Have an excellent and amazing and wonderful Monday, SuperForesters in SuperForestland!
Panda bear kisses for your little noses!
Love,
Jackson
p.s. Like this drawing? Want your very own? Here’s the pdf: panda bear kisses
A Catalogue Of Sustainable Achievements

First, a big thank you to all you SuperForesters who’ve make me feel so welcome. What a treat!
Second, check out Michelle Stitzlein, who makes beautiful art pieces out of “discarded piano keys, broken china, license plates, rusty tin cans, electrical wire, bottlecaps, and other miscellaneous items.” Wow! What most people would see as worthless junk, Michelle sees as valuable,wonderful supplies for a bigger picture.
I think that in any situation it’s worth taking a step back and trying to see things in a different light. This can apply to material things, like broken china as a piece of a butterfly’s wing, or to things that are of an emotional, spiritual nature. Often times we get caught up in trying to measure worth and analyzing every detail, every tiny piece of a situation that we forget to consider what those pieces can create. Things that look like worthless junk can in fact turn into smaller pieces of a picture that’s leading you to an ultimate happy ending/beginning.
Think about it!
Love,
Amy
How to make new crayons out of old crayons:
Step one: Get a bunch of old crayons and de-wrapper ‘em.
Step two: Place crayons in baking tray and bake at 350ยบ for 10 minutes, or until all are melted together into one large crayon-mass.
Step three: While said crayon-mass is still warm, use a cookie cutter of your choice to cut it into fun shapes.
Step four: give fun shapes out to all your friends!
Thanks to boingboing for the tip via Daily Danny.
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