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A Sand County Almanac
A Sand County Almanac: With Other Essays on Conservation from Round River | Aldo Leopold
Approaches the prevalent issues in ecology from an aesthetic viewpoint, stressing the beauty and balance of nature.
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AmandaBorchers
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“I was young then, and full of trigger-itch; I thought that because fewer wolves meant more deer, that no wolves meant a hunters‘ paradise. But after seeing the green fire die, I sensed that neither the wolf nor the mountain agreed with such a view.”

Tamra This is a wonderful read! 3y
AmandaBorchers @Tamra it‘s so good! I am reading it for a class and didn‘t expect to agree with so much of his philosophy! 3y
8 likes2 comments
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KathyWheeler
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I‘ve read several books more than twice: A Christmas Carol, Stephen King‘s Dark Tower series, Gift from the Sea

Cover art is often what initially attracts me to a book. I bought The City of Brass because the cover of book 2 , The Kingdom of Copper, is so beautiful.

#THOUGHTFULTHURSDAY

MoonWitch94 Thanks for playing ☺️📚🌿 3y
24 likes1 comment
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libbiesmith
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If you‘re looking for a book where you fall in love with nature, this is for you. Leopold introduced many to conservation and the idea of ecology, or a “land ethic”. The almanac was filled with beautiful stories with observations so descriptive, it‘s like you were in Wisconsin with him.

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Cosmos_Moon
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1. Oddly (being from Wisconsin) my mom named me after two hurricanes.
2. I am tankful for a quick storm, safe friends and family and cool weather during a power outage.

Forgoing the flowers today - thought it would be fun to share the position our trampoline is now in 😂🤷‍♀️ could be worse.

#ThankfulThursday
@KathyWheeler @RamsFan1963 @TheRiehlDeal @hannah-leeloo @Susanita @suvata

hannah-leeloo Thanks for the tag 3y
KathyWheeler The cool weather during a power outage was truly a blessing! My power came back yesterday, but the internet just came back this afternoon. 3y
Cosmos_Moon @KathyWheeler glad you‘re back online and don‘t have to hit up the library for internet! 3y
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KathyWheeler @Cosmos_Moon I had to go into the library to work for the first half of the day. Luckily, our library is really limiting the number of people who can be in the library, enforcing mask rules, and limiting where people can go. My office has a door and is way in the back. I didn‘t see anyone the entire time I was there. 3y
Cosmos_Moon @KathyWheeler wow, that‘s great! Which library do you work at? 3y
KathyWheeler @Cosmos_Moon The University of South Alabama‘s Marx Library. 3y
Cosmos_Moon @KathyWheeler oh nice! I didn‘t realize Zeta affected that far west, but I guess New Orleans is not that far from Mobile. 3y
KathyWheeler @Cosmos_Moon I used to have to take my daughter to Tulane Medical Center when she was a baby. My house is 2 hours and 15 minutes from Tulane. I‘m closer now than I was when I loved in Louisiana— there, I was 4 hours away in Pineville. 3y
27 likes8 comments
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Schwifty
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This was my second time reading through this book. The first was in 2003 while I was studying philosophy in undergrad. Although Leopold wrote these essays and sketches on ecology and early environmental ethics 80 years ago, they still remain poignant and retain their poetic exhortation to value the land in its entirety for itself and not measure nature in economic terms. This is also great reading while camping if you ever get the itch.

plemmdog I am so thankful my biology professor made us read it. Somewhere I have an old photo of me in front of the Aldo Leopold monument near Gila, NM. 4y
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Schwifty
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"Is education possibly a process of trading awareness for things of lesser worth?"

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KathyWheeler
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In the mood for some nature writing, so I‘m reading this. I‘ll probably go to sleep soon though.

Tamra Love this! 5y
23 likes1 comment
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Addison_Reads
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Decided to go through my shelves today and collect my TBR for #nonfictionnovember

Anyone else participating?

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lauraisntwilder
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All through reading this book, I kept sending messages to my nephew, a newly pinned Eagle Scout, telling him to read it.

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jessamyngrace
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jessamyngrace
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jessamyngrace
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jessamyngrace
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jessamyngrace

Man always kills the thing he loves, and so we the pioneers have killed our wilderness. Some say we had to. Be that as it may, I am glad I shall never be young without wild country to be young in. Of what avail are forty freedoms without a blank spot on the map?

Suet624 Good question. 6y
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jessamyngrace

We grieve only for what we know. The erasure of Silphium from western Dane County is no cause for grief if one knows it only as a name in a botany book.

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jessamyngrace

Mechanized man, oblivious of floras, is proud of his progress in cleaning up the landscape on which, willy-nilly, he must live out his days. It might be wise to prohibit at once all teaching of real botany and real history, lest some future citizen suffer qualms about the floristic price of his good life.

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jessamyngrace

Tell me of what plant-birthday a man takes notice, and I shall tell you a good deal about his vocation, his hobbies, his hay fever, and the general level of his ecological education.

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Krisjericho
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Aldo Leopoldo has some great commentary on nature and conservation in his books and essays. #trivial #quotsy #quotsydec17

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readinginthedark
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Back at work and feeling a bit better! Lunchtime reading pictured above.

