Lottery grant to help city develop nature access
Sunderland is among 40 areas nationally awarded money from the National Lottery Heritage Fund as part of the Nature Towns and Cities Programme.
Plans include a focus on boosting transport and linking community green spaces including the city's coastline and riverbanks.
Michael Mordey, leader of Sunderland City Council, said residents would be consulted in the coming weeks and months to help develop schemes.
Nature Towns and Cities is a partnership between Natural England, the National Trust and the National Lottery Heritage Fund.
Sunderland's council will also work with Durham Wildlife Trust and organisations from the voluntary sector as it looks to allocate the funding.
Measures are set to include new conservation and horticulture courses, ecological surveys for local Sites of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI), such Tunstall Hills and Claxheugh Rocks, and community grants.
Welcoming the funding, Mordey said the aims of the forthcoming projects were "all about improving our residents' access to nature and helping them to enjoy some of the fantastic greenspaces, coastline and riverbanks on their doorstep".
He added: "As we all know, getting out into the fresh air can really help us to clear our minds and take time for ourselves.
"So we'll be looking to work with residents and partners over the coming weeks and months to help us develop the plans further and make sure that we're making the most of this grant funding."
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Newsweek
3 hours ago
- Newsweek
Abandoned Dog Found Tied Up With Heartbreaking Note: 'Don't Want Him Back'
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. An abandoned dog, found tied up at the park with a note, landed in the right hands, despite the unfortunate circumstances. Erica Loring received a call from a neighbor who found a pup tethered at the local park. As someone who has fostered countless canines, Loring knew she needed to step in and help. She arrived to find the dog, Juniper, calmly lying on the sidewalk, tied to the park's entrance sign. He greeted her with happy tail wags and sniffs. The note read: "Just got him and it was too much for me. Nice dog. Can't keep him and the original owner doesn't want him back. Please help." Loring immediately took Juniper to the car, and he hopped in, no questions asked. She said in her June 27 Instagram video to the account @super_scooty that the dog seemed to be thrilled about driving in the car. It was as if he knew a better life was in his future. Screenshots from a June 27 Instagram video of a dog tied up to a park sign, left, and abandoned with a note, right. Screenshots from a June 27 Instagram video of a dog tied up to a park sign, left, and abandoned with a note, right. @super_scooty/Instagram However, because no one was available to be an immediate foster to Juniper, Loring brought him to the San Diego Humane Society. A dog in her home prevented her from taking him back to her place. "I knew the SD Humane Society is the best-possible no-kill shelter in the country," Loring told Newsweek via Instagram. "We have an amazing program here. I dropped him off, but I went to visit him every day." Every day since then, Loring came bearing doggy treats and smothering Juniper with love. She posted daily videos about the pup, cautious that he wouldn't slip through the cracks and be forgotten, but, soon enough, seven families expressed their interest in adopting him, Loring said. One family got matched with a different pit bull, which freed up space in a foster home and allowed Juniper to move in once his stray hold time expired. "Because the families came from various areas of the country, Oregon, Nevada, Utah, northern California, etc., we didn't know how long it would take to actually get people to come visit him," Loring said. "We decided to foster him while we figure out who was the perfect home for him." Within a week, Juniper's forever family came and adopted him. She said they absolutely adore him and his "big personality." Juniper has especially taken to the family's child, with the two being inseparable. Viewer Reactions The Instagram video, which reached almost 1 million views as of Tuesday, instantly left people heartbroken, but they applauded Loring's selfless and quick action. "Glad you took that horrible collar off he was left with," posted a viewer. Another added: "I'm sick of this world. What a sweet boy. I wish I could take all the animals." A third person commented: "Can you imagine if someone tied up a baby to a tree and left a note? To me, it's literally the same thing." Do you have funny and adorable videos or pictures of your pet you want to share? Send them to life@ with some details about your best friend, and they could appear in our Pet of the Week lineup.


Time Magazine
9 hours ago
- Time Magazine
The Unspoken Etiquette of Mourning on Social Media
When Molly Levine, 28, lost her father in the summer of 2023, 'life stopped.' Just weeks earlier, she had been dating, posting comedic TikToