Swam with an eel in a freeeeeezing creek,
Saw a golden orb spider the size of a plate,
Met a brush turkey who tried to steal our breakfast,
Met a few forest spirits,
Ate mangoes in the bath,
Woke up to laughing kookaburras,
Remembered my reasons,
Happy holidays from home 💚💚
Swam with an eel in a freeeeeezing creek,
Saw a golden orb spider the size of a plate,
Met a brush turkey who tried to steal our breakfast,
Met a few forest spirits,
Ate mangoes in the bath,
Woke up to laughing kookaburras,
Remembered my reasons,
Happy holidays from home 💚💚
Swam with an eel in a freeeeeezing creek,
Saw a golden orb spider the size of a plate,
Met a brush turkey who tried to steal our breakfast,
Met a few forest spirits,
Ate mangoes in the bath,
Woke up to laughing kookaburras,
Remembered my reasons,
Happy holidays from home 💚💚
Swam with an eel in a freeeeeezing creek,
Saw a golden orb spider the size of a plate,
Met a brush turkey who tried to steal our breakfast,
Met a few forest spirits,
Ate mangoes in the bath,
Woke up to laughing kookaburras,
Remembered my reasons,
Happy holidays from home 💚💚
Swam with an eel in a freeeeeezing creek,
Saw a golden orb spider the size of a plate,
Met a brush turkey who tried to steal our breakfast,
Met a few forest spirits,
Ate mangoes in the bath,
Woke up to laughing kookaburras,
Remembered my reasons,
Happy holidays from home 💚💚
Swam with an eel in a freeeeeezing creek,
Saw a golden orb spider the size of a plate,
Met a brush turkey who tried to steal our breakfast,
Met a few forest spirits,
Ate mangoes in the bath,
Woke up to laughing kookaburras,
Remembered my reasons,
Happy holidays from home 💚💚
Swam with an eel in a freeeeeezing creek,
Saw a golden orb spider the size of a plate,
Met a brush turkey who tried to steal our breakfast,
Met a few forest spirits,
Ate mangoes in the bath,
Woke up to laughing kookaburras,
Remembered my reasons,
Happy holidays from home 💚💚
Swam with an eel in a freeeeeezing creek,
Saw a golden orb spider the size of a plate,
Met a brush turkey who tried to steal our breakfast,
Met a few forest spirits,
Ate mangoes in the bath,
Woke up to laughing kookaburras,
Remembered my reasons,
Happy holidays from home 💚💚
Swam with an eel in a freeeeeezing creek,
Saw a golden orb spider the size of a plate,
Met a brush turkey who tried to steal our breakfast,
Met a few forest spirits,
Ate mangoes in the bath,
Woke up to laughing kookaburras,
Remembered my reasons,
Happy holidays from home 💚💚
Hello! A few months ago I read some stunning material on re-thinking how our gardens are used, and haven’t been able to stop thinking about it since 🥹🌱
As we know, we’ve lost a horrendous amount of forest, wetland & other natural habitat. There’s already an awesome movement towards changing the idea that ‘nature’ is something set aside in parks or preserves. Instead, it should be part of our daily lives. If our gardens could be less of the traditional biological wasteland that is a ‘lawn’ and include more native plants, we could support insects, birds and other wildlife clinging onto their fragmented homes. There are 130 million parcels of residential land in the US alone that could be being used as a connected habitat to help restore lost biomes.
On my recent trip home to Australia I found the amazing✨ @indigigrow ✨, 100% Aboriginal owned and not-for-profit, native plant nursery. If you’re in Sydney, go check them out!! I visited and got a bunch of beautiful Australian natives to start replacing some of the random ornamental plants we had in our backyard. I get excited finding something that is affordable and joyful that can help this messed up, over-developed planet so if one person seeing this does the same… I’ll be stoked 🤙💕💕
Hello! A few months ago I read some stunning material on re-thinking how our gardens are used, and haven’t been able to stop thinking about it since 🥹🌱
As we know, we’ve lost a horrendous amount of forest, wetland & other natural habitat. There’s already an awesome movement towards changing the idea that ‘nature’ is something set aside in parks or preserves. Instead, it should be part of our daily lives. If our gardens could be less of the traditional biological wasteland that is a ‘lawn’ and include more native plants, we could support insects, birds and other wildlife clinging onto their fragmented homes. There are 130 million parcels of residential land in the US alone that could be being used as a connected habitat to help restore lost biomes.
