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Pulitzer Prize editorial cartoonist Signe Wilkinson spread her wings and created Family Tree, allowing her to write and draw outside the left/right, headline-driven box of daily editorial cartooning. A contemporary family comic strip, it chronicles the humorous challenges that Ames, Maggie, Twig and Teddy encounter when trying to live "green" and with environmental purpose.
© Signe Wilkinson - All Rights Reserved.
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Comments (4) (Please sign in to comment)
AshburnStadium said, 6 months ago
The Philadelphia area has an overabundance of deer. Valley Forge National Historical Park is a great example.
When I lived just north of Philly, dead deer carcasses alongside the road were a daily occurrence.
Now that I live near Hershey, I’ve seen 4 dead deer carcasses along the road in the 2 years that I have lived here. The rednecks that live here complain that there are no deer to hunt.
cgresq said, 6 months ago
deer in the Northwest are like mice they’re everywhere. We used to leave our trampoline up all year and in winter the deer used it as a tent to sleep under out of the snow usually no less than 5 or 6 of em, in our backyard . gotta love that country living.
pgates4 said, 6 months ago
You think you have problems in the East. Try the moose problems in Alaska. When moose are in the neighborhoods in Anchorage, people bring the dogs in and stay indoorsl! These creatures not only eat your flowers- they charge you! And they are huge!
georgelcsmith said, 6 months ago
There are plenty of deer here in South Texas. During the worst of the drought, they were eating plants that they’re not supposed to like and even some that had been sprayed with deer repellent. They change where they sleep every night, but I’ve had them in my wooded front yard and in the woods in the far back. The’re welcome to my grass, but not my good shrubs and trees. They usually wait beside the road for cars to go by, but one just stood his ground and made me stop the other day. He must not have been a local