Enjoy a Nature Walk at School
By Mike • May 7, 2007 • No comments yetwith the second edition of Learning in the Great Outdoors, the carnival of environmental education.
Looking for a good book or field guide? We've got some suggestions...
with the second edition of Learning in the Great Outdoors, the carnival of environmental education.
Looking for a good book or field guide? We've got some suggestions...

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There are approximately 10,000 bird species on this beautiful planet. Welcome to 10,000 Birds, where, between us, we expect to eventually see every single one. Expect plenty of commentary on nature, science, politics, and blogging along the way.
10,000 Birds is powered by Mike Bergin, Charlie Moores, and Corey Finger.
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So, yes, there is a controversy about climate change. Are deniers in it for the money or because they hate the planet? Or both? Check out this list of organizations that think climate change is a fact and those that don’t and try to figure out the motivation behind the deniers…
In an unfortunate decision, the Department of the Interior did not designate the Greater Sage Grouse an endangered species, though the bird’s status will be reviewed yearly, because scientists at the United States Fish and Wildlife Service had determined that the bird is endangered, but not as endangered as other species, meaning that the grouse would be categorized as “warranted but precluded.”
Despite the fact that the bird did not get listed as an endangered species, one gibbering idiot, Republican representative Rob Bishop of Utah, was not happy: “Today’s unnecessary federal designation is one more on a growing list of examples that this administration places environmental special interests before job creation.”
Even he wasn’t as big a jerk as another Republican representative from Utah, Jason Chaffetz, “The only good place for a sage grouse to be listed is on the menu of a French bistro,” he said recently. “It does not deserve federal protection, period.”
Lillian Stokes has some great pictures of birds catching fish at Ding Darling National Wildlife Refuge on Stokes Birding Blog today. Enjoy!
I’ll declare my interest straight away: I volunteer for the Great Bustard Group and really, really want the species to breed commonly in England again. ‘Great’ news then (see what I did there?) that the first display of 2010 was filmed and posted on the GBG website yesterday. Shake those feathers, young man, and may all your offspring survive and prosper!
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