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PublishedJanuary 13, 2021
Dana Wilde: The death of the great auks
We like to think we’ve come a long way in conservation. Which we have, sort of, writes Dana Wilde, but the Earth is right now undergoing its sixth mass extinction event.
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PublishedDecember 31, 2020
Dana Wilde: Poppop’s got a brand new jeejah
It's hard to remember what life was like before syntactic devices, but it existed, writes Dana Wilde.
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PublishedNovember 26, 2020
Dana Wilde: The still point of November
This month is an astonishing revelation if you know where to look, as angles of light point us toward cosmic truth, Dana Wilde writes.
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PublishedNovember 11, 2020
Dana Wilde: The spirit of the tamaracks
While the world closes down in November, beauty knells up through the tamarack branches on the edge of bogs and winter, writes Dana Wilde.
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PublishedOctober 28, 2020
Dana Wilde: Canada geese in October
In October comes a certain slant of light that seems to rise up out of some unseen spot of time and gather itself, and head south, writes Dana Wilde.
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PublishedSeptember 23, 2020
Dana Wilde: Wildfires, desperation, self-destruction
I still don’t know what will deter us from driving headlong into self-destruction by climate change, writes Dana Wilde.
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PublishedSeptember 9, 2020
Dana Wilde: The blue wanderers of the woods
Blue jays are tricksters who know what they’re doing, and also what they’re talking about, writes Dana Wilde.
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PublishedAugust 12, 2020
Dana Wilde: Spiders in the day lilies
Little did we know in June that a veritable summer colony of nursery web spider families was setting up in the garden, writes Dana Wilde.
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PublishedJuly 29, 2020
Dana Wilde: Life in the time of COVID, and climate change
I don’t know what else to do except to keep pointing to facts from the real world, writes Dana Wilde.
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PublishedJuly 22, 2020
Dana Wilde: Within a budding grove of buttonbush
Buttonbush blossom is a natural miracle you can see performed every year, writes Dana Wilde.
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