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May 15 2024
News
This natural wine festival in Guerneville is one of the hottest events of the summer
When Miracle Plum shuttered its doors in 2022, Emily Weber and Nina Kravetz were devastated. Weber, a former Miracle Plum employee, and Kravetz, the former marketing director at Martha Stoumen Wines in Sebastopol, had struck up a friendship at the natural wine (and food) shop in Santa Rosa, where they had connected over their love of low-intervention wines. Early on, the pair had dreamed of
The Press DemocratMay 30 2024
News
From Northern Lights to the Solar Eclipse - here’s DC’s 2024 weather, natural phenomena coverage
The Washington, D.C. region has experienced quite an eventful year for weather and natural phenomena - and there is surely more ahead as we get ready to enter the second half of the year. Here’s a look back at what we’ve seen so far in D.C., Maryland, and Virginia: A small earthquake rattled the DMV during the first few days of 2024! The 2.3 magnitude quake was centered in the Rockville area.
Fox 5 DCMay 15 2024
News
Nature and art merge for spring show in Corona del Mar
Ceramicist Agnes Noble joins husband Don with her functional clay art pieces during the Garden Art Faire Saturday at Sherman Gardens in Corona del Mar. Twenty-one artists contributed a variety of nature-themed art to show Saturday throughout the patios in Corona del Mar’s botanical showplace, Sherman Gardens. Among them, Huntington Beach artist Wendy Hamu turned finds from her frequent beach
Los Angeles TimesNov 02 2023
News
Lower natural gas winter rates set for some Arkansas residential customers
Winter rates for three of Arkansas' natural-gas utilities will be lower this year, according to Wednesday news releases from the utilities. The Arkansas Public Service Commission requires utilities to adjust their gas prices each Nov. 1 and April 1. The utilities are allowed to pass along their gas supply rate -- basically the cost of acquiring natural gas -- to customers, but they cannot make
Northwest Arkansas Democrat GazetteApr 16 2024
News
A ‘Nature School’ Meets in Brooklyn
Nature is all around us, even in New York City. Though it can be difficult to appreciate the magnolia and ginkgo trees when running to catch the subway, we are in fact surrounded. Field Meridians, an artist collective in Brooklyn, wants to help harried New Yorkers stop and smell the Callery pears. The group recently started a six-week program called Nature School that aims to help New Yorkers
New York Times (News)May 15 2024
News
Sustained bacterial N2O reduction at acidic pH - Nature Communications
Soil samples were collected in August 2018 at the El Verde research station in the El Yunque Natural Forest in Puerto Rico36. The measured soil pH was 4.45 and characteristic for the region. Vertical distance of the El Verde research station to mean sea level is 434 meters. Fresh soil materials from 9 to 18 cm depth were used to establish pH 4.5 laboratory microcosms that were amended with N O
Nature.comMay 26 2024
News
'The power of Mother Nature:' Neighbors clean up after tornado hits Milton
'The power of Mother Nature:' Neighbors clean up after tornado hits Milton MILTON, Wis. (CBS 58) -- Parker Loofboro was in his bedroom, talking to his girlfriend on Sunday afternoon, when he heard what he describes as “a big, loud noise.” “It started hailing like 30 minutes before and then the wind really picked up,” the Milton native told CBS 58’s Ellie Nakamoto-White. “It felt like 20, 30
CBS 58May 09 2024
News
Entrepreneur De’Vonna Pittman on Nature's Syrup's success
Through the entirety of De’Vonna Pittman’s life, starting at age 5 when her mother began using a chemical relaxer on her, she’d worn her hair straight. She came to the realization after publishing her memoir, “My Pretty and its Ugly Truth,” in 2013, that she was not presenting “an authentic voice” to the world. “I wasn’t portraying myself as how I was created,” said Pittman, who shortly
MinnPostMay 23 2024
News
Richmond plans to build $150,000 kids nature zone on Belle Isle
The city of Richmond is planning more ways for kids to hop, climb and run at Belle Isle. On Tuesday, the city’s planning commission approved a plan to install a “nature exploration area” built from repurposed tree trunks, boulders and driftwood. Installation will cost about $150,000, paid for by private donations. The concept, which would need approval from City Council, is Richmond latest
Richmond Times DispatchMay 19 2024
News
Return to Nature purgatory: At least 989 families remain without answers
In the days after her 33-year-old son, Zach, died in July, 2020, Heather DeWolf started taking a new route to and from work so she could slow-roll by the Colorado Springs funeral home that was handling his final arrangements. She knew the oldest of her three boys, an aspiring author and stand-up comic who favored fedoras and red sneakers, was gone. But the body she’d hugged — those blue eyes
Colorado Springs Gazette