Ads via The Deck
A very stupid thing begins again. Credit: TMN.
Here are some beautiful images from optical satellites.
A Kyoto Tengu lost its seven-foot nose to heavy snow. The nose has since been repaired.

We simply need that wild country available to us, even if we never do more than drive to its edge and look in. For it can be a means of reassuring ourselves of our sanity as creatures, a part of the geography of hope.

From Wallace Stegner's 1960 letter to the Outdoor Recreation Resources Review Commission, which inspired the Wilderness Act.
↩︎ Adventure Journal
5h
Ads via The Deck
After 37 years as the United States' top crop, corn is expected to fall behind soybeans in production this year.
Unwilling to offer a counter-narrative, the Midwest is complicit in pop culture's stereotypes about the region.
Retired park ranger apparently goes rogue and and posts 1,496 US National Park maps online for free downloading.
Of "the Appalachian folk songs that a metal listener might appreciate best," most are murder ballads.

Music made us get up and dance, or occasionally throw a rock. Food, especially if combined with wine, encourages a state of satiety and repose.

Our recent obsession with food may be inducing complacency in broader culture. "Eating everything is not much of a revolution. If anything, historical resonance has been achieved by people who refused to eat certain foods."
↩︎ Bloomberg
11h
NBC catches up with streaming era, nixes tape delay for live 2018 Winter Olympics.
More Features at TMN