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22 October 2009 - 8:40pm
ode to the speesees
for the ‘chik’s & the ‘kid’s
across this here globe
we have a story to tell
so let it be told
and travel with us
to a country afar
where the cows are your friends
and a tuk tuk’s your car
where they grow and they pick
our cotton by hand
the farmers, their children
their beautiful land
so travel with us
and you will soon see
that you’re free to be you
and i’m free to be me
the knitting, the dyeing,
the printing is clean
the are sewn
by a wonderful team
and shipped here, each piece
with love and with care
from beginning to end
the process is fair
for the redwoods & ‘pup’s
on the land & the sea
take our hand lend your smile
and together we’ll be
just a part of the speesees
on this planet, this globe
do you have a story?
please let it be told.

the organic cotton farmers' children wave good-bye to us.
18 October 2009 - 1:15pm
speesees of the month
october 09 :: the ever-adaptable + resourceful american kestrel
in this day + age of booming population + bustling urban spaces, we can all stand to take a page or two from the book of the tiny but mighty american kestrel. this lovely little bird—a petit member of the falcon genus—has survived just swimmingly as we humans have encroached on the planet’s open space. the american kestrel looks at a power pole + sees a perch, spots a nook in the side of a building + makes a nest. remarkably, the kestrel never builds its own nests, instead making its home in man-made spaces or the nests of other speesees, which we think is a mighty neat + inspiring example of sustainability in the animal kingdom. kestrels, who mate for the long haul, often return to the same nests again + again after each migration.
roughly the size of an american robin, the kestrel is notable among other falcons for its unique hunting style. the small bird uses rapid wing strokes to hover above the ground while hunting for other small birds, mammals, lizards + insects. the species got its start in africa, + has been evolving + spreading around the globe for close to 2.5 million years. amazingly, the kestrel can thrive in the most diverse landscapes, from urban centers to forests + deserts.
speesees’ very own eliza jane bradley has a very special place in her heart for the american kestrel:: “growing up with a step-father who was a lover of wildlife + passionate falconer, he exposed to me what lovely little creatures these birds are. we would spend many sunny afternoons flying our kestrel, little wing, together. i was always so amazed when he would actually fly back to me!” eliza jane says. american kestrels, along with red-tailed hawks, that are most commonly used by apprentice falconers in north america.
eliza jane recently made the american kestrel a permanent part of her life by getting a tattoo of the bird on her arm, in loving remembrance of her late stepfather + her joyous experiences growing up with little wing.

