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A Drink with the Idler: Colin Tudge on Enlightened Agriculture
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Animal
Sat Nov 13 1999 at 8:38:14
A kingdom (Animalia) of living things which includes single- and multi-celled organisms. Animals differ from plants in several ways. They have cells without cellulose walls. They lack chlorophyll and the capacity for photosynthesis. They require more complex food materials like proteins. They are often more complex organisms. They have the capacity for spontaneousmovement and can respond rapidly to stimulation. Protozoa and sponges are classified as animals, as are higher life forms, like humans, apes, dolphins, and chipmunks, and everything in-between.
In general, people seem to like animals. We like to keep them as pets, we like to see them in zoos, we like to crane our necks around in the car and take pictures when we see them in the wild. Many of us even like to emulate them. For the most part, we like to see them do well and thrive. The feeling is, of course, not universal. Some people like to kick them, mutilate them, abuse them. Some people
Humans 24 April 2021
A fantastic science book can wow you, entertain you and change the way you think, all over the course of a few hundred pages. It can also act as a source of inspiration. We have asked 10 brilliant science writers and authors to pick their favourites, many of which were influenced earlier in their careers by their choices. Did your favourite make the list?
The best popular science books as picked by science writers
Jonathan Drori chooses
Silent Spring by Rachel Carson
This is like being asked to choose the best vegetable or your favourite child! However, if pressed, I would nominate Rachel Carson’s
A Drink with Colin Tudge
idler.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from idler.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
January 8, 2021
Thousands of farmers and activists across six continents will come together at the Oxford Real Farming Conference (ORFC Global) on Jan. 7 to show that small-scale farming can fix the climate and ecological crisis.
ORFC Global delegates, including representatives of indigenous communities from the Amazon to Alaska, are pushing for food, farming and nature to be at the top of the COP26 agenda this November.
Farmers around the world who practice climate-friendly methods, including regenerative and organic farming, will share their success stories over the course of the seven-day global conference.
Colin Tudge, Oxford Real Farming Conference co-founder, said: “Agriculture in its present form is both a cause and a victim of all that is wrong with the world – from social injustice and political unrest to mass extinction and climate change. It is treated as “a business like any other” and required above all to compete for profit in the global market.
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