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Feather Plucking Fun
Keeping chickens is fun but every week throws up a new challenge. This week, we have been mostly trying to solve the mystery of the missing bum feathers.Turns out our dear Little Edie has been a-pluckin’ and a-chewin’ those feathers from the derriere of all three of her sisters. This is some perverse sibling rivalry! More likely though, a nutritional deficiency (which we will address).So here’s the Legend of Little Edie…Fastest Feather Plucker in the West.If you like these vids, you can find more at recovereden.com (link in bio).We can also do personalised videos featuring our animated menagerie to order. Just drop us a message.
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It’s a Wonderful World Photo Gallery
It’s still a beautiful planet and it’s always worth reminding ourselves what we stand to lose. Any of the photos in the following gallery are available to purchase as high-resolution digital downloads or as framed prints. For details, please visit our photo store. 30% of all proceeds will go toward our tree planting fund. The remainder helps us to run this website and other RECOVER EDEN initiatives.
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Where’s Your Head At?
This post was sourced from the article, Technology is Changing Our Relationship With Nature As We Know It by Adrienne Matei in QZ.com. University of Washington psychology professor Peter Kahn has spent much of his career analyzing the relationship humans have with nature—and he thinks that relationship is more fragile than many of us realize. Kahn works to understand the intersection of two modern phenomena: the destruction of nature, and the growth of technology. As UW’s director of the Human Interaction with Nature and Technological Systems Lab (HINTS), Khan researches humans in relation to both real nature and “technological nature”: digital representations of the wild, such as nature-focused documentaries, video…