View allAll Photos Tagged migration
Not safari is ever the same is right! I've never seen the rhinos in the brush or so many. Pretty awesome to see regardless.
Hennepin County MN 2010
Baker Park Reserve Fall colors. I like the cloud formation in the classic V-pattern geese use to head south during migration.
Our Migration Story
Wednesday, September 14, 2011
BMW Guggenheim Lab
First Park | Houston at Second Ave.
New York City
What does it mean to be an immigrant? And who is really impacted when people leave their homes in search of a dream? Is there more to the story than what is debated in the press? Using popular education tools, the Latin American and Caribbean Community Center leads participants in mapping their personal migration stories and identifying the forces that encourage us to get up and move.
Photos: Kristopher McKay
© The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, New York
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January 8, 2011
Countless Canada Geese have flown over the house the last few days. There's a little lake across the street that they use as a rest stop. It's quite impressive when hundreds of them take off at once. Not to mention noisy. Drives the dog crazy!
Migration is not a crime|Banksy|Banksy artwork painted over in Glastonbury graffiti clean-up
www.guardian.co.uk/artanddesign/2009/apr/30/banksy-awtwor...
Dorthy Rooke McCulloch ’50 and husband Norman McCulloch at the "Global Challenges: Migration" conference
Muted Swan at Holy Island.
Association of birds migrating like people. Transported over Flight and Sea.
02/20/2018, at the Inter-governmental negotiations on a global compact for safe, orderly and regular migration.
©OPGA
Furry Migration 2017 is a furry convention held in Minneapolis, Minnesota from August 25-27, 2017 at the Hyatt Regency Minneapolis
As part of the ILO’s Fair Recruitment Initiative, the EU-funded “Global Action to Improve the Recruitment Framework of Labour Migration”, also known as REFRAME project organized a stakeholder consultation on labour migration and fair recruitment on 31st May, 2018 at the Movenpick Hotel, Colombo
Tanzania Day 2 in the southern Serengeti
a little bit of all of the food species heading off together. safer in groups from the predators.
For the pass several weeks I have been regularly checking the Monarch Monitoring Project website. Here there is a daily update of the current counts of the migrating butterflies. Over the last several days the numbers have been high with reports of “a river of wings” over the dunes. I could not wait to make my return visit. I rounded up a few friends to make the hour trip. I had promised we would see more butterflies than we could count.
The sky was overcast and rain was predicted for late this afternoon. I had concerns, but a Phriend had always encouraged me to think happy thoughts as this would hold the rain off and the butterflies would be plentiful, fingers crossed.
As we neared the location the sky opened and buckets of rain poured down. Still thinking happy thoughts, we decided on stopping for lunch before approaching the dunes. While dinning my friends and I kept positive thoughts in mind and I even started to flap my arms in a flying motion. Success! The rain stopped!
We arrived at the dunes and ran to the top. We saw a butterfly, we headed out to the gardens and started counting on 4 hands the number we saw. It was 18 to be exact. Reports on the monitoring site; due to the rain migration was at a stop, today the numbers were the lowest they have been in two weeks!
submitted to ODC/ topic ~ relax
this fellow is relaxing and feeding before the 2000 mile flight to Mexico