The Story of Stuff is a powerful yet fun video presentation by Annie Leonard. Learn how you can break the cycle of the unsustainable materials economy.
The Consumption Conundrum
The Story of Stuff is a powerful yet fun video presentation by Annie Leonard. Learn how you can break the cycle of the unsustainable materials economy.
This is a follow-up to yesterday's, twice the length (1,400 words) but worth the story -- 250 birds for The Big Year! I am hoping the nature photos will make up for the long read. Cheers, all!
Shooting the bird at American tradition, figuratively -- and literally.
Only five months late, here is a longish photo journal for our first day in Yellowstone. Go get a cup of coffee.
Clicking "Publish" rather than "Save as Draft" feels good, so I'm kicking these dirty clothes down the hall and into the laundry room for the final washing and sorting. Dang, it feels good. PS - There's some video here too. Yellowstone is going to get the post it deserves.
A somewhat random post, missing my old kitty, Roi. I remember him here, from 10 years ago, with very old digital pictures, some of my first.
My mee-maw's famous buttermilk pancake recipe, completely bastardized to make it vegan, some October photos of kids and nature. These are hands down the best and easiest pancakes around.
The perfect animal rescue for ethical vegetarians: bunnies. Our family grows by three!
Kids beach frolic and parents go birding as Mr. and Mrs. Dirt celebrate 20 years together in Galveston. Come dig your toes in the mud,...er, uh, SAND. There's a new "Beaches" photo album, too. Cheers!
Lacking time for a more wordy post, enjoy September in pictures and a recipe for Curried Butternut Squash Soup instead. Birds, kids and nature continue to be favorite photographic subjects at DirtNKids.