A site to check out
No, we didn't lose access to the internet or electricity here in Memphis. My semi-regular blogging has been less regular lately, but I shake out of Greta Garbo land to pass along an interesting website. It's Ecosystemmarketplace.comand it's an eclectic mix of news, opinion and eco-market tracking. A particular article of note is on the lessons learned from the collapse of a California land trust. Interesting reading, interesting site.
Ok, back into my hole now.
Ok, back into my hole now.
5 Comments:
Hey, Pat, we miss your voice! Understand that life intervenes and other priorities can and should trump blogging, but there is no authentic presence from the landtrust world taking your place in the blogosphere.
Walking the Berkshires has a new URL" http://greensleevesenviro@sbcglobal.net if you're interested.
Cheers, Tim Abbott
Have you been tired lately? So your disappearance for awhile is understood. Well, you are back anyway! So things will be fine and we'll be hearing again from you.
Welcome back!
Hi Pat--
I couldn't find a direct e-mail link, so I figured the best thing to do would be to leave this as a comment. I'm the administrator of the various blogs written about Natural Lands Trust preserves, which you linked to on your site. I wanted to let you know that we've taken the exisiting blogs (Crow's Nest, Gwynedd, Mariton, New Jersey, and Stroud) and combined them into one (The Natural Lands Trust Preserve Blog.) We were hoping that you would update your links accordingly. The new blog can be found at http://natlands.typepad.com/nlt_preserve_blog.
Thanks!
Molly Smyrl
I hate doing this, but I have to remind people that there's more than just one planning site out there. We tried email before, and it was ignored, so ...
Cyburbia (http://www.cyburbia.org), founded in 1994, is the Internet's oldest continuously operating planning-related Web site. Cyburbia has served the planning community for nearly 14 years with very little funding or financial remuneration. The Cyburbia Forums (http://www.cyburbia.org/forums) went online in 1996, and today remains a vibrant virtual third place for planners, students and others interested in the built environment ; 5,800 members, 400,000 posts, and still growing.
Cyburbia may be the considered the red-headed stepchild of planning-related Web sites among bloggers, but ask the thousands of people that use it every day ...
Thanks for the great articles and for the link. You have a wealth of information.
Cheers,
Mark
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