LauraBrook Glad you're feeling better! 7y
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readinginthedark
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I feel worse today, but I have to go back to work this afternoon if at all possible for my last orientation meeting, so I'm trying to rest and rally. Maybe I'll finish the second half of this one today.

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readinginthedark
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I've missed a few months, and I'm just breezing through several essays in here right now. Leopold's pulling me out of my rut! Win for the nature writers!

Cinfhen Welcome back!!! 7y
Sace Howdy! 7y
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dastevensish
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"Our ability to perceive quality in nature begins, as in art, with the pretty. It expands through successive stages of the beautiful to values as yet uncaptured by language. The quality of the crane lies, I think, in this higher gamut, as yet beyond the reach of words."
This book deserves to be slowly savored, and thus that is what I've been doing.

EllieDottie I love this cover! I love loons, and their call! 7y
BethFishReads As you already know, I 💕💕💕this book 7y
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dastevensish
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"That land is a community is the basic concept of ecology, but that land is to be loved and respected is an extension of ethics. That land yields a cultural harvest is a fact long known, but latterly often forgotten." --from foreword, March 4, 1948

BethFishReads I first read this many years ago. Remains a favorite 7y
dastevensish @BethFishReads One of my husband's all-time favorites too. He even named our kitty Aldo many moon ago. Can't believe I'm only now first reading it. 7y
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readinginthedark
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I love coming back to this each month! ❤️

Grrlbrarian That bookmark! 😍 7y
readinginthedark @Grrlbrarian I have a ton of these bookmarks from when my mom did book groups at my schools! Some of this dinosaur and some of others. I've just been leaving them in library and donated books as surprises; do you want some? 7y
Grrlbrarian Oh, @readinginthedark I would LOVE some! Wearing my dino pjs right now. ☺️ Thanks! 7y
readinginthedark @Grrlbrarian 👍🏻You're welcome! Just email me your mailing address and put Litsy or Dino Bookmarks as the subject line: hew1988 (at) gmail 7y
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readinginthedark
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It's the beginning of a new month, and for me that means a new section of Leopold's almanac! I'm enjoying little dips into this book as the months change!

BethFishReads I love love love this book, which I discovered when I was only a teen 7y
LauraBrook What a great idea! I'll have to track down my book and copy you! 😊 7y
readinginthedark @BethFishReads I don't know how it took me so long to hear about it! 7y
readinginthedark @LauraBrook My aunt gave me the idea. It's really fun! 7y
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Halechr
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"Perhaps the most serious obstacle impending the evolution of a land ethic is the fact that our educational and economic system is headed away from, rather than toward, an intense consciousness of land"

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readinginthedark
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I've found that I can read while doing my stretches or jogging on the elliptical (for personal health reasons, not a doomed resolution)! Pretty fascinating to follow the travels of an atom through nature in this book while stretching, too--it brought up all of these thoughts on how those atoms work through my body as well! I'm loving this book. I need more nature writing in my life.

silentrequiem I love this book. I should really reread it. His daughter recently published a book, Stories from the Leopold Shack, I really want to read. 7y
readinginthedark @silentrequiem Oh, awesome! I'll have to read that one, too! 7y
jpmcwisemorgan I'd like to re-read this one too. 7y
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readinginthedark @jpmcwisemorgan I'm reading the almanac parts with each month and the sketches whenever. It's fun! 7y
Amandajoy Audiobooks are handy for that too. Then you don't get your book all sweaty. 🏃🏽‍♀️📚🎧 7y
readinginthedark @Amandajoy Oh, nice plan! When I get to the jumping jack days, I'll have to keep that in mind! 7y
monalyisha I really want to read Mary Oliver's "Upstream" (a collection of nature essays). I love her poetry, so I'm sure her essays will be perfect. ?? 7y
readinginthedark @monalyisha That one's on my TBR as well! There are several books about nature that sound fantastic to me but then I forget about them. Maybe I'll make that a challenge next year, if they keep getting pushed back. (edited) 7y
monalyisha @readinginthedark I know the feeling! I'm terrible at reading non-fic. It's such an effort to get myself to choose *anything* over a novel, you know? I'd love to know your top 5-10 nature books on your TBR! (I can share mine too!) 7y
readinginthedark @monalyisha Oh wow, sure, but let me get back to you on that! 7y
readinginthedark @monalyisha I have trouble sorting through my giant TBR list, but here are some of the top nature books on my TBR: Walk in the Woods; The Lost City of Z; The Snow Leopard; Seeds of Hope; and The Origin of Species. There are many more, and I've read a couple of good ones lately, so this is obviously limited. How about you? 7y
44 likes11 comments
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readinginthedark
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I guess it's good that I forgot to post for #dreamingofacolderclimate because this is also my choice for #booksaboutnature ! Although I'm not so much dreaming of a colder climate, I suppose--rather, a different perspective? This book was recommended to me by my aunt, and I've decided to read the almanac portion of the essays with each month (so this picture is from "January"). I'm finding this book really beautiful and fascinating! #readjanuary

syasutake I love this book! 7y
candyflossramparts This is lovely! I just added it to my stack. 😍 7y
readinginthedark @syasutake @candyflossramparts I've never read it before, but I'm really enjoying the immersion in nature. Really beautifully written. 7y
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