modern Day Patriots, Homesteaders & Locavores

    Victory Garden Posters for Modern Day Patriots, Homesteaders & Locavores

    victory garden poster

    The future belongs to those who believe in the beauty of their dreams.
    –Eleanor Roosevelt

    Man, I want chickens. You guys want to start a letter-writing campaign to my husband, letting him know he’s depriving me?

    Anyway, when I was researching my post earlier this week about victory gardens and their modern day relevance, I came across this Etsy seller with the most awesome posters and t-shirts celebrating the Victory Garden of Tomorrow— “artful advocacy for the modern homefront.”

    Of the chicken poster (my favorite), the seller says:

    I just love the idea of taking chickens, who are anything but heroic, and illustrate them so. I was inspired by the posters that used to hang in WWII aircraft factories, and posters selling war bonds.

    Today, our heroes are the common, the simple and can be right in our own backyard.

    A man after my own heart.

    A couple more that I love:

    victory garden poster 2

    “Eat real food” sounds like an obvious thing to say, like it should go without saying. But in today’s industrialized world of processed products-that-are-edible, a reminder to eat only whole, real foods is necessary. I was inspired by an old canning manual cover to create this print that will remind and inspire to eat what is wholesome.


    victory garden poster 3

    I consider this to be one of the most important messages I have made as a designer activist: that there is ground all around us that can and should be cultivated. It’s in empty city lots, on rooftops, in window boxes, and other surprising nooks and crannies. This image is inspired by a 1944 Garden for Victory poster that also featured a foot and pitchfork along with the slogan, “Groundwork for Victory.” The setting then was the suburban or rural lawn–the setting now is the urban food deserts. Urban farming as source of nutrition and education has to be part of our future.

    Awesome sauce.

    The posters are 12″ x 18″ and printed on acid-free Mohawk Options FSC certified recycled content 80# cover stock. They sell for $12; the seller has some bundled into 3-packs for $30 and it looks like he’ll allow substitutions. These are gonna look sah-weet in my dining room!

    I think I might be seriously addicted to Etsy.

    Who are your favorite sellers?

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  • Star-of-Bethlehem (Ornithogalum umbellatum): Mostly Wordless Wednesday

    Star-of-Bethlehem (Ornithogalum umbellatum): Mostly Wordless Wednesday

    star of bethlehem flower

    To a person uninstructed in natural history,
    his country or seaside stroll is a walk through a gallery filled with wonderful works of art,

    nine-tenths of which have their faces turned to the wall.

    –Thomas Huxley

    I love finding out the names of the flowers that volunteer in our yard. This one took a little time to research; it wasn’t listed in any of my field guides. It eventually occurred to me to search by area and not flower type, and I found a lovely site under the search term Delaware wildflowers.

    This ethereal beauty is the Star-of-Bethlehem (Ornithogalum umbellatum). It popped up overnight in huge drifts, and of course it turns out that they are non-native and invasive, not to mention toxic to The Dogness, who is more interested in eating the outdoors than his dinner.

    But they are pretty, aren’t they?

    What’s popping up in your garden?