Posts tagged “Botany”

Berry Go Round

This month’s Berry Go Round is going to be hosted at A Neotropical Savanna.  Submissions are due by the 26th.  If you’d like to host May or June, volunteer here.

Berry Go Round #26

Welcome to the 26th edition of Berry Go Round!  February was a botanical box of chocolates, but this month is the much anticipated herald of spring.  So what if the crocuses are just beginning to peek above the soil on my mountain and it’s going to snow two days this week?  This Berry Go Round […]

Berry Go Round reminder

The next edition of Berry Go Round will be up here next week.  I can accept submissions through the end of the day Saturday if you haven’t sent me your botanically inclined posts yet.

Berry Go Round

I’m hosting this month’s edition of Berry Go Round, so if you’ve written or read something plant related that you particularly liked, send it my way.  You can use the submission form or email me at enchantressofnumbers AT gmail DOT com.  I’m planning on getting most of the links together in the next week since […]

Berry Go Round

The latest edition of Berry Go Round is up at Foothills Fancies.  Sally did a fantastic job of finding terrifically interesting posts (including my post on the fossil Archeopteris, of course).  One of my favorite submissions describes a potential identification for a very puzzling fossil from January’s Berry Go Round host. To show that I […]

Berry Go Round!

The latest edition of Berry Go Round is up at The Phytophactor.  I’m more than a little late with this announcement, but I promise it’s not because I’m bitter about missing the deadline with my Archeopteris post.  That would just be petty and, despite what my sister may tell you, I really don’t hold a […]

What I’ve noticed

Testosterone doesn’t actually make people selfish; it promotes fair play. It’s not that feminists don’t have a sense of humor, you’re just not funny. China really isn’t getting better about human rights abuses. Fantastic essay by Asimov on “The Relativity of Wrong.”  I feel like this would be especially good to read in intro science […]