February 20, 2011
"When we sit with the quiet of nature we are reminded of time, that it can take hundreds of years to grow a mature tree, thousands to make a mountain, but only a day or a year to destroy them for short-term gain. It is here in nature that we can best learn the practice of foresight, of actually seeing ahead, and adopting the long-term goal of care for “the seventh generation,” an elegant concept of sustainability long held by the Iroquois Nation in their Great Laws. We need laws that will not harm future generations. What would happen if meetings held by world leaders and decision makers were to take place over a slowed-down, two-week period in a wild forest or mountain wilderness – instead of within the insulated urban chambers of the most frenetic cities?"

— Osprey Orielle Lake

February 20, 2011
"The natural world offers us enduring lessons in design, sustainability, balance, and ecological health while also echoing back to us our sacred place in the greater community of the Earth. With insight gained in the stillness of the mountain, desert, or forest, as well as in a city park or home garden, we can be more certain that our actions will address long-term and enduring goals, a larger vision, bound also to bring us deeper satisfaction, and not just immediate superficial fixes."

— Osprey Orielle Lake

December 10, 2010
Civilization!

This artifact of the human body’s need to hydrate was photographed on the same duckweed that these Black-bellied Whistling Ducks were nesting:

We can hydrate with reusable bottles we own. My son and I see our natural areas littered with too much human waste…waste that doesn’t have to be created in the first place, or it can be properly disposed. (Scroll down on this page to see multiple pictures of this family of ducks.)

Plastic is made from oil. Oil isn’t consumed only to run our cars. In fact oil is in an astounding number of products.

This is what the sign said about the giant tire seen here:

I’m speechless!

What kind of world will he be living in?

All photographs © Pamir Kiciman 2010

July 13, 2010
"The more clearly we can focus our attention on the wonders and realities of the universe about us, the less taste we shall have for destruction."

— Rachel Carson

June 15, 2010
"Destroying rainforest for economic gain is like burning a Renaissance painting to cook a meal."

— E.O. Wilson, Biologist

June 14, 2010
"We will be known forever by the tracks we leave."

— Dakota proverb

June 8, 2010
A powerful healing intention for the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.
Reblog it, like ♥ it, go to the page and add your name in comments. Make it your wallpaper, print it, email to everyone. Keep it circulating, focus on it daily. Commit!
Thank you,Pamir Kiciman

A powerful healing intention for the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

Reblog it, like ♥ it, go to the page and add your name in comments. Make it your wallpaper, print it, email to everyone. Keep it circulating, focus on it daily. Commit!

Thank you,
Pamir Kiciman