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#Gamta
bukimevieningi · 1 year
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Eglė Lekstutienė. Kreipiuosi į visus, kuriems rūpi Lietuvos gamta ir jos ateitis! (video)
Ar norime išsaugoti Lietuvos gamtą ateities kartoms? Invaziniai augalai – ne tokia jau nekalta Lietuvos problema. Jie užima vis didesnius natūralios gamtos plotus ir darosi labai sunkiai sukontroliuojami. Apie visa tai pasakoja Eglė vaizdo reportaže. Invazinių augalų ir gyvūnų Lietuvoje knyga su nuotraukomis (atsisiųsti PDF): https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j… Invazinių augalų Lietuvoje…
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rimfot · 1 year
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Dusios ež
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kristinutee · 1 year
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Winter magic ❄️ ------------------------------------------------------ Credits: KrisArtry 📷 Shot with: Sony A7II 28-70 mm ------------------------------------------------------ #winter #snow #lithuania #nature #photography #tree #sniegas #ziema #sirvintos #lietuva #gamta #fotografia #naturephotography #winterphotography #magical #wintermagic #view #instagood #explore #photos #coldweather (at Sirvintos) https://www.instagram.com/p/Co9XsVBtEpq/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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romanphoto · 1 year
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Spring is coming. Alder blossom Canon 5d classic and Jupiter 37a #spring #nature #naturephotography #naturelovers #gamta #blossom #wolverhampton #compton #canon_photos #canon5dclassic #jupiter #jupiter37a #jupiter37a135mm #manualfocuslover #manualfocuslens #manualfocus #manualphotography #vintagelensphotography #vintagelenses (at Wolverhampton, UK) https://www.instagram.com/p/CojxReFIJdr/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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xtruss · 4 months
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South Korea Is A Test Case On How To Fight An Ecological Disaster
After Two-thirds of the Country’s Tidal Flats Were Lost to Shoreline Development, South Korean Scientists Set Out to Prove Why This Ecosystem is so Essential.
— By Anna Jeanine Kim | Photographs: By Youngrea Kim | August 15, 2023
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The sun sets over a tidal flat in Southwestern South Korea. Tidal Flats are a type of Ecosystem that Provide Habitat for Wildlife and help fight climate change—yet many are at risk of disappearing.
Yubudo, South Korea — As Byeongwoo Lee slowly walks across a sandy tidal flat on Yubudo, a small island off the west coast of South Korea, the birding guide does so quietly.
“You can’t see the birds right now,” Lee said. “You can feel them.”
Through the scope, it was just possible to make out their blurry shapes in the dark, and to hear the gentle but powerful “whhhrrr-reet-reet-reet” of tens of thousands of birds as they fed at the shoreline and in the shallow water.
As the sun rose, the tide retreated until it revealed six miles of the muddy sea floor. Channels of water like tree branches crisscrossed mud teeming with crabs, clams, snails, and sea worms.
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Top: Depending on the time of day, tidal flats are either completely submerged under water or exposed to the air. Seen here at low tide, tidal channels criss cross an exposed tidal flat neighboring a residential neighborhood in Muan, South Korea.
Bottom: During an annual ceremony that takes place on the first full moon of the Lunar New Year, Gwangho Chu bows before a ceremonial table placed on a tidal flat in Wando, a small island in South Korea. Coastal communities in the Yellow Sea region have continued to honor the centuries-old tradition of celebrating the ancestral spirits of the sea and praying for a good harvest from the tidal flats.
Tidal flats like these are a type of wetland found on coastlines around the world. Korea’s Yellow Sea tidal flats, like those found on Yubudo Island, form the heart of an 18,000-mile route traveled by 50 million shorebirds as they migrate from eastern Russia and Alaska in the summer to Australia and New Zealand in the winter.
Many of them only stop once on their marathon journeys, and the tidal flats of South Korea provide them with essential food and shelter.
Yet despite their critical importance to the environment, many are at risk of disappearing. Some of the most important, and most endangered, are found surrounding the Yellow Sea along the shores of China and the western side of the Korean peninsula.
