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22/10/2025

I gained 7 followers and created 6 posts in the past 90 days! Thank you all for your continued support. I could not have done it without you. 🙏🤗🎉

A gold plated moth.
22/10/2025

A gold plated moth.

15/10/2025

$250,000 for a single acre. That is what developers are offering for my farm. At first glance, it sounds like a dream. But for me, it’s a reminder of the pressure closing in on farms like mine. Our land sits in a place they call a “land shortage” area, where open fields are quickly disappearing to make way for houses and shopping centers.
My farm is 313 years old. For the past 92 years, my family has cared for it, just as three families did before us. We’ve worked these fields through good harvests and bad storms, trusting the soil to give back what we put into it. Developers visit often, talking about how many houses they could build here. But they don’t see the history, the sweat, the long nights, or the generations of love that are rooted in this ground.

Farming is not easy. It demands everything from you—your strength, your patience, your hope. Yet it’s a life I would never trade. There is a quiet joy in planting seeds, caring for them, and watching them grow into food that feeds not only my family but my neighbors too. Even in the hardest years, when nature works against us, farmers rise again with a new season ahead.

As the New Year begins, I want to ask you to add one more resolution to your list—support your local farms.

Here’s how you can make a difference:
• Cook at home more and let farm-fresh produce guide your meals.
• Buy a farm share through a CSA and invest in your local growers.
• Choose milk from nearby dairies.
• Visit farmers markets close to your home or work.
• Spend a day at a farm and meet the people who grow your food.

Once farmland is developed, it’s gone forever. The only way farms can survive is if their communities stand with them. Every choice you make at the market is a vote for the future you want—one that keeps green fields, fresh food, and hardworking farmers alive.

Let’s make that future possible. Choose local. Eat local. Support the hands that feed you.

BREAKING: World’s First International Governing Body and Judicial Authority Declares mRNA Injections Biological and Tech...
10/10/2025

BREAKING: World’s First International Governing Body and Judicial Authority Declares mRNA Injections Biological and Technological Weapons of Mass Destruction
The Alliance of Indigenous Nations International Tribunal recognised by Canada on a Nation-to-Nation basis has issued this

I have never seen a gold plated moth before. This was on my car side window, this morning.
22/09/2025

I have never seen a gold plated moth before. This was on my car side window, this morning.

21/09/2025

History forgot this: a 7,000-year-old burial that rewrote our understanding of ancient America.
In 1982, a backhoe operator in Florida unearthed a human skull while digging at Windover Pond. What followed was a discovery that stunned archaeologists and historians alike.
Beneath the murky waters of this small pond lay the remains of 168 individuals—some of the oldest known human burials in North America. The peat at the bottom of the pond had preserved not just bones, but remarkably intact brain tissue in 91 skulls. This preservation was so exceptional that scientists were able to extract DNA, revealing that these people carried genetic markers linking them to ancient populations from Asia. They were not related to any known Native American tribes today.

The burial practices were equally fascinating. Bodies were placed in the water within 24 to 48 hours after death, wrapped in woven textiles and secured with sharpened pine stakes driven into the peat. These stakes may have been intended to hold the bodies underwater, reflecting a complex ritualistic practice.
Artifacts found with the remains, such as atlatls (spear-throwers) and projectile points, indicate that these people were skilled hunters and gatherers. The presence of wild grape seeds, elderberries, and prickly pear fruit in their stomachs suggests a diverse diet and intimate knowledge of their environment.
Windover Pond is more than an archaeological site; it is a window into a world long past, offering insights into the lives and customs of a people who lived thousands of years before recorded history.
Would history be different if this discovery hadn't been made? What other secrets might lie buried beneath our feet, waiting to be uncovered?

So, earlier this year I planted 6 beans and 5 of them grew. This is the 3rd harvest. Not a bad return, hey?
17/08/2025

So, earlier this year I planted 6 beans and 5 of them grew. This is the 3rd harvest. Not a bad return, hey?

16/08/2025

This bird’s message is a stark reminder of the damage caused by pesticides. After drinking from a lawn and eating a worm, its wings no longer work, poisoned by chemicals that also kill the bugs it needs. We must consider the long-term impact of our actions on wildlife. 🦋🚫

13/07/2025

“Still Here, Still Smiling — And I’m Not Going Anywhere.” BBC Breakfast icon Carol Kirkwood has finally broken her silence after enduring years of what she calls “DREADFUL ABUSE” from viewers — and her response is pure fire. “Call me what you like, but I show up every day and I own that screen,” she snapped. In a bold takedown of her harshest critics, Carol hit back with unshakable grit, saying the trolling is now “nothing but heavy rain off a duck’s back.” After decades on air, a bestselling book, and a private fairytale wedding, she’s not just surviving — she’s thriving, and she’s done staying quiet....

12/07/2025

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