This design has proven to be a crowd favorite. Order your merch today and enjoy this message of the importance of pollinators everyday.
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One of my most popular cards. Pollinator Power features color illustrations of several midwest pollinators among black & white native wildflowers.
Who will be able to resist a smile when they receive this avalanche of critters leaping, hopping, running, slithering, and flying across the road to say thank you.
We don't send thank you cards enuf. Don't be caught short.
These come in a four-pack, as do all the other cards.
We don't say thank you enough. Let these wetland creatures say if for you in nine different languages.
Oh, the otter.
This is another fan fave. This card is multi-purpose, you can use it to say, "Hey, thank you,' or, "Hey, I'm so sorry your lizard died," or "Hey, congrats on the new peepling."
There are few things cuter than a screech owl. This little guy has been a fan favorite ever since I introduced this card.
These wood duck babies are on the verge of jumping from the safety of their nest high in a birch tree for the first time.
This hardy woodland native is a sure sign spring is in full swing.
Ruby-throated hummingbirds are all around us during the warm months, we simply need to be quiet, pay attention, and plant plants they prefer to nectar on in our gardens. This brilliant scarlet Cardinal flower, Lobelia cardinalis is a hummingbird magnet - and deer candy, watch out!
Birds fill the world with their song and provide a soundtrack to our outdoor lives.
The happy frog can convey many sentiments; thank you, hello, thinking of you, you light up my life.
A cheerful watercolor image on the front, blank inside for your own message.
Monarchs are an integral part of the circle of life, contributing greatly to the health of our planet and its plants. It's easy to help these beautiful creatures by planting a few different plants common milkweed is used as a nursery to hatch monarch eggs, and native wildflowers of all types provide food once the baby monarchs take flight.
Wild canaries love echinacea and will flock to your backyard stands of this beautiful wildflower.
These illustrations are originally from my life spent as an illustrator telling stories about the natural world.
This big fuzzy lump used to sleep on my front porch. One day I snapped his photo after I had the gall to wake him up. This was the look he gave me as he awoke.
He also speaks several different languages.
Few things are more charming than seeing a line of painted turtles basking together, nose to tail on logs in wetlands.
Beauty is everywhere when we slow down long enough to see it. I used to live across the street from a marsh. I spent many happy hours there just looking. The dragonflies and damselflies never minded my presence.
This illustration is from my life as an educational outdoor interpretive sign maker. It shows the beautiful plants above and their corresponding roots below ground, including chipmunk dens.
Peace, what else is there to say? Our planet needs it. This is hand-lettered, peace is included in many different languages around the outside edge.
Audubon hired me to create art for a luncheon to thank their bird volunteers. I was given carte blanche to do what I wanted. This little drawing is the result.
Loki not only dreams of floating, but I suspect he also dreams of crunchy slaty things - don't we all? Truth be told, he'd have no idea what to do with a crunchy, salty, squeaky thing if he caught one.
Loki spends lots of time laying flat on his fluffy back all over the house. I think he dreams of floating.
Don't tell the other two, we're not supposed to have a favorite, but...this guy. Loki is the best purr kitty and just a big hunka-hunka purring love.
This art was created by tearing paper.
Leo, who really isn't ferocious anymore, began his life in a horse barn at Arlington Park Race Track in Illinois. Today he is quite elderly and spends most of his time dreaming of days gone by when he ran our former 'hood.
This art was created by tearing paper.