May 16-20, 2016
In the hierarchy of correspondence forms, nothing beats a physical letter, writes Christie, particularly for their superior ability to be stumbled upon.
Cassie threw up her hands in despair about climate change – and her intractable fatalism about it – and LWON’s trusty commenters took the ball and ran with it.
Wherever rivers get sucked underground, the sinkholes act as a kind of time capsule, capturing things like mastodon tusks and harpoons, then preserving them.
Guest Ivan Amato is a like birder, but his prize sighting is the moire effect – the phenomenon that emerges from overlaying two patterns and moving your point of view.
And finally, the diary of a bird poop magnet, by Helen Fields.
Photo courtesy of Joanne Mattera Art Blog