Nature
The Power of Moldavite.
For quite a long time I have been wondering what my purpose is , I have been through so much and wonder why, why things just happen .
Fairy gay godmother🧚🏽‍♀️Published 3 years ago in EarthCatalpa Tree
I love the Catalpa Tree. It has such big beautiful blossoms. There are a couple of trees along a road we travel often. One is just before you get into our little town and the other is just before you get into Wysox, another little town about twelve miles away.
Let's Clear the Negative Air
Have you ever felt like the air around you or you yourself are holding a negative energy that you can't seem to shake away? Sage is an herb used during a Native American ritual called smudging, to purify the air of negative energy and allow one to get rid of the negative energy held within one's self. A window is opened to allow the negative energy to leave. The sage is then lit with a wooden match and left to burn. As it burns, one washes the smoke over the body, using one's hands, so as to walk in a positive light. Once the sage has burned to ash, the ashes of the sage are then put outdoors to get rid of the negative energy (CBC News, 2019; Harmon, 2016).
Herbs to a TPublished 3 years ago in EarthThe Hobby of Life
How to explain plant magic and its effect on me? How to explain the beauty I see in all of the greenery? The expanse of the wild fern, the litter of tree limbs after a great storm. I often look to the Earth for my inspiration for what is inside. I often find that the plants speak more truth than I see from people in church pews. Their whispers of patience, of growth, of human connection to the planet. I look to them for the answers I cannot reach in myself. I ask how the rose is so beautifully formed in order to become a symbol of love. I work in the dirt, I work in the sun. I live for the plants, I live for the earthworms doing their due diligence. They provide for us, despite being fodder for the fish in the water. In this I embrace what the Earth gives, is also what it takes away. I am shown that in order for a bloom to thrive, sometimes it must be cut back to the root. Sometimes it must start all over again in order to provide the beauty we barely notice on our way to work.
Faith De YoungPublished 3 years ago in Earth5 Gardening Tips It's Not Too Late To Implement
This post is for everyone that looked outside their window last week, stared down their empty outdoor space and thought, "Do I have enough time to start my garden this year?"
Farmer NickPublished 3 years ago in EarthNature Diary
Northern Oriole Northern Orioles (also known as Baltimore Orioles) had been sighted in parks around the city for a week or so and I had seen several. They are easily recognized orange-coloured black birds that whistle pure notes from the treetops. I had been trying for days to get a clear photo of one but, shooting at a distance from the ground up to their high perches, all of the photos taken had turned out blurry.
Andrew TurnbullPublished 3 years ago in EarthPatio Time
I much prefer to sit on my kitchen patio but my handsome husband Mike invited me to come and sit on the front patio, his patio, with him. We were sitting there enjoying the mild evening and this helicopter came flying in and landed on one of our hillbilly patio tables, aka a tree stump,
5 Reasons You Should Spend More Time in the Forest
On a sunny Saturday, where else do you go but the forest? That’s the consensus around here. If you’re going to live in British Columbia, you’re obliged to like the outdoors. There’s not much else here. Vancouver has its charms, but they only go so far. It’s what’s outside the city that makes it so appealing.
Ryan FrawleyPublished 3 years ago in EarthOn foraging an craft
The scissors in my bookbag are the most versatile tool that bridges worlds: They bridge the world of nature and the world of art. As a forager, a natural dyer, and a textile artist, I use them at every step of the way.
Josephine ClarkePublished 3 years ago in EarthSnapping Turtles
I came across this little snapping turtle bathing in a tire-track mud puddle in the rain. Wherever it had been walking to, the baby turtle had found a wet, comfortable place to rest.
Andrew TurnbullPublished 3 years ago in EarthGreen Connection
Connection or connectedness comes in many different forms. It's the common theme or desire among all religions and cultures. It is part of what makes us human, I believe. Happy, healthy individuals typically desire to belong and partake in an activity that resonates with them and fulfills the need for connection.
My Little Happy Place
Can you feel it, calm, peace, serenity? Pulsing rhythm, blood and water, connected, steady beats. At one, calm as the sky meets the water, entwining, mirrored, reflected. Wind caressing your skin, flowing through your hair. Cool, soft, gentle caress upon your cheek, tingling the hairs on the back of your neck and into your inner being. Listening within, to that inner knowing, inner wisdom, inner peace, inner triumph, inner depths of longing, dread, defeat. Can you hear it, that whispering sound calling to you from within?
Crystal R. HartmanPublished 3 years ago in Earth