On my recent trip home to Australia I found the amazing✨ @indigigrow ✨, 100% Aboriginal owned and not-for-profit, native plant nursery. If you’re in Sydney, go check them out!! I visited and got a bunch of beautiful Australian natives to start replacing some of the random ornamental plants we had in our backyard. I get excited finding something that is affordable and joyful that can help this messed up, over-developed planet so if one person seeing this does the same… I’ll be stoked 🤙💕💕
Hello! A few months ago I read some stunning material on re-thinking how our gardens are used, and haven’t been able to stop thinking about it since 🥹🌱
As we know, we’ve lost a horrendous amount of forest, wetland & other natural habitat. There’s already an awesome movement towards changing the idea that ‘nature’ is something set aside in parks or preserves. Instead, it should be part of our daily lives. If our gardens could be less of the traditional biological wasteland that is a ‘lawn’ and include more native plants, we could support insects, birds and other wildlife clinging onto their fragmented homes. There are 130 million parcels of residential land in the US alone that could be being used as a connected habitat to help restore lost biomes.
On my recent trip home to Australia I found the amazing✨ @indigigrow ✨, 100% Aboriginal owned and not-for-profit, native plant nursery. If you’re in Sydney, go check them out!! I visited and got a bunch of beautiful Australian natives to start replacing some of the random ornamental plants we had in our backyard. I get excited finding something that is affordable and joyful that can help this messed up, over-developed planet so if one person seeing this does the same… I’ll be stoked 🤙💕💕
Hello! A few months ago I read some stunning material on re-thinking how our gardens are used, and haven’t been able to stop thinking about it since 🥹🌱
As we know, we’ve lost a horrendous amount of forest, wetland & other natural habitat. There’s already an awesome movement towards changing the idea that ‘nature’ is something set aside in parks or preserves. Instead, it should be part of our daily lives. If our gardens could be less of the traditional biological wasteland that is a ‘lawn’ and include more native plants, we could support insects, birds and other wildlife clinging onto their fragmented homes. There are 130 million parcels of residential land in the US alone that could be being used as a connected habitat to help restore lost biomes.
On my recent trip home to Australia I found the amazing✨ @indigigrow ✨, 100% Aboriginal owned and not-for-profit, native plant nursery. If you’re in Sydney, go check them out!! I visited and got a bunch of beautiful Australian natives to start replacing some of the random ornamental plants we had in our backyard. I get excited finding something that is affordable and joyful that can help this messed up, over-developed planet so if one person seeing this does the same… I’ll be stoked 🤙💕💕
Hello! A few months ago I read some stunning material on re-thinking how our gardens are used, and haven’t been able to stop thinking about it since 🥹🌱
As we know, we’ve lost a horrendous amount of forest, wetland & other natural habitat. There’s already an awesome movement towards changing the idea that ‘nature’ is something set aside in parks or preserves. Instead, it should be part of our daily lives. If our gardens could be less of the traditional biological wasteland that is a ‘lawn’ and include more native plants, we could support insects, birds and other wildlife clinging onto their fragmented homes. There are 130 million parcels of residential land in the US alone that could be being used as a connected habitat to help restore lost biomes.
On my recent trip home to Australia I found the amazing✨ @indigigrow ✨, 100% Aboriginal owned and not-for-profit, native plant nursery. If you’re in Sydney, go check them out!! I visited and got a bunch of beautiful Australian natives to start replacing some of the random ornamental plants we had in our backyard. I get excited finding something that is affordable and joyful that can help this messed up, over-developed planet so if one person seeing this does the same… I’ll be stoked 🤙💕💕