Thursday, October 19, 2017

Sights in the City #Boston 1

Click on photo for larger view  ©Dave Peatfield

Great view of the Museum Of Science from the Boston Common


Friday, September 29, 2017

Help Salem High School Band fill the truck! #NewHampshire helping #PuertoRico time is of the essence!



Monday, September 25, 2017

Puerto Rico is destroyed. Please help. (video)

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "Adriana Gonzalez, Sierra Club Puerto Rico" <reply@emails.sierraclub.org>
Date: Sep 25, 2017 7:16 PM
Subject: Puerto Rico is destroyed. Please help.


Explore. Enjoy. Protect.

Puerto Rico has suffered catastrophic destruction
Help Puerto Rico
You can help by making a donation to support relief and recovery efforts happening now.

100% of donations will go to community-led recovery efforts.



It's impossible to overstate the horror of what's happening in my home of Puerto Rico right now. The worst storm to hit our island in 80 years has utterly destroyed us.
After taking out our entire power grid, submerging entire neighborhoods in contaminated water and killing nearly a dozen people, Hurricane Maria has now threatened the Guajataca Dam with collapse, meanwhile untold numbers of people are still trapped in their homes and may be running out of food, water and medicine.
Our situation is desperate. The distribution of gas and fresh water is far too slow -- and isn't reaching the most impacted areas quickly enough. The island's infrastructure is in shambles. And without power or communications, we can't even assess the environmental fallout. We need your help, and we need it now.
The Sierra Club is working with community-based partners in emergency relief efforts,including our Puerto Rico Chapter. These groups are working to create resilient communities that will transform our island -- building community microgrids so people have cleaner power that won't take 6 months to bring back online, ensuring building codes are met so coastal homes are safer from flooding, and so much more.
We're so grateful for your support of our storm relief efforts thus far -- thank you -- but if you can contribute again to help our neighbors here in Puerto Rico, your generosity will literally help save lives.
Please, make an emergency gift to the Sierra Club's Maria relief efforts now. Remember, 100% of funds donated will go directly to community-led recovery efforts in areas affected by the worst storm to hit Puerto Rico in 80 years.
The mood across the island ranges from tense to near-hysteria. Curfews are in place to deter looters searching for food. Hospitals are at capacity -- and running low on generator fuel -- and 15,000 people remain in shelters. And communicating with aid workers is extremely difficult, as only one cell phone company has even limited service.
Puerto Rico was in environmental crisis before Maria hit. Wastewater stations are at the mercy of the island's decrepit electricity system. The 23 Superfund sites here include a U.S. military bomb-testing site on the island of Vieques -- which contaminated 75% of the small island and, some believe, has heightened cancer rates among its 9,000 inhabitants.
Most estimates give us at least 6 months without power, meaning the ecological crisis will soon become a public health one. And, as always, my low-income neighbors will bear the worst of the contamination, illness and environmental injustice. You can help: your $5 donation today will help us keep our promise that no person or community will be left behind.
Please, contribute what you can to support on-the-ground relief and recovery efforts in Puerto Rico. 100% of your contribution will support locally-led efforts to help communities devastated by Maria.
I won't lie -- the situation here is as frightening as I could imagine. The empathy and generosity of Sierra Club members like you keeps me going; we have a long, difficult road ahead, but knowing you're with us gives us all hope.
We'll keep you updated as the situation here develops. In the meantime, thank you for your support.
Sincerely,
Adriana Gonzalez, Environmental Justice Organizing Representative, Sierra Club Puerto Rico Chapter


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Saturday, September 23, 2017

Natural Disasters and Impacts on People, Wildlife, and Habitats.

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The National Wildlife Federation
Plus climate action, a trail-blazing monarch and education programs that help the natural world.
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Save the Wild Things, Save Ourselves
Wildlife champions from hundreds of communities across the country came together to tell their stories and share pictures of wildlife and wild places that matter most to them.

Read the messages, see the inspiring photos, and urge our leaders in Washington, D.C. to take action on climate.

Hurricane Irma: Impacts on Florida Wildlife & Habitat
Hurricane Irma: Impacts on Florida Wildlife & Habitat
Hurricane Irma was the strongest Atlantic hurricane on record and maintained winds of 185 mph for longer than any tropical cyclone in the world.

As we begin to recover from this extreme storm, the fate of many of the state's unique wildlife species and native habitats remain unknown.

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Texas Birds and Bays — Hurricane Harvey's Ecosystem Impacts
Texas Birds and Bays — Hurricane Harvey's Ecosystem Impacts
As the nation's eyes focus on the state of Texas, it is worth taking time to consider the region's significant ecological importance and the potential impacts from the storm on the natural world.

Here is a look at some of the species — and the places they depend on — that could see impacts from Hurricane Harvey.

Top 10 Reasons to Join Eco-Schools USA
Top 10 Reasons to Join Eco-Schools USA
Why have almost 5,000 schools joined this global education program that empowers students to be change makers for wildlife and the environment?

Read about the free Eco-Schools USA program.

A Tale of a Trail-blazing Monarch
A Tale of a Trail-blazing Monarch
What started with a dedicated teacher and students planting milkweed in the schoolyard, ended up with the longest recorded migration of an Oregon tagged monarch butterfly!

Learn about monarch butterfly education and surprising outcomes.

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