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Charles Bello has spent the last 40 years handbuilding a succession of homes with timber cut and milled from his 400 acres in Northern California.
Photos by Leslie Williamson.
Learn more about his quest to acquire and preserve redwood forests at www.savetrees.org.
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Latest fettled Trumpet to burble forth from the bowels of Deus Venice CA.
Man crush on a motorcycle
Posted on April 19, 2012 via Deus Customs with 164 notes
Source: deuscustoms
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Foothills Union: Give-A-Way #1...aka follower drive Spring 2012
So I’ve decided to combine two things on my To-Do-List
1.) Get rid of somethings to make moving and life in general easier.
2.) Work on this blog more with both content and adding followers in mind.
This brings me to the first Foothills Union Contest.
The rules…I’ll give the following…
Posted on April 17, 2012 via Foothills Union with 4 notes
Source: foothillsunion
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If this doesn’t hit a million reblogs I don’t know what will. #campvibes
And counting… Higher and higher
(via polerstuff)
Posted on April 15, 2012 via Where is the Cool? with 474 notes
Source: whereisthecoool
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Now that’s tuff!
(via topo-designs)
Posted on March 23, 2012 via The days I live with 21 notes
Source: kadinkline
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Keith Haring. Brooklyn Museum. (Taken with instagram)
Posted on March 15, 2012 via NICK WOOSTER with 238 notes
Source: nickelsonwooster
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Will Your City be Underwater? There’s a Map for That
A new report shows accelerated sea level rise from global warming has doubled the risk of extreme flooding events in many coastal communities.
Ben Strauss of Climate Central explained what this means for New York City:
“[Sea level rise] raises the launching pad for coastal storms. And Manhattan is very vulnerable to coastal storms. New York Harbor is shaped a little like a funnel. So, if a hurricane hits at the wrong angle, there’s already the possibility of a storm surge that would leap into Lower Manhattan and fill the subway system, much of which is already below sea level, and disable it.”
In other words: under normal circumstances, these coastal communities would be fine. But if a severe weather event were to hit, they’d be in big, big trouble.
Strauss also put it this way: ”If you were to raise the floor of a basketball court, you would see a lot more dunks. And sea level rise is raising the floor that storms launch from.”
Watch the full interview here:
-KC
Uh oh…
(via thedailyfeed)
Posted on March 15, 2012 via PBS NewsHour with 224 notes
Source: newshour
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bomb.
Posted on February 21, 2012 via JUST WAIT with 13,786 notes
Source: haterswegood
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Posted on February 14, 2012 via Where is the Cool? with 407 notes
Source: whereisthecoool




![newshour:
Will Your City be Underwater? There’s a Map for That
A new report shows accelerated sea level rise from global warming has doubled the risk of extreme flooding events in many coastal communities.
Ben Strauss of Climate Central explained what this means for New York City:
“[Sea level rise] raises the launching pad for coastal storms. And Manhattan is very vulnerable to coastal storms. New York Harbor is shaped a little like a funnel. So, if a hurricane hits at the wrong angle, there’s already the possibility of a storm surge that would leap into Lower Manhattan and fill the subway system, much of which is already below sea level, and disable it.”
In other words: under normal circumstances, these coastal communities would be fine. But if a severe weather event were to hit, they’d be in big, big trouble.
Strauss also put it this way: ”If you were to raise the floor of a basketball court, you would see a lot more dunks. And sea level rise is raising the floor that storms launch from.”
Watch the full interview here:
-KC
Uh oh…](http://25.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m0xtgoWrBT1qd9bz1o1_500.jpg)

