Mojo’s legacy lives in on from her teaching our other felines to avoid the road, writes Dana Wilde.
Dana Wilde
Dana Wilde: 600 million cats
How felines came to live among us is an interesting story, Dana Wilde writes.
Dana Wilde: Autumn, winter moons in focus
Native American names for seasonal moon cycles carry more resonance than our months, which are a human-made illusion, Dana Wilde writes.
Dana Wilde: How did it get to be fall again?
Years pass like seasons, piling up gradually like waves on a beach until it’s high tide, writes Dana Wilde.
Backyard Naturalist: Suicide by climate change, or not
For the sake of your own backyard, maybe you want to vote in the next election, Dana Wilde writes.
Dana Wilde: Humans in monsters’ bodies
Spiders are having experiences we can probably never understand, the same way we’re having experiences they can never understand, writes Dana Wilde
Dana Wilde: Notes on a September afternoon
There’s no way autumn’s natural beauty is random, writes Dana Wilde.
Dana Wilde: In fall, the beauty in an ending
Nowadays we cherish the clear autumn chill and the color in the trees, but it wasn’t always the case, writes Dana Wilde.
Dana Wilde: Dreaming of a trip to Mars
Exploring is an essential component of the health of human beings, writes Dana Wilde.
Dana Wilde: Bug and snake anecdotes
One person’s backyard observation is insufficient evidence of anything general, except in that one location at that one time.