Latest Stories
Most recently published stories in Earth.
Why Should You Hire Commercial Landscape Contractors?
Commercial landscaping is a challenging job and requires a particular set of skills. There are a wide variety of services involved in commercial landscaping. To ensure excellent aesthetics and perfection, it is advised that you hire commercial landscape contractors. They will help you plan, design, and implement all the activities and reduce costs related to the projects. Commercial landscape contractors are also experts at ensuring sustainable construction. You should hire professional landscape contractors to create a captivating working environment. They know what needs to be done, so your workplace looks its best. Let's look at the benefits of hiring a landscape contractor.
By David Parkinson5 years ago in Earth
See Ya Later Alligator
My family and I are very outdoorsy. We live in a rural part of Georgia, in the deep south of the US. We raise chickens, we develop our land ourselves, we grow some of our own food, but most importantly we camp, fish and go on long boat rides on our favorite waterway, the mighty Flint River.
By Abigail Adams -The Mad Cow Mob Boss5 years ago in Earth
Advantages and Environmental Impact of Sustainable Packaging
Sustainable Packaging: Advantages & Environmental Impact Even as the flexible packaging market continues to expand, packaging materials, plastics among them, have gained a name and are typically coupled to litter and marine dust, instead of being compared to additional reusable packaging choices. With the environment and sustainability ranking high among consumers—and particularly millennials—as problems they price extremely—even as highly as convenience—when registration their preference for packaging, this perception has got to modification.
By Jupiter Laminators5 years ago in Earth
Ingesting
You, for whatever reason, suddenly looked less than the horizon to me. On a normal night, the lack of jagged, saw-toothed pine roping across my eye’s limit was jarring. For months, I instead saw a depressing horizon as a flat line––a charcoal blue, an endless territory, a subject matter that did not interest me in the least. It was a horizon that swallowed the sun unilaterally, equidistantly, identically every late evening. And that collection of dying orange would leave me all the same, every time, every day, every repeating instance that I was not quite ready for it to leave me.
By Calvin Spears5 years ago in Earth
Late Afternoons
She leaves the house at two thirty, as she does every weekday. It’s a sunny spring day with barely any breeze off the ocean, ideal fishing weather. Roy left at sunrise and will not dock his cuddy until just before the sun dips back into the sea, as satisfied with his day’s catch as the sun will be with the yellow and orange brushstrokes it leaves lingering in the sky, silhouetting grey clouds as darkness settles. She has plenty of time before meeting him in the harbour.
By L J Purves5 years ago in Earth
By the Sea
Simone glared at her date with annoyance. “ You do realize you're at the beach, right?” Caleb took a long swallow from the insulated can in his hand. He immediately looked back to his laptop before replying: “Working at the beach is the best of both worlds! You should have brought a book with you, Simone. There's an entire genre designed around that activity. You’ve heard of beach reads, right?”
By Eileen Kos5 years ago in Earth
Save the Ocean
David Attenborough states on his Netflix documentary “A Life On Our Planet”, “The living world is a unique and spectacular marvel, yet the way we humans live on earth, is sending it into a decline- human beings have overrun the world”. With a current world population of 7.8 billion people- it’s no secret that humans benefit (and continue to benefit) from destroying entire ecosystems. Our carbon footprint is as high as it’s ever been, sitting at 415ppm; warming our planet at such an alarming rate, that the damage will have unforgivable consequences. With our oceans covering 71% of the planet- one might think that it’s vast enough to endure cruel human treatment; but in 1998, film directors of “Planet Ocean” noticed the bleaching and death of entire coral reefs- and soon realized that the rise in global temperatures is being absorbed by the ocean, and that the ocean is dying.
By Kennedy Brown5 years ago in Earth
Into The Blue
Cold salty waves crashed against the rocks. His green eyes were sensitive to the setting sun as he watched his favorite ship and sailor sail into the open waters as a storm brewed on the horizon. She knew better, his thoughts wandered as he watched, climbing the stairs of the lighthouse.
By Misha Alsleben5 years ago in Earth










