Stickers for the Strong
Are you KneeDeep in Climate Work?
Reward yourself with a sticker…
Are you grieving for the planet?
Highlight your inner resilience with a sticker…
Holding a resilience workshop or climate class?
Share these rewards…
How to Get Them
Stickers come 9 to sheet including all three types.
We will snail mail you 1-18 stickers for free (more for a modest donation).
Email your request to editor@kneedeeptimes.org
Got a Better Idea?
Looking for great new images or art, or new KneeDeep slogans, for our stickers. Please share your ideas!
Other Recent Posts
Building Sustainably with Mass Timber
This building method can help clear forests of smaller trees that burn easily while also reducing the carbon footprint of new homes and offices.
Hardscapes That Filter Rain
Heavy rain can overwhelm storm drains and pollute waterways, but materials like permeable pavements help filter runoff and prevent flooding.
The Gray-Green Alchemy of Baycrete
Baycrete is a nature-based hybrid of concrete, shell, and sand designed to attract oysters and create shallow water reefs in SF Bay.
Tools Tweak Beaver Dams
Humans find ways to co-exist with beavers, tweaking dams to prevent flooding and create more climate resilience.
Hopes and Fears for Sierra Snowpack
February’s drought and deluge confirms that uncertainty may be a given for California snowpack, western water supply, and wildfire risk.
Errands by E-Bike
Electric cargo bikes are climate-friendly car replacements for everyday activities, from taking the kids to school to grocery shopping.
A Rare Plant Tough Enough to Save the Future Bayshore
Sea-blite can thrive in adverse conditions, buffer shores from waves, hold sand and soil in place, and clamber up eroding cliffs.
ReaderBoard
Once a month we share reader announcements: jobs, events, reports, and more.
Reforming Rules to Speed Adaptation
Bay Conservation and Development Commission to vote early this year on amendments designed to expedite approval of climate projects.
Warner Chabot Shifts Gears
After 11 years at the helm of the Bay Area’s leading science institute, its leader moves back into the zone of policy influence.