For decades, people have been transforming them into industrial sites and farms, squeezing them into smaller areas and pushing some species to the brink of extinction. But as science increasingly shows how wetlands like these benefit wildlife and help fight climate change, South Korean scientists and conservationists are gaining momentum in their effort to save and restore what’s left.
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Top: From left, Okji Kim, Yangim Kim, and Sunim Bae work together to make gamtae-kimchi, a special type of kimchi made with sea algae instead of cabbage. With limited farmland available, coastal communities have traditionally relied on the abundance of tidal flats, developing a unique culinary culture over thousands of years.
Bottom: A seafood meal is served at a restaurant in Yamido, a small island now connected to the mainland by the construction of the 21-mile-long seawall built as part of the Saemangeum development project. Many of the residents living around the seawall used to make a living working in the seafood industry, but the destruction of nearby tidal flats significantly decreased their harvests, threatening their livelihood.
Why Tidal Flats Are An Environmental Powerhouse
“The tidal flats made the relationship between humans and the sea possible,” said Joon Kim, a senior researcher at the Jeonnam Research Institute who studies the culture around Korean tidal flats.
Since prehistory, South Korea’s coastal communities relied on tidal flats for harvesting clams, crabs, octopus, and seaweed, adjusting their way of life to the tide’s schedule. Their biodiversity and abundance inspired many beloved local cuisines, unique coastal culture, and a fishing economy worth over $330 million U.S. dollars a year.
These same ecosystems are now helping fight climate change.
South Korean universities are partnering with the government to study tidal flats and their ability to clean polluted water, protect shoreline communities from storms, and mitigate climate change by absorbing carbon dioxide.
Korean tidal flats are full of tiny one-celled organisms called benthic diatoms that sink through the mud as they complete their life cycle, burying carbon dioxide in the deep sediment, says Jong Seong Khim, a marine scientist and professor at Seoul National University.
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Top: Seoul National University researcher Inok Lee hands a sediment sample to her colleague outside the Saemangeum seawall. Scientists like Lee are studying how the large-scale development project is harming water quality and marine wildlife.
Bottom: People ride recreational boats through a man-made canal at a city park in Songdo, South Korea. Once a thriving tidal flat ecosystem, Songdo was built on reclaimed land and hailed for creating "a city out of nothing." Over the past 70 years, South Korea has lost over two-thirds of its tidal flats due to reclamation projects like these.
The diversity and number of benthic diatoms make South Korean tidal flats unique, as does its thick mud—over 80 feet deep in some tidal flats.
In 2021, Khim and his fellow researchers published a study showing South Korea’s tidal flats and salt marshes absorb 260,000 tons of carbon dioxide annually, equivalent to taking about 110,000 cars off the road every year.
The same year, the South Korean government announced a four-year project to bring back tidal flats and salt marshes to help fight climate change.
Kim hopes that by showing how effectively tidal flats store carbon, governments and conservation groups will recognize them as valuable and save them from being destroyed.
Why Tidal Flats Are In Danger
In the past 70 years, South Korea has transformed from a country devastated by war into a highly developed, industrial nation. During this rapid change, two-thirds of its tidal flats subsequently disappeared.
In a country surrounded by the ocean on three sides, like South Korea, engineering solid, dry land over water-logged terrain, a process referred to as land reclamation, can expand territory or create more farmland.
Of all the threats to tidal flats—such as sea level rise and pollution—land reclamation has led to the most loss.
Scientists are only beginning to understand the true extent of this loss globally, but one recent study suggests 16 percent of the world’s tidal flats have disappeared in the past few decades.
“We are at a point where we should consider what we can do to give back to tidal flats,” said Kim.
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Left: In 1989, a satellite image shows what the tidal flats around the Saemangeum development project looked like before construction began in earnest.
Right: By 2018, a satellite image of that same tidal flat reveals the effect of a 21-mile seawall and construction. The 100,000-acre reclamation project is seven times the size of Manhattan. ESA/NASA/USGS
One of the most controversial shoreline developments is Saemangeum, a 100,000-acre reclamation project seven times the size of Manhattan.
