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Tricina said: "Consumers feel duped with all the greenwashing that companies have thrown at them. Fuji Water says they are "green to the last drop", Clorox has "G..." [read]

العاب said: "It seems we will never bring these anti nature pesticides to an end as long as these companies are eager to make material gains at the extent of en..." [read]

bryan said: "I pick up a piece of litter then drop it on the ground again. Is this littering? Releasing CO2 that would be released anyway is even l..." [read]

James said: "2 things not addressed: 1. If we are more mobile, then when a city makes a bad decision, businesses will migrate out faster. Okay, competit..." [read]

e. laud said: "I cycled and camped in Scotland this year for a week in the highlands. All the water I drank came from small streams and the odd river. Some ..." [read]

National Wildlife Federation, Gardener's Guide To Climate Change

by John Laumer, Philadelphia on 05. 3.07
Travel & Nature

texas%20bluebonnets.jpg

Last February we got melancholy about Arbor Day on seeing how drastically plant hardiness zones were changing, of late, in response to climate change. A modern extension of that platitude that you "can't ever go back home," apparently, is that certain of those glorious flowers of childhood memory may soon exist only in the landscape of our dreams (pictured: Texas Bluebonnets). Fanciers of official US state flowers and trees will find their recollections digitally planted on the National Wildlife Federation's Gardener's Guide to Global Warming. Like windows eternally open to spring, the internet can stitch our emotions to the present. Click twice, plant once.

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