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This project is the getting through process of the young people who are individuals by integrating their traditional arts to the major society and make their cultures embrace with the society without being isolated.
This project is the getting through process of the young people who are individuals by integrating their traditional arts to the major society and make their cultures embrace with the society without being isolated.
About 500,000 migrating snow geese at Loess Bluffs National Wildlife Refuge. They are incredibly loud, and move as a group that, at times, looks like a dark cloud in the sky.
Watching Migrating Snow Geese is a long held ambition.
Photo donated by Leftantler
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Perched above the Rocky River in Cleveland, Ohio on August 31, 2013. Photo taken with Canon Powershot, near the Little Met golf course in the Cleveland Metroparks.
This project is the getting through process of the young people who are individuals by integrating their traditional arts to the major society and make their cultures embrace with the society without being isolated.
Herbert "Dee" Wyman (third from left) poses with a group of unknown men in the Kansas City area. Like many people did during the 1920's and 1930's, Dee left Taney County for Kansas City in an effort to find work, and lived the majority of his life there. Beginning mid-March, the White River Valley Historical Society's "Migrations" exhibit will take a year-long look at those who migrated to, and from, the Ozarks over the years. For more information, call 417-546-2210. Photo Wyman Family Collection
I stumbled across this flock of snow geese yesterday! As I drove around the corner they came in to land on an open piece of ground near a community centre. There were upwards of a few thousand (not that I counted) and the noise was phenomenal! They were eventually spooked by about 10 seagulls and what a sight when they all took off together. An unforgettable moment of pure nature :-)
Ps. I read online that they can sometimes be seen in flocks of up to 20 000!