Developers first envisioned Saemangeum as a vast agricultural area for rice cultivation, then as the economy changed, they promised to turn it into an industrial corridor.
In 2006, despite lawsuits and protests, a 21-mile-long wall in Saemangeum deprived the ecosystem of the water it needed to exist. Just one part of the region’s transformation, it set the Guinness World Record for the world’s longest sea dam.
Millions of shellfish died when the wall severed the ecosystem from the tide.
Finding no food and no place to land, tens of thousands of migratory birds disappeared. About 90,000 now-endangered great knot birds died, driving their total population numbers down by at least 24 percent.
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Top: The 21-mile-long Saemangeum seawall is is the longest such structure in the world. After its construction, tens of thousands of shorebirds disappeared from the area that used to be one of the most important habitats along the Yellow Sea region.
Bottom: As excavators work on tidal flat reclamation in Songdo, shorebirds rest during their annual migration from Australia to the Russian Far East. Developing tidal flats in this region destroys critical habitats for the 50 million migratory birds that fly this route every year.
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Top: Great knots feed on clams and seaworms at a tidal flat near Yubudo, a small island off the west coast of South Korea. About 80 percent of great knots have disappeared in the last two decades due to habitat loss.
Bottom: Dongpil Oh and his son, Seungjun Oh, conduct monthly surveys of shorebird populations on the the Sura tidal flat found in Gunsan, South Korea. Sura is one of the last remaining tidal flats found within the Saemangeum reclamation site. Dongpil and Seungjun are part of the Saemangeum Citizen Ecology Investigation Team, a grassroots organization that advocates for conservation and documents threats to tidal flats impacted by the Saemanguem.
It wasn’t only wildlife that suffered. Before the wall, the area was known for the nation’s best clams, with a fishing industry supporting around 20,000 people. Nearly all of that disappeared.
And yet despite promises of jobs made to the community, developers have completed less than half of the reclamation, and much of what has been reclaimed are undeveloped empty lots.
Saemangeum developers now plan to build an airport over the last remaining tidal flat, Sura, with construction scheduled to begin in 2024. Activists are suing to stop it, pointing out that the site still provides habitat for endangered species like black-faced spoonbills and Far Eastern curlews.
“It’s painful to remember how much it’s changed. Sometimes you forget how beautiful it was in the past because your eyes adjust to what it looks like now,” said Dongpil Oh, one of the activists involved and leader of the Saemangeum Citizen Ecological Investigation Team.
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Left: Halophytes turn red on a tidal flat in Sinan, South Korea. South Korean researchers are studying how salt-tolerant plants like these can boost tidal flats’ ability to fight climate change by absorbing carbon.
Right: A blue-spotted mudskipper jumps during a mating dance at low tide in Sinan. Resting in its burrow at high tide and feeding in the mud when the tide goes out, the unusual, amphibious fish is adapted to the tidal flat’s drastic daily changes.
Bottom: The sun sets over Suncheon Bay Wetland Reserve at low tide. About 16 percent of the world's tidal flats have been destroyed in just the past few decades, but science is increasingly showing how important these ecosystems are for preserving wildlife and fighting climate change.
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Top: National Institute of Ecology researchers and local volunteers tag baby black-faced spoonbills with GPS trackers in Incheon, South Korea. Around 90 percent of these endangered shorebirds breed on the country’s west coast. After their worldwide population dropped below 300 in the late 1980s, conservation efforts have brought their numbers to around 5,200. “As a top predator in tidal flats, their health can indicate the health of the overall ecosystem,” researcher Inki Kwon said.
Bottom: Ecotourist guide Sunjeong Heo points out a flock of birds over a tidal flat at Suncheon Bay Wetland Reserve in South Korea. Drawing over six million visitors a year, the UNESCO World Heritage site is a blueprint for the country’s tidal flat conservation and ecotourism.
A New Era of Conservation
After 30 years of construction, Saemangeum has become synonymous with ecological collapse, but it also sparked an environmental movement in South Korea after people witnessed what happens when tidal flats are lost.
Two years after the Saemangeum seawall was finished, in 2008, the South Korean government banned new large-scale reclamation projects—though developments already in progress, like Saemangeum, are still permitted.
