Direkt zum Inhalt

Laxaþjóð | A Salmon Nation

Unsere Beziehung zur Natur definiert nicht nur unsere Geschichte, sondern prägt auch unsere Zukunft. Doch unter der Oberfläche der Fjorde Islands droht eine Methode der industriellen Fischzucht einen der letzten verbliebenen Orte der Wildnis in Europa zu zerstören. „Laxaþjóð | A Salmon Nation“ erzählt die Geschichte von Island, das durch sein Land und seine Gewässer vereint ist. Und von dem Einfluss einer Community, die diesen besonderen Ort und seine wilden Tiere schützen möchte, die entscheidend zu seiner Identität beigetragen haben.

Erfahre mehr

Versandinformation

Wir tun unser Bestes, um Bestellungen innerhalb von 1-2 Werktagen zu bearbeiten und zu versenden (montags bis freitags, außer an Feiertagen). Wir bitten dich, sofern möglich, den Standardversand zu wählen, um unsere Auswirkungen auf die Umwelt zu minimieren. Bei Fragen zu deiner Bestellung steht unser Kundenservice jederzeit bereit.

Weitere Details

Rücksendung

Unsicher bei der Auswahl der Größe? Du kannst dich nicht für eine Jacke entscheiden? Unser Kundenservice ist hier, um zu helfen - je weniger unnötiger Versand, desto besser. Wir haben kein Zeitlimit für Rücksendungen und akzeptieren sowohl Produkte aus der aktuelle Saison als auch aus der vergangen Saison.

Wie funktioniert das Rücksenden? Artikel zurücksenden Kundenservice

Melde dich an

Um Produkthighlights, spannende Stories, Informationen über Aktivismus, Veranstaltungen und mehr zu erhalten.

Backyard Corridors: What Obstructs Animal Movement in Your Neighborhood?

 /  14.12.2009 3 Min. Lesezeit  /  Activism

DSCN8281 When we talk about Freedom to Roam it's impossible to make an argument for wildlife corridors without mentioning the obstacles that block an animal's ability to go where it has to go in order to survive. The obstructions we often cite include housing sprawl, energy and resource extraction, population growth, expanding urban areas, and highways and freeways – pretty large scale stuff. On the Backyard Corridor level however there are a myriad of smaller obstacles that must be taken into account as well. Hence, this week's question:

What obstructs animal movement in your neighborhood?

Please share your observations in the comments on our blog, The Cleanest Line, or on Patagonia’s Facebook page. Unfortunately, the stories about these obstacles typically aren't pretty, as Martha Sherrill illustrates below. [Wildlife corridor sign in Central Park, New York. Photo: Tom Skeele] 

Turtle Blues
by Martha Sherrill

I’m not sure when the turtle discovered our vernal pond. One day I noticed his head sticking out of the water – slim, pointy, a completely different shape from all the frogs’ broad heads.

He panicked easily, was shyer than the frogs. For a month or two, he spent his days basking in the sun on a mud island in the middle of the pond. He was yards away, protected by water, but if I moved toward the pond’s edge, he plunged in with a loud splash. Ker-plunk. I began watching him through binoculars from the kitchen window instead.

And I Googled him. He was a Painted Turtle, according to the New England field guides, sometimes called “sun turtle” for their love of basking. He had a red-orange throat – and a thin stripe of the same color was visible along the perimeter of his glossy dark green carapace.

I wondered where he’d come from. I wondered if he had a mate, or wanted one. He was a mere seven inches long, but he had won some kind of unseen conquest against the frogs and ducks for the mud island – and had created a stronghold there. The only thing that seemed to bother him was me.

Driving home one shadowy late afternoon, a truck swerved on the road in front of my car, then slowed way down.  I slowed too – just in time to see a painted turtle, about seven inches long, crossing the road. The truck had been careful and missed him.

I wasn’t far from our house, so I wondered. Was that him? Our turtle? When it was safe, I pulled the car over, about sixty feet ahead, letting a couple of cars behind me whiz by. They’d been on my tail and anxious to speed up.

Maybe I could carry him back to our pond, I thought. Or maybe I’d just put him somewhere safe. I turned my car around for a rescue mission. Returning to the spot in the road where he’d been crawling along so obliviously, I found him again – smashed, carapace shattered, face pressed flat into the choppy surface of the asphalt, a gory pool of blood seeping out of him.

It was too awful to look at. But I did anyway. It was the only time he let me get so close. My son was wailing in the car; I bent down over our shy friend and did too.

Für all unsere Produkte gilt unsere kompromisslose Garantie.

Kompromisslose Garantie

Wir übernehmen Verantwortung für unsere Auswirkungen.

Unser Fußabdruck

Wir unterstützen Klima- und Umweltschutzgruppen.

Besuche Patagonia Action Works

Wir schenken deiner Bekleidung neues Leben.

Worn Wear

Alle Gewinne fließen in die Bekämpfung der Klimakrise.

Erfahre mehr über unser Engagement
Beliebte Suchanfragen