Home Actress Kristin Bauer HD Photos and Wallpapers May 2024 Kristin Bauer Instagram - Beautiful walk with the pups and @hoverair_global following us! How gorgeous to be in the #pacificnorthwest with SO MUCH GREEN!!! So many trees that haven’t even been trimmed!! (Unlike the LA over tree trimming psychosis). Wild trees, wild yards, nothing uniform or over controlled, so much water….so beautiful. #portland

Kristin Bauer Instagram – Beautiful walk with the pups and @hoverair_global following us! How gorgeous to be in the #pacificnorthwest with SO MUCH GREEN!!! So many trees that haven’t even been trimmed!! (Unlike the LA over tree trimming psychosis). Wild trees, wild yards, nothing uniform or over controlled, so much water….so beautiful. #portland

Kristin Bauer Instagram - Beautiful walk with the pups and @hoverair_global following us! How gorgeous to be in the #pacificnorthwest with SO MUCH GREEN!!! So many trees that haven’t even been trimmed!! (Unlike the LA over tree trimming psychosis). Wild trees, wild yards, nothing uniform or over controlled, so much water….so beautiful. #portland

Kristin Bauer Instagram – Beautiful walk with the pups and @hoverair_global following us! How gorgeous to be in the #pacificnorthwest with SO MUCH GREEN!!! So many trees that haven’t even been trimmed!! (Unlike the LA over tree trimming psychosis). Wild trees, wild yards, nothing uniform or over controlled, so much water….so beautiful. #portland | Posted on 30/May/2024 10:01:55

Kristin Bauer Instagram – So I found this baby black capped #chickadee on the busy side walk with two cats two feet away watching him/her & I had my dogs on leash w/ me. I didn’t know what to do!! So I scooped him up in my hand & put him in a box and called the @audubonsociety & left a message (they never called back). 
I then called @dovelewispdx – a vet hospital that says they also handle wild animals. I was on hold for an hour & then she said he’s a fledgling & this is normal & to put him back in the tree in a strawberry box. 
I tried. He jumped out of it in 1.6 seconds & was back on the ground. I got the immediate neighbors to bring their cats in but everyone in portland lets their cats out 😠, & they are everywhere. Yesterday I saw a cat get a baby bird while the parents dive bombed the cat. 😭 
So I kept putting the little guy back in the tree on the lowest branch. I saw the parents coming to feed him.
This is a very busy sidewalk w/ dogs, skateboards, strollers & he was very hard to see. 
For a long time he had stayed in the tree & was fed & he slept. 
I went to check on him at midnight & he was lying in the dirt, splayed out on his face & looked dead. 😵 
I brought him back in & put him in the box in a rag made nest & would call the vet again in the morning. I could see he was rhythmically jerking. He was alive, barely.
In the morning he was dead. 😭 
I buried him & said a few words.
I don’t think the advice I got was 💯 correct. I googled the crap out of it & they all said don’t move them unless they are in danger from cats, if so put them back in the nest (I had climbed the tree up 12 feet high-no nest), or on a higher branch. their best chance is with the parents. I saw the parents. 
This poor little dude was days from being able to fly. I can’t see how he would have made it at this busy spot on the ground! Not with so many cats, dogs, pedestrians, strollers….
But he also had to fall from that tree over & over! That can’t have been right. it also said online Do not move them far from the parents, but the only shrubs were not terribly close. Next time I’ll barricade the area & protect him on the ground! #babybird
Kristin Bauer Instagram – Are you ready to dive in with our “A Sea of Hope” series?

Explore Aotearoa (New Zealand) where local advocates and Indigenous leaders allow the ocean’s voice to speak through them in our latest episode– streaming now on YouTube! Through these changemakers’ deep connections with the waters they call home, they lead the way toward restoring the region’s ecosystems.

Diving into New Zealand’s depths, we discover that what was once a thriving, bountiful underwater metropolis has become a desolate and empty landscape devoid of activity. Overfishing eliminated key ecosystem contributors within the region’s kelp forests, and in our interconnected natural world, dramatic change rippled well beyond the impacted marine species.

In a country whose territory is 93% ocean, only 0.38% of its regional waters fall within a protected area. But in those sparse safe havens, an amazing contrast appears. Lush kelp flows with the currents, and life abounds among the rich algae ecosystem. 

Visit the link in our bio and discover the power marine protections can possess for the health of our ocean’s ecosystems.

Video by @paulnicklen 

@mitty @andy_mann @youngoceanexplorers @rileyhath 

#ocean #nature #stingray #aseaofhope #newzealand

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