
Eating the Big Apple. If there's one great thing about New York City, it's the infinite dining choices that fill every nook of the city. But how to navigate the city's many ethnic enclaves? Foodies should check out
New York: The Big City and Its Little Neighborhoods, a book that explores 20 neighborhoods--from Little Italy, to Little Senegal, to Little Odessa--and all the food they have to offer.
One of the best things to come out of last week's
Governors' Global Climate Summit was an innovative agreement between California's Environmental Protection Agency and its Mexican equivalent, SEMARNAT, to help protect the 750 million monarch butterflies who migrate yearly to the mountains of Michoacán, Mexico's most colorful natural attraction. Besides engaging in a large-scale reforestation around their winter refuge in western Mexico's Sierra Madre mountains, the bi-national plan seeks to reduce illegal logging. (Every year, millions of monarch butterflies freeze to death, which many scientists blame on thinning forests.) If reforestation and aggressive forestry management result in more trees growing than being cut down - a carbon surplus -- the Mexican mountain communities will receive revenue from companies paying to offset carbon deficits. [via Charles Kulander]
Photo: Universe Publishing
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