And in 2019, reclamation of tidal flats finally plateaued in South Korea, when the net gain from restoration barely surpassed the loss, according to a 2023 report from the International Union for Conservation of Nature.
One of the best places to see the benefit of this kind of conservation is South Korea’s Suncheon Bay Wetland Reserve, on the peninsula's southern edge. The wetland was spared from the threat of development in the ‘90s, when residents and activists protested the government’s plan to mine the land.
Suncheon Bay became the country’s first internationally protected coastal wetland, and its tidal flats were designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 2021, along with four other tidal flats in South Korea. Every year, over six million tourists visit the wetland and the nearby National Garden to see wildlife like hooded cranes and blue-spotted mud skippers.
With municipal and national funds, the Suncheon Bay Wetland Reserve bought nearby farmland by the coast, restoring the connection with the sea.
Their holistic approach to restoration has introduced organic rice farming to reduce pollution from runoff and educational opportunities for ecotourists, residents, and children in local schools. Suncheon’s success is a blueprint for tidal flat conservation around the world.
“Our focus is on letting the tide flow again, like it always did,” said Sunmi Hwang, a conservationist with the wetland reserve. “And then nature heals itself.”
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444names · 11 months
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lingua ignota glossary + theological demons and angels
Abehempueat Abenn Abiel Abrimalin Addon Adkiliz Adkirits Adolus Adower Adras Aevath Agalka Agallock Agory Ahriz Aiellabnos Alloca Alloch Alphant Amannin Amayon Amdum Ameelas Ameir Amerins Anciris Andareph Andre Andres Angeni Aninfalabis Anniz Anshereeliz Anzune Aphee Apher Aphieles Aphkir Apolocer Archiel Aritriel Arius Arusoil Asabraguan Asalili Asiel Asmor Assat Assya Asuaym Asyas Ather Athiel Ators Aziel Baddon Badres Badyalach Baharrel Bahiel Bahil Bakaboyequn Bales Ballock Ballus Balthinio Banuel Banzois Baphimo Baritiel Bartat Barus Bassadon Batepson Batriarah Batriel Behegiel Behout Behouta Behumalthya Beiel Berel Beriniol Bifessio Bimebus Bimies Bolus Boraje Boran Bothenis Bukavus Bunzur Caaphemoil Calemichas Caman Chael Chalian Champocel Chantish Chius Chomiel Cifriel Cipons Crizapower Cusim Daeles Daleos Dalephiela Dangeli Daniasmoth Daran Daviou Dechax Decher Demolus Deuel Deuer Deusheel Devac Devinka Devirgent Devith Dower Drota Duaniz Dumalasiel Dumaler Dzoavy Dzoin Elucifrit Erubub Falic Falilit Farrel Fathasber Femin Fereel Ferin Filias Filistosit Flarta Flavus Forch Forge Foron Forphinove Forziuio Furielu Furmartyr Gaalphegus Gabrisch Gademetes Gadres Gadya Gales Galilister Galpher Gambrimepat Gamta Ganziel Garbat Ghoel Ghomiel Ghonsch Ghorcasal Goderiel Gonfant Goragrel Gramdua Grekas Gualiath Guendremy Guens Hadeueriel Hanamejehus Harchemebas Harel Harinschael Haronzias Hasalas Hasan Hassya Haumah Hazepfath Hazunz Hazurar Hedignus Hemhar Hielits Hillomarbas Hinka Humathiel Ifrocelial Inamsiel Iniel Ipaiel Ipenniz Ipeusois Ipolus Iposiel Iueris Jeginins Jeguel Jehemarub Jehon Jehus Jequnemoti Jequnz Jeriel Jerit Jikiliono Jinae Jintarial Jophion Jugizaigon