Nature
Trapped in the Arctic | One Man’s Fight Against Nature
The Arctic is a place of paradox. To the eye, it appears breathtakingly beautiful endless sheets of white snow, the northern lights dancing across the night sky, and the silence of a world untouched by mankind. Yet beneath that beauty lies danger: freezing winds, shifting ice, and the constant threat of death. For anyone stranded here, survival is not a guarantee, but a battle.
By Farooq Hashmi5 months ago in Earth
Composting with Red Wiggler Worms: A Way To Live More Sustainably. AI-Generated.
Unveiling the Wonders of Red Wiggler Worms: Nature's Ultimate Composting Heroes! When it comes to eco-friendly solutions for waste management, few creatures compare to the remarkable red wiggler worm. Charles Darwin referred to them as the "unheralded soldiers of mankind."
By Hungry Worms5 months ago in Earth
Dedication to the trees
The tree is one of the most powerful, complex and popular symbols in human history and culture , and it came to represent a variety of things. Strength, wisdom, balance, protection, growth. Tree of Life, World tree, Cosmic tree, Tree of knowledge of good and evil. There is a lot to unpack here, as this is indeed a multifaceted and complex archetype, but in this article I will focus on the aspects I personally find the most interesting, as well as the most applicable in my own life.
By Eva Smitte5 months ago in Earth
The Last Forest on Earth
The Last Forest on Earth When survival depends on the final breath of nature The year was 2145. Humanity had conquered the stars, built towers of steel scraping the clouds, and designed machines that could outthink their creators. But in their triumph, they had forgotten the oldest truth: without forests, there is no life.
By Farooq Hashmi5 months ago in Earth
Tim Kizirian on Hiking Mount Tamalpais in August’s Famous Fog
By Daniel Carter — Northern California Outdoors & Lifestyle Writer On an August morning in Marin, the air carries that peculiar blend of eucalyptus, sea salt, and chill that instantly signals summer along the coast. For most people, summer means heat and sunshine. But for hikers on Mount Tamalpais, the season belongs to a different character altogether: Karl the Fog.
By Bay Area Back Roads5 months ago in Earth
“The Day the Skies Broke: Cloudburst Disaster in Swat & Buner – August 15, 2025”
“The Day the Skies Broke: Cloudburst Disaster in Swat & Buner – August 15, 2025” How a sudden storm changed hundreds of lives in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa — a firsthand account of survival, loss, and resilience.
By Wings of Time 5 months ago in Earth
The Power of Peace: Gandhi’s Nonviolent Movement and Its Global Legacy
Introduction: A Different Kind of Freedom Fight Most revolutions in history were won with guns, wars, and violence. But Mahatma Gandhi showed the world another way. Instead of fighting with weapons, he used peace, truth, and courage. His idea of nonviolence (known as ahimsa) gave India freedom from British rule and inspired people around the world to fight for justice without bloodshed.
By Md Abul Kasem5 months ago in Earth
🌪️ China’s Strongest Monster: Typhoon Kajiki of 2025 Shakes Buildings and Lives
It was challenging to picture the degree of the damage Typhoon Kajiki would cause when the public first heard it was heading for the Chinese coast in 2025. Meteorologists and worried neighbors called it a large typhoon. Kajiki rocked the foundations of skyscrapers, put important infrastructure under examination, and most importantly, exposed human frailty in addition to strong winds and torrential rain. Life can be against the great might of nature.
By Shahjahan Kabir Khan5 months ago in Earth






