The Natural Gait is your gateway to natural well-being. Improve your life by improving your relationships. Our purpose is to help you explore and determine your own "natural gait." Our experiences have taught us to trust our intuition - the wisdom of the heart. We invite you to join us as we continue on our rewarding journey of self-discovery, finding the "natural gaits." Howard & Donna
Showing posts with label Canada. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Canada. Show all posts
Thursday, February 14, 2013
News Release: Great Backyard Bird Count Goes Global Feb. 15-18
Bird watchers worldwide invited to participate online
February 5, 2013—For the first time, anyone anywhere in the world with Internet access can participate in the 16th annual Great Backyard Bird Count (GBBC) February 15-18. Participants simply watch birds at any location for at least 15 minutes, tally the numbers of each species they see, and report their tallies online at www.BirdCount.org. The GBBC is a joint project of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology and Audubon, with Canadian partner Bird Studies Canada.
This year, anyone visiting the GBBC website will be able to see bird observations pouring in from around the world and contribute their own tallies. Global participation will be made possible thanks to eBird, a real-time online checklist program that the Cornell Lab and Audubon are integrating into the GBBC for the first time this year. The GBBC is open to anyone of any skill level and welcomes bird observations from any location, including backyards, national parks, gardens, wetlands, and urban landscapes. The four-day count typically receives sightings from tens of thousands of people reporting more than 600 bird species in the United States and Canada alone.
"We're eager to see how many of the world's 10,240 bird species will be reported during the count this year," said Cornell Lab director John Fitzpatrick. "We're looking forward to this historic snapshot of birds that that will be reported from around the world. We need as many people as possible to help build the wealth of data that scientists need to track the health of bird populations through time."
Participants will be able to view what others are seeing on interactive maps and contribute their tallies for ongoing bird research and conservation efforts. For the first time, participants will also be able to upload their counts from the field using the eBird BirdLog app for Apple or Android smartphones. To celebrate the new global reach of the count, developers of the eBird BirdLog app are offering regional versions of the app for just 99 cents through February 18. Learn more
Just how big is this year's irruption of northern finches and other species such as the Red-breasted Nuthatch? GBBC reports will help define the answer. Photo by Christine Haines, 2012 GBBC. "This count is so much fun because anyone can take part, whether you are an expert, novice, or feeder watcher," said Gary Langham, Audubon’s Chief Scientist. "Invite new birders to join and share the experience. Once you get involved, you can continue with eBird year round."
"The popularity of the Great Backyard Bird Count grows each year," said Dick Cannings, Senior Projects Officer at Bird Studies Canada, "and with the new features, participation will be even more exciting."
Participating is easy. To learn more about how to join the count, get bird ID tips, plus downloadable instructions, web buttons, and flyers, visit www.BirdCount.org. The count also includes a photo contest and a prize drawing for participants who enter at least one bird checklist online. Portions of the GBBC site are also now available in Spanish at www.ContandoAves.org.
The Great Backyard Bird Count is made possible in part by sponsor Wild Birds Unlimited.
You Can watch the birds at The Natural Gait from where ever you might be setting or standing! The birds know they are welcome and safe at The Natural Gait. You can find Bald Eagles soaring above and Mourning Doves walking under the feeders! Many species of birds call The Natural Gait Home. Visit Our Website at www.thenaturalgait.com.
Monday, June 18, 2012
Tallgrass Prairie Ecosystem | North American Prairies |
North American Prairies
TNG Happenings
The Natural Gait
TNG Horse Happenings
Credit: Linda & Dr. Dick BuscherTallgrass prairies once covered over 170 million acres (69 million hectares) of North America. They were a sea of waving grasses that stretched from the western edge of Indiana into eastern Kansas and from Saskatchewan, Canada, into the northern regions of Texas.
http://www.ouramazingplanet.com/3022-tallgrass-prairie-ecosystem.htmlHoward Bright "Earthyman" Commented On This Article
Picture the corn and soybean fields stretching for miles across the horizon. Now replace this scene with a sea of wildflowers and grasses. As the wind blows and you look straight out onto the edge of the horizon, witness an ocean of undulating textures and colors making huge waves blowing across the vast landscape. Goose bumps form on my arms as I am once again with the great spirit that made this land and I am witness to a virtual native landscape vision. Perhaps my Native American blood can sense this feeling as maybe I used to roam these lands hunting buffalo and using many of the plants for food and medicine.
TNG Happenings
The Natural Gait
TNG Horse Happenings
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