Fireflies can make an evening forest magical. (Photo by Tony Phan, Unsplash) |
Once upon a time, Diesel the Donkey ran away from home and joined an elk herd in Northern California. He had always longed to live free. "Diesel’s story has made headlines for years. It first did so in 2019, when he ran away from Terrie and her husband, Dave, who after months of searching for their new pet, gave him up for dead," reports Jonathan Edwards of The Washington Post. "Five years later, a video of Diesel roving the California wilderness as a fully enmeshed member of an elk herd [surfaced]. . . . The video, taken by a hunter, shows Diesel turning, trotting and running with his more graceful-looking herd mates." Some of us are born to be wild. Watch the video here.
Driscoll's has worked for years to breed the perfect berries. (Photo by Maksim Shutov, Unsplash) |
Why cats decided to befriend humans isn't clear. Maybe it's the beds. (Photo by K.S. Matheson, Unsplash) |
In terms of evolution, people didn't choose to hang out with other
people. Instead, survival mandated that humans stay together in groups.
That's not true for felines. Solitary and smart, cats decided to live
among people, "domesticate themselves," and even fine-tune their meows
to communicate with humans, writes Grace Carroll for The Conversation,
a journalist platform for academics. "Originally, cats were solitary
creatures. Most of their social behavior was restricted to mother-kitten
interactions. Outside of this relationship, cats rarely meow
at each other. . . . However, as cats began to live alongside humans,
these vocalizations took on new meanings. . . . Over time, cats have
evolved to use vocal signals that resonate with our nurturing
instincts."
In the American West, many wild mustang herds are rounded up each year to be divided and sold at auction. Clare Staples is working through her sanctuary to return horses to their long-lost herds, reports Cathy Free of The Washington Post. "Staples began purchasing the horses and working to reunite as many of them as possible with members of their original herds at her 9,000-acre ranch in Bend, Ore. She also rescued wild donkeys from kill pens and took in horses that had been relinquished to other animal rescue agencies."
Carrots can be grown the in the spring and fall. (Photo by Julian Hochgesang, Unsplash) |
No comments:
Post a Comment