Hike, Forage, Read: Nature Ideas for Thanksgiving Week
Wild turkeys ( Meleagris gallopavo) in Ben Lomond, Calif., perform as role models for us all by going for a walk (and doing a passable Abbey Road cover impression while they are at it). runnerman19 via iNaturalist, CC-BY-NC Hardly anybody reads much news this week, according to our website analytics. Therefore, we shall save it for next week. Instead, here are some ways to commune with nature this Thanksgiving week, whether outside or from a comfy chair. I. Go Outside It beats shopping. First: a roundup of stories in a roundup of stories? Yes. From 2021. Still good, ignore the pandemic references. The dinosaurs roam and flit among us. II. Eat (Very) Local We are not going to tell you to be grateful, but there is food all around us, if you are willing to learn how to find and process it. Two from Sara Calvosa Olson, a Karuk food writer who lives in the Bay Area: Bay nuts taste like hazelnuts with attitude and are not that hard to find. III. And Some Seasonally Appropriate Light Reading Various fowl stories from the archives. Every story from Bay Nature magazine is the product of a team dedicated to connecting our readers to the world around them and increasing environmental literacy. Please help us keep this unique regional magazine thriving, and support the ecosystem we’ve built around it, by subscribing today—you’ll get Bay Nature four times a year in your mailbox! Read This Next June 10, 2024 Baynature.org February 13, 2024 Magazine October 10, 2023 Magazine
Some ways to commune with nature this Thanksgiving week, whether outside or from a comfy chair. The post Hike, Forage, Read: Nature Ideas for Thanksgiving Week appeared first on Bay Nature.
Hardly anybody reads much news this week, according to our website analytics. Therefore, we shall save it for next week. Instead, here are some ways to commune with nature this Thanksgiving week, whether outside or from a comfy chair.
I. Go Outside
It beats shopping.
First: a roundup of stories in a roundup of stories? Yes. From 2021. Still good, ignore the pandemic references.
The dinosaurs roam and flit among us.
II. Eat (Very) Local
We are not going to tell you to be grateful, but there is food all around us, if you are willing to learn how to find and process it.
Two from Sara Calvosa Olson, a Karuk food writer who lives in the Bay Area:
Bay nuts taste like hazelnuts with attitude and are not that hard to find.
III. And Some Seasonally Appropriate Light Reading
Various fowl stories from the archives.
Every story from Bay Nature magazine is the product of a team dedicated to connecting our readers to the world around them and increasing environmental literacy. Please help us keep this unique regional magazine thriving, and support the ecosystem we’ve built around it, by subscribing today—you’ll get Bay Nature four times a year in your mailbox!
Read This Next
June 10, 2024
Baynature.org
February 13, 2024
Magazine
October 10, 2023
Magazine