For my innovation project for my Poynter Fellowship I turned in a TikTok account I made for Bay Nature Magazine. We started with 52 fellows and I’m one of 5 that gets to present my project at the final summit!
So check out the BayNature TikTok for lots of educational and pretty nature videos.
The Perils of Shooting Prime, #1 by Zed
Via Flickr:
A White-tailed Kite takes his mousy friend on an epic adventure. From Dotson Family Marsh in Richmond, California.
POV: You’re so photogenic, you’ve never had a bad profile pic
We think you’ll agree that the purple striped jelly is stunning. 😎 From its silvery white body with deep-purple bands, to its opulent oral arms and trailing tentacles — it’s both bold and beautiful.
7 months of carving coming to an end, I lost some details and added some. I love and need to see the prints, but honestly, the block is the final art piece for me. It’s what I spend all my time with and each one has a segment of my life attached with it.
When an Animal Dies in a National Park, what does the Park Service Do with it?
I'm always excited to see an animal in nature — even when it’s dead.
Not everyone feels that way, and you may wonder why the park staff doesn’t remove carcasses to make a prettier and safer experience for the viewers, like a city public works department cleaning public streets.
Well, there are reasons for that. What a park decides to do with a carcass depends largely on the circumstance, science, safety, and pragmatism.