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PoemsSeeking Reverence
When anxious about the state of the world, poetry can provide solace.
— Issue #9 -
EssaysCycle Awareness
How can menstrual cycle awareness provide a blueprint for imagining a world beyond the ecological crisis?
— Issue #9 -
EssaysThe Power of the Space In-Between
To break free of boxes or borders and venture into unfamiliar territory can feel deepening and exhilarating, but equally it can be terrifying and disorientating.
— Issue #9 -
EssaysWithout Vultures
Vultures around the world are facing a crisis, and that crisis impacts us all.
— Issue #9 -
FeaturesAncient Knowledge, Future Farming
The book, Country: Future Fire, Future Farming is a unified clarion call from two very different minds: Bill Gammage and Bruce Pascoe.
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FeaturesConservation Politics
An international group of scuba divers and conservationists established a 43-hectare marine sanctuary at Danjugan Island in the Philippine archipelago.
— Issue #9 -
FeaturesSlow Fruit
Over the centuries we have lost an estimated 13,000 varieties of apple, along with countless family orchards.
— Issue #9 -
EssaysRooted Beings
An exhibition at London’s Wellcome Collection explores the relationship between human bodies, plants, and planetary health.
— Issue #9 -
FeaturesEdible Education
The benefits of nutritious free school meals can impact and elevate whole communities
— Issue #9 -
FeaturesBiodynamic by Nature
André Tranquilini is the estate manager at Waltham Place, a 220 acre organic and biodynamic farm and garden in Berkshire, UK. He is a founding member of the biodynamic seed company, Living Seeds.
— Issue #9 -
FeaturesOccupation Kitchen
How the kitchen of an occupied building in São Paulo, Brazil, became part of a social justice movement to provide food, shelter, cultural activities and job opportunities.
— Issue #9 -
InterviewsAttuned Landscapes: an Interview with Murray Livingston
Murray Livingston is a South African-born photographer, based in the UK, but currently living on the road in a bespoke van while exploring long-term photography projects throughout Europe.
— Issue #9 -
EssaysWhat Counts
Wildlife expert and naturalist Chris Packham wants to see everyone in the UK contribute to The Big Plastic Count.
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EssaysHoly Trees
The practice of nature worship prevalent in an Indigenous community in south India signifies the interconnected kinship of all life forms on Earth.
— Issue #10 -
EssaysWeather Warning
Antarctic atmospheric scientist John Law describes his work at Rothera Research Station.
— Issue #10 -
FeaturesNo Word for Nature
Forced off their land and bearing the brunt of climate change, Inuit people are fighting to maintain their cultural traditions.
— Issue #10 -
EssaysWords World Worlds
Sometimes words feel inadequate when trying to describe nature, but if we get creative we can expand our vocabulary to bring our world to life.
— Issue #10