Pudukkottai, Tamil Nadu
Conservation Tourism
Bird of the Day: Shaheen Falcon
Bird of the Day: Rufous-necked Hornbill
Bird of the Day: Cinereous Tit
Bird of the Day: Greater Spotted Eagle
Bird of the Day: Verdin
Bird of the Day: Grey-headed Warbler
Bird of the Day: Great Slaty Woodpecker
Bird of the Day: Saffron Finch
juvenile – Parque del Acueducto, Cali, Colombia
Bird of the Day: Collared Falconet
Bird of the Day: Hoopoe
Bird of the Day: Golden-hooded Tanager

Gallon Jug, Belize
Pomology, Diet & Trade

More than half of the fresh fruit and almost a third of the fresh vegetables Americans buy now come from other countries. Credit Jens Mortensen for The New York Times; Styled by Mariana Vera
David Karp, no not that David Karp, is in our distant memory recalled as The Fruit Detective, and we had lost track of him until today. Thankfully, he is still pomologizing:
Most of America’s Fruit Is Now Imported. Is That a Bad Thing?
It’s obvious to anyone who visits an American supermarket in winter — past displays brimming with Chilean grapes, Mexican berries and Vietnamese dragon fruit — that foreign farms supply much of our produce.
Although local, seasonal and farm-to-table are watchwords for many consumers, globalization has triumphed in the produce aisle. Credit Jens Mortensen for The New York Times
Imports have increased steadily for decades, but the extent of the change may be surprising: More than half of the fresh fruit and almost a third of the fresh vegetables Americans buy now come from other countries.
Although local, seasonal and farm-to-table are watchwords for many consumers, globalization has triumphed in the produce aisle. And despite the protectionist “America First” message coming from the Trump administration, the growth in imports appears likely to continue.
So this is an apt moment to examine how the shift happened, and what it portends — good or ill — for American consumers and farmers.
“I had no idea that more than half our fruit is imported, and it shocks me that this has happened so quickly,” said Michael Pollan, a professor of journalism at the University of California, Berkeley, whose best-selling books have analyzed the tensions between local and global food systems. Continue reading
Bird of the Day: White-throated Laughing Thrush
Bird of the Day: Brown Violetear
Bird of the Day: Oriental Pied Hornbill
Bird of the Day: Amazilia Hummingbird
Miraflores, Peru
















