Sentences with phrase «about deep forests»

Klara Kristalova embrace the somewhat Nordic cliché about deep forests and imaginative flora and fauna, but she injects it with a strong and unique narration.

Not exact matches

Rusty Blackbird (Euphagus carolinus) populations have decreased by about 95 % in the last fifty years, but the reasons are not well understood; it doesn't help that their preferred breeding habitat, stunted conifers deep in the wetlands of the boreal forest, makes finding and studying them difficult.
«About half of species win from the forest change; they like the edges and so avoid the deep forest, preferring instead to live near forest edges.
Or what about that wish that comes to mind at the seaside or in a deep evergreen forest — that if someone could bottle this fragrance, they'd make a killing?
«What we know about black leopards is that they are found in higher - density, deeper forests.
But worry not about the plot, which is as old as the jagged mountains and deep forests that bear witness to the cycles of power and as elusive as the mists that surround them.
She loved the Jean Hegland novel «Into the Forestabout two sisters living with their father in a modern home deep in the Northwest woods who go off the grid during a prolonged blackout.
Chn take a close look in this session as they delve deeper into the forests and find out about life in the Jungle using books and ICT.
If I recall correctly, it was the first in a series of stories that I wrote about finding strange things hidden deep in the forest that surrounded the house in the mountains of North Carolina where I grew up.
Pha Dok Siew falls are situated about halfway up the mountain hidden deep in the forest and are only accessible on foot.
On the way to Quinault, take a side trip to the Hoh Rain Forest Visitors Center, deeper in the interior of the Park, to learn more about the western valleys that are drenched in more than 12 feet of rain each year.
A visit to Forest Holidays is all about finding a little sanctuary deep in the fForest Holidays is all about finding a little sanctuary deep in the forestforest.
For a really great image of how environmental changes are already affecting people, in fact destroying an entire culture — and no, not in some low - slung Pacific Island — The New York Times has a poignant piece about how the Kamayurá people in Brazil are struggling today with deforestation and climate change making their way of life less and less tenable: Forest Homelands Now Surrounded by Ranches The Kamayurá people live in the middle of the Xingu National Park — which was once deep in the Amazon but is now surrounded by ranches — and live by hunting, fishing and some agriculture.
I start by noting some of the unnerving situations I've been in while reporting about climate change and related issues — sitting with a murderous cattle rancher on his porch deep in the Amazon rain forest, camping on cracking sea ice floating on the 14,000 - foot - deep Arctic Ocean a few dozen miles from the North Pole.
From their trawlers scraping the floors of the seas to their dams impounding sediment by the gigatonne, from their stripping of forests to their irrigation of farms, from their mile - deep mines to their melting of glaciers, humans were bringing about an age of planetary change.
The large cities full of excitement and activities are spread about the state in such a way that you may find yourself staring at the ocean or living deep within the mountainous forests.
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