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Rebecca Hockman was the Antietam Photographic Society's model for the evening at the Hagerstown City Park. She's great to work with and was lots of fun (and funny)!

used here, here, here, here, here

 

excerpt from the wikipedia entry for Mouse:

 

Although they may live up to two years in the lab, the average mouse in the wild lives only about 3 months, primarily due to heavy predation. Cats, wild dogs, foxes, birds of prey, snakes and even certain kinds of insects have been known to prey heavily upon mice. Nevertheless, due to its incredible adaptability to almost any environment, and its ability to live commensally with humans, the mouse is regarded to be the third most successful mammalian species living on Earth today, after humans and the rat.

 

Mice can be harmful pests, damaging and eating crops and spreading diseases through their parasites and feces. In the Western United States, breathing dust that has come in contact with mouse feces has been linked to the deadly hantavirus. The original motivation for the domestication of cats is thought to have been for their predation of mice and their relatives, the rats.

  

copyright © 2007 sean dreilinger

  

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view cornered mouse - profile - _MG_3005 on a black background.

 

TreeHugger installation for International Tree Day in the cities of Warsaw, Zabrowo, and Wilkowice, Poland.

Largest Sitka Spruce

Hoh Rainforest Visitor Center

before it fell Duncan Cedar: World's Largest Western Red Cedar Tree

www.roadsideamerica.com/tip/13132

akkamaan.blogspot.com/2013/06/directions-to-duncan-cedar-...

My children helping me out with this month's scavenger hunt.

 

Entry for April's Scavenger Hunt

treehugger offers beer to a lumberjack, hoping he'd like it and not cut down the tree.... LOL

Milk Frog

Iguazu National Park, Argentina

 

HUGE treefrog. 6 or 7 inches long. very cool and very sticky...

We had to go back to "The Big Tree" to get a photo (this isn't the one). While I was setting up the tripod, a family came walking up and the little boy went up and hugged the tree. The father and mother smiled and the father said "Tree Hugger". It seemed like this had happened before... and like a photo op :^)

Now that I keep an eye out for them, there seems to be bees everywhere! Here is a small bee hive in a hollow of a tree.

Temperate Rainforest With Antartic Beech

Sunday afternoon Julia and I went for a walk. Eli recommended we check out Rancho San Antonio, which is about 15 minutes drive from our place.

 

The trail was muddy, so we only walked for a couple of kilometers on the hiking trail, and then continued on the paved walking path.

 

It was beautiful. We plan on exploring this park.

 

-- foolswisdom

My image capturing a sand fox wondering on the Tibetan plateau, published by Treehugger on their website.

 

You can see the original photo here.

Castanea sativa. Many thanks to HappyTreeFriends!!

 

The TreeHugger Project was the featured environmental art project at the United Nations Climate Change Conference this year to be held in December in the beautiful city of Poznan, Poland, December 1-12th

 

The installation “Lonely Tree, Lonely People” invited all passers by to join the line just for a moment, to feel how it may be if there is indeed just one tree left to hug, or just even to look at.

Discovery Channel's Treehugger.com just ranked the ShuttleBug as the "champagne of kid/cargo bikes", ranking it at the top of the top 5 bikes of this type.

Ah, it's my tree-huggin' kids. Go Planet Earth!

at the treehugger.com party

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