Kalvathies Keres Kirgaas Kobae Kobar Kokabor Korus Krandros Krazuuel Krophas Kulch Kulchushym Kulschilzel Kulzpes Legarta Leyalik Liabezbehos Liatepmo Ligor Likies Limanz Litir Liuraphiel Lucim Lusoy Mainthini Malecar Maliginctu Maliueriel Maliur Malphulocas Mamantic Mamasartuel Mamassyak Mamel Manctu Marchon Marman Martus Massitieles Matepat Matris Mayothusher Melitron Mepah Miuerapher Molaac Molechim Morchomamta Morit Mothius Motir Mualthinemo Muandanggin Muremod Mures Murgent Murgin Muritricub Murivigo Murmuer Naagon Nabatta Naboyou Naelzsciri Nakkul Namaimel Namdus Nampharrel Nampus Nangel Nemoth Nethym Nitias Nuraham Ornex Orymosio Orzinove Orziusa Painiel Parchiel Parmur Patepaim Pather Pathet Pathim Pazaph Pazuzur Pelephemiel Peshmaimon Peuear Peuel Phamaii Phasakabi Phemor Phemy Pheth Pirampon Piriel Polemiel Poshantu Posiaruflas Postemigin Powenniel Poyou Prichini Priel Prigiel Printhiel Prons Pront Prontuerunz Prubukas Prune Prutat Pulchushmal Pulocenniz Pulschost Pulzpenz Puriz Qaphish Rabael Ragoron Ragos Ramdumah Ranin Rapha Rasual Ratar Ravas Ravidus Razang Sabhax Sacheruta Sadrekavas Sadrel Sagalphim Sagel Sainur Salephimiel Saler Salilzphim Salimali Salka Sanctu Sange Sangrameje Sathaasur Savir Savirgin Savrithu Scher Sciman Sediel Serbel Serius Shaurtir Siariel Sitheminex Soniel Sonion Spiri Stanth Stere Stles Stolocennio Stolus Suantichan Surchon Temorai Terus Thenn Thros Torson Tzachilil Tzadeus Tzapulch Ukalphon Ukobalphas Uriegingdag Uzuuel Vacheel Vachoma Valas Valocers Vandim Vaphas Vaphegiz Vaphiel Vatathiman Vepater Vepfalath Vialbennins Vialis Vidumbricus Vigon Vigorzim Viliuer Viriz Vithies Vroserus Wenzour Werbarubi Widolap Womolaap Yequn Yequnka Yonzophon Zachant Zachomiel Zacron Zaddomethet Zadres Zaniellu Zapos Zapoyequn Zazapha Zazrajjalik Zeblin Zebuel Zebukariel Zepazim Zepfantu Zethili Zopherun Zunzoph Zurgos Ördaiel Ördavachael
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birutebi · 1 year
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miške minios gerbėjų #kiekvienasgalibūtižvaigžde @ginta.liberyte @gailgarnys #uodai #gamta #komiksas
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ugnethings · 5 months
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5 vyrų tipai, sugriausiantys Jums gyvenimą.
1. Silpnesnis vyras už jus pačią. Visaip - fiziškai, emociškai, psichologiškai, intelektualiai. Ir pamirškite tą visų žongliruojamą taisyklę 50/50. Nėra jokių absoliučių lygybių, gamta ne be reikalo mus išskyrė į skirtingas stovyklas su skirtngais genotipais, hormonais ir galimybėmis. Moteris TEIKIA gyvybę - vyrai, ją SAUGO. Tam reikia atitinkamų savybių ir galimybių. Moteriai kitą kartą reikia daugiau kantrybės, ištvermės, dvasinės stiprybės - vyrui labai svarbu psichologinė ir intelektualinė branda - fiziškumo šiais laikais negana. Silpnas vyras - prastas saugumas. Nebent moteris kupina vyriškos energijos ir jai patinka "sūnaus" tipažo meilė savo išrinktajam.
2. Vyras nesugebantis priimti sprendimų ir jų vykdyti. Amžinos savęs ir laimės paieškos - paaugliams. Jei toje stadijoje keturiasdešimtmetis vyras - vėlgi - šeimai tai ne į naudą. Vyras turi turėti viziją, misiją, strategiją, taktiką ir gebėjimą visa tai įvykdyti. Turėjimas gyvenime aiškią ir patikimą navigaciją vyrui prideda daug patikimumo taškų ir padeda moteriai apsispręsti, ar jiems pakeliui.
