
Hailey Haymond
Articles
-
2 days ago |
washingtonpost.com | Nicolas Rivero |Allyson Chiu |Hailey Haymond |Nicolas Ortega
You can make every day Earth Day with these tiny climate actions (washingtonpost.com) You can make every day Earth Day with these tiny climate actions By Nicolás Rivero; Allyson Chiu; Hailey Haymond; Nicolás Ortega 2025042209004500 Climate change is a big, global problem — which can make anything you do about it seem incredibly insignificant. But sometimes, doing one tiny thing can help you feel a little less helpless and hopeless.
-
Oct 29, 2024 |
msn.com | Michael Coren |Alice Li |Stella Kalinina |Hailey Haymond
Continue reading More for You
-
Oct 29, 2024 |
washingtonpost.com | Michael Coren |Alice Li |Stella Kalinina |Hailey Haymond
Climate CoachWhy you just mightfall in love with mothsColumn by Michael J. Coren, Alice Li, Stella Kalinina and Hailey HaymondOctober 29, 2024 at 6:00 a.m. EDT9 minSorry, a summary is not available for this article at this time. Please try again later. As humans drop off to sleep, the invisible world of moths comes to life. Across the planet, billions of the insects take flight on their nocturnal errands.
-
Aug 11, 2024 |
washingtonpost.com | Hailey Haymond |Dino Grandoni |Kasha Patel |Emily Sabens
Dino GrandoniHey! How was camping? Kasha PatelGreat! Saw 🐻, 🐦, and 🔥+✈️!Dino Grandoni🔥+✈️?? Fireflies? Kasha PatelYeah, I couldn’t find an emoji for it 😥By Hailey Haymond, Dino Grandoni, Kasha Patel and Emily SabensIllustrations by Rafael VaronaAugust 11, 2024 at 6:00 a.m.Butterflies, beavers, panda bears — open your phone and you’ll find all sorts of cute and cuddly creatures in the library of emojis you can text your friends.
-
Jul 29, 2024 |
washingtonpost.com | Hailey Haymond |Emma Kumer
Welcome to the bird Olympics, where we try to figure out the avian world’s fastest fliers. If you think you already know the answer — peregrine falcon — you’d be incorrect. At 240 mph, the peregrine’s downward swoop holds the record for the fastest velocity in the animal kingdom. But when flying horizontally, the falcon moves at just 68 mph. One could argue that the peregrine falcon isn’t good at flying so much as it’s good at falling.
Try JournoFinder For Free
Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.
Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →