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PublishedSeptember 8, 2021
Dana Wilde: The frosts of September
At our house we no longer expect patches of frost until October, writes Dana Wilde.
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PublishedAugust 25, 2021
Dana Wilde: What the heck is this?
There are more weird-looking creatures on the green Earth than is dreamt of in our philosophy, writes Dana Wilde.
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PublishedAugust 11, 2021
Dana Wilde: No humans were harmed in the making of this news column
Even though they look monstrous, spiders are actually your allies in the battle against the little bugs who do try to eat you, writes Dana Wilde.
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PublishedJuly 28, 2021
Dana Wilde: The visible 6,000 stars
You could spend a lifetime sorting out information on one star at a time and probably not make your way through them all, writes Dana Wilde.
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PublishedJuly 21, 2021
Dana Wilde: Tall meadow rue, or the ambiguities
Nature has an array of exceptions to every named category, writes Dana Wilde, whether plants or processes or people.
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PublishedJuly 7, 2021
Dana Wilde: 70 degrees before 8 in the morning
Global warming is directly attributable to the fumes and exhaust that we pump into the Earth's atmosphere, and the heat that is trapped in the process is disrupting the climate, writes Dana Wilde.
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PublishedJune 23, 2021
Dana Wilde: What kind of grass is that?
Ignorance about grasses is startling, writes Dana Wilde, given the fact that we live on them.
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PublishedJune 9, 2021
Dana Wilde: Red-winged blackbirds and the phenomena of beauty
The experience of beauty is not hypothetical and can be observed in nature, Dana Wilde writes.
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PublishedMay 26, 2021
Dana Wilde: Thoreau and the bluets
If I don’t make it hard for the mosquitoes, writes Dana Wilde, they will innocently do their best to kill me.
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PublishedMay 12, 2021
Dana Wilde: Parables for a changing climate
Temperatures in the last 10 years are markedly higher than any time in recorded history, writes Dana Wilde.
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