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Conservation and Wildlife Ecology students from SGU's School of Arts and Sciences participate in a bird netting workshop held with Grenada's Forestry Department at the La Sagesse Nature Center.
Closeup of Greige Lariat: Netting stitch with Swarovski dangles. Completed 10/2011.
© 2011 auralesque hi-res bead art
Conservation and Wildlife Ecology students from SGU's School of Arts and Sciences participate in a bird netting workshop held with Grenada's Forestry Department at the La Sagesse Nature Center.
Uploaded by SA for guest blogger Bob D.
Learn more about First Landing State Park here: www.dcr.virginia.gov/state-parks/first-landing#general_in...
Okay--so now that I'm finished taking 90billion photos of ground cherries--what the heck am I going to do with them? I tasted one and am not wild about the flavor...
The Phoenix add their seventh goal of the night to the scoresheet.
Photo by Richard Allan.
© Manchester Phoenix 2012. All rights reserved. This photo may not be reproduced, edited or manipulated in any way without prior expressed consent of the photographer.
Coir Green ™(Geotextiles) – CGgeo ™ have been known to reduce soil erosion and is used for bioengineering and slope stabilization applications globally due to the mechanical strength necessary to hold soil together. It is been proven that CGgeo ™(Geotextiles) last for approximately 3 - 5 years depending on the weight, and by the time the product degrades, it converts itself it to humus, which enriches the soil. The following Geotextiles are produced by Coir Green.
CGgeo 400g Hand Woven Coir Netting (CG Geotextiles)
CGgeo 700g Hand Woven Coir Netting (CG Geotextiles)
CGgeo 900g Hand Woven Coir Netting (CG Geotextiles)
Conservation and Wildlife Ecology students from SGU's School of Arts and Sciences participate in a bird netting workshop held with Grenada's Forestry Department at the La Sagesse Nature Center.
Conservation and Wildlife Ecology students from SGU's School of Arts and Sciences participate in a bird netting workshop held with Grenada's Forestry Department at the La Sagesse Nature Center.
This is the scene on the road into a nearby village after workmen covered hedgerows in netting, on at least two sides of a large field, in preparation for the building of four hundred new homes, the same netting (only in green) was also used on a larger development close by. Increasingly developers are using this hideous hedge netting to get around the Wildlife and Countryside Act (1981) which prevents the disturbance of nesting birds. This allows them to rip up trees and hedgerows at a time of their choosing and avoids any costly delays that our wildlife might inflict upon them. Concerns have been raised about birds and mammals becoming trapped and the timing could not be worse for our native hedgehogs as they are emerging from hibernation. As the pictures show there are plenty of holes in the netting for wildlife to enter and then become trapped. Hedgehogs are particularly vulnerable to becoming trapped in netting because their backward facing spines prevent them from reversing out.
Conservation and Wildlife Ecology students from SGU's School of Arts and Sciences participate in a bird netting workshop held with Grenada's Forestry Department at the La Sagesse Nature Center.
A pearl lariat I made for Mom this Christmas. This deceptively simple-looking netted necklace is comprised of 60 grams of size 10 pearl seed beads, 15 grams size 11 lavender hex beads, about 70 freshwater potato pearls, and about 80 freshwater rice pearls. It's about 3 1/2 feet long, taking nearly 40 hours to complete.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=_nW5AF0m9Zw
DEC 26, 2013
Did she miss him? She wanted to lose herself in him. To tie his arms around her like a tourniquet. If she showed him how much she needed him, he’d run away.
Donate mosquito nets and protect children and their families in developing countries from potentially deadly disease from insects.
This is the scene on the road into a nearby village after workmen covered hedgerows in netting, on at least two sides of a large field, in preparation for the building of four hundred new homes, the same netting (only in green) was also used on a larger development close by. Increasingly developers are using this hideous hedge netting to get around the Wildlife and Countryside Act (1981) which prevents the disturbance of nesting birds. This allows them to rip up trees and hedgerows at a time of their choosing and avoids any costly delays that our wildlife might inflict upon them. Concerns have been raised about birds and mammals becoming trapped and the timing could not be worse for our native hedgehogs as they are emerging from hibernation. As the pictures show there are plenty of holes in the netting for wildlife to enter and then become trapped. Hedgehogs are particularly vulnerable to becoming trapped in netting because their backward facing spines prevent them from reversing out.