3. Vyras, nesugebantis užtikrinti saugumo. Šalia vyro turi būti saugu - į tai įeina visi galimi saugumo parametrai, nuo fiziško iki emocinio. Dažnai moterys mėgsta teiginius - "Man reikia to, kuris daro, o nešneka". Savo ruožtu galiu pasakyti - man vyras, kuris "daro" - dar joks ne autoritetas. Šnekėtojų ir net darytojų - pilnos pakampės. Esmė ne ką jis daro, o ką jis PADARO. Vyro veiksmai turi nešti REZULTATĄ. Jei rezultato nėra - visos pastangos ir kalbelės - neįdomios. Dar kartelį - vyriškumas - tai saugumo rezultatas, jo įgyvendinimas ir palaikymas.
4. Poligaminis vyras. Jų rūšių daug. Vieni gali biologiškai žygiuoti iš rankų į rankas, kiti amžinai gydosi traumas, treti - adrenalino mėgėjai. Yra į poligamiją linkusių vyrų genetiškai, ir jų vertybės, jausmai, branda - nenusveria jų noro nusunkti pautus kartą į savaitę kur nors kitur. Ką reikia tokiu atveju žinoti moteriai - jūsų vyras - SILPNAS. Silpnas, nes tarnauja tik savo genetikai, vertybių ir gilesnių jausmų jis taip ir nesugebėjo išvystyti. Silpnas, nes nesprendžia iššūkių namuose. Užuot ėmęsis spręsti problemas namie - jis persijungia į daug lengvesnę užduotį - pabūti "VYRU" pas meilužę lovoje, kad ir trumpai, bet VYRU!! O namie būti vyru jis neišgali, dėl minėtų psichologinių bei materialinių resursų stokos. Namie reikia pinigų, remontų, auklėjimo, rūpesčių sprendimų, reikia tobulinti buitį, santykius, vaikų gyvenimus, o tai sunku. O pas meilužę - Jis "tobulas".
5. Vyrai, kurių genotipas yra savidestrukcinio pobūdžio. Į tai įeina visos priklausomybės, smurtas prieš save bei kitus ir kt. Savidestrukcija - tai ne vien alkoholis ar dūmai - tai apskritai chaotiškas ir nevisavertis gyvenimas, kuomet vyras, neišgalintis gyventi, egzistuoti realybėje - pradeda nuo jos bėgti - be svaigalų ir dūmų tai gali būti dievai žino kas - sėdėjimas paromis prie kompiuterio, kai neišgalint funkcionuoti realybėje, ji pasirenkama virtuali, tai gali būti tūnojimas dienomis garaže, bare, ištisas savaites kokioje nors baloje su meškere - kad ir sporto salėje - jei hantelis ir veidrodis tapo jo namais - tai irgi tam tikra prasme bėgimas nuo kitų svarbių gyvenimo sričių, kuriose vyro dalyvavimas - būtinas.
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camposriscosaltos · 8 months
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Camping Gamta es un proyecto en el que intenta que el ser humano conecte con la naturaleza, brinda la oportunidad de conocerse así mismo a la vez de conocer a los demás. 
El objetivo de este proyecto es atraer a familiares, parejas o incluso a individuos que quieran sentirse arropados por la naturaleza, dejando en sus casas el ruido del tráfico y el estrés que supone hoy en día vivir en nuestra sociedad.
El camping, constaría de dos partes, una zona llamada Kabiné y otra llamada cilindras.
Kabiné consiste en un espacio común para los residentes, también definido como “coliving” con una estructura con forma de cabaña y sus paredes acristaladas para dar énfasis a la relación entre la estructura y el entorno y su naturaleza. 
Consta de dos plantas, en la primera nos encontraríamos con las cocinas, comedor y aseos, y en la segunda planta se ubicaría una enorme sala de estar, cuarto de lavandería y un pequeño salón de actos en los que se podría realizar tanto charlas como ultras actividades que se pudiesen plantear.
Por otra parte, cilindras serían las habitaciones que están equipadas solamente de una habitación o dos habitaciones, un pequeño vestidor y un baño con ducha.
Se caracteriza por su estructura cilíndrica y sus grandes vidrios por los que se podrían contemplar las estrellas por la noche
Gamta garantiza la concienciación sobre la naturaleza y el medio ambiente, además de darnos la ocasión de conocer a los demás integrantes de dicha experiencia gracias a las zonas comunes.
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bukimevieningi · 29 days
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Miško lankytojai, kurie miške pamatysite tokius prietaisus ant medžių, labai prašomi jų neliesti
Pastaruosius keletą metų šalies miškuose pastebimai padaugėjo džiūstančių eglynų. Medynai džiūsta dėl besikeičiančių klimatinių sąlygų. Eglynams augti Lietuvoje sąlygos tampa nepalankios dėl šiltėjančių orų, dažnėjančių sausringų, kaitrių periodų ir gausėjančios žievėgraužio tipografo populiacijos. Pavasarį, vasarą vyraujant šiltiems ar net karštiems, sausiems orams, eglių augimas sulėtėja ar…
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rimfot · 1 year
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Pūkuotas pavasaris
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apsupta · 9 months
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dažnai mes, kaip lietuviai, neįvertinam savo krašto grožio, pastoviai lyginam su “superinėmis” valstybėmis, kur alkoholis pigesnis, kur moderni pastatai pastatyti, kur medeliai iškirsti ir pastatyti verslai, kur žmonės vaikšto ir pasitaško, kur girdi roleksą tiksinti. Nuvažiavę į užsienį, aplankius sostinę, mes stebimės jos grožiu, tų namų modernumu, o už kampo prasigėrusių ubagų šaikelė, mes stebimės prekybcentrių dydžiu, o už kampo vienišas, nuvytęs krūmas, mes stebimės, kokiais drabužiais čia vaikšto žmonės - gucci, prada, tiksantys roleksai ant rankos, o už kampo skurdi, vos išgyvenanti šeima. Ir nesakau, kad pas mus Lietuvoje taip nėra, bet mes mėgėjai smerkti savus, o svetimais žavėtis. Bet aš to stengiuosi nebedaryti, o man pati Lietuva - mano kraštas, mano šalis - arčiausia širdies. Ir pati gyvenu miestely ir gal, gal kartais atrodo, kad mažas miestas, nėra kur eiti, viskas nuobodu, net atsibodę, įprasta, bet jame slypi tiek daug, vien ta paslaptinga gamtos didybė, ta žaluma. Taip, stebėdamas gamta gali daug ką išvysti. Pavyzdžiui, kiek vabaliukų skraido aplink tave, kiek drugeliukų praskrenda, o ir prisimeni, kaip vaikystėje juos gaudydavai.. Žiūri į pūšis, renki kaštonus, renki baravykus, skini medžių lapus ir prisimeni, kaip maža laipiojai medžiais ir statei namelį medy. Skaičiuoji gėlytes, skini jas, o ir prisimeni, kaip lakstydavai palaidomis kudlomis pievose, kaip jose šokinėdavai, vartydavais, kaip galų gale su šienu žaisdavai. Visgi, sava gamta leidžia mums viska pergyventi, prisiminti, nors ir testebėjom mieste augančias tulpes ir pastebėjom praskridusį drugelį. Gamta leidžia mums būti ir primena tą, kas buvo užmiršta. Ji kartu su mumis auga.
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tobuladovana · 10 months
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e-nuoroda · 10 months
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foodies-channel · 10 months
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🍥 NYC: Where to find and buy gamtae seaweed
🍔YouTube || 🍟Reddit
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advokatasbauza · 10 months
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Kai skurdas subtiliai išgraviruos anksti veide vienatvę ir raukšles, Ir kai rudens saulėlydis žėruos, lyg pranašystė pro nuogas šakas,
Tame peizaže visas būsiu aš: nuogų miškų tamsėjanti kančia lydės, kai ant kalvos užkas mane, taip subtiliai išgraviruos veide vienatvę, ilgesį, raukšles, ak, skurdas... kaip rudens gamta...
- Rimas Burokas -
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