I took these photos from a suspension bridge several hundred feet up in the air—what do you see when you look at them? Last week, I had a chance to co-lead a high school camping trip in Indonesia. One of our guides on the trip was an ecologist named Diego, a burly guy built like a fridge with a sleeve of colorful tattoos, an Indiana Jones hat, and a giant machete that was great for both bushwhacking and cutting apples. On the first night, he gave us a brief overview on the history of forests.
What do you see?
What do you see?
What do you see?
I took these photos from a suspension bridge several hundred feet up in the air—what do you see when you look at them? Last week, I had a chance to co-lead a high school camping trip in Indonesia. One of our guides on the trip was an ecologist named Diego, a burly guy built like a fridge with a sleeve of colorful tattoos, an Indiana Jones hat, and a giant machete that was great for both bushwhacking and cutting apples. On the first night, he gave us a brief overview on the history of forests.