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This sign in a store window in Dublin gave me a good laugh! At 18, we're all geniuses. By 30, we realize we're idiots! Photo LD Lewis July is a Jamboree of Events! Happy July. Like every month, I pick...
June's Gems Welcome to June. School is out, fun is in, and business tends to slow down for the next three months. Another June theme is children and keeping them engaged, learning and growi...
Prom, graduation, mothers, boating and barbeques are several themes in May. Along with October, May tends to be one of the most densely packed event months of the year. It's before the summer humidity and t...
National Pollinator Month began as a weekly event in the United States and Canada and has been expanded to a full month as of 2020.
If you grew up before the 1990s you probably remember seeing a lot of bees and butterflies in the summer. They were everywhere, anywhere there were flowers. Take a walk around your neighborhood today and more likely than not, you won't see a single bee or butterfly. Where did they all go?
Insecticides and other chemicals have drastically culled the population of bees and other pollinators over the past two decades. This is devastating to food production and biodiversity. Bees, butterflies, birds and bats are essential to pollination. Without it, food won't grow. Pollination Week is your opportunity to learn about the effects of pesticides on nature's workers and a chance to make your home, school or workplace pollinator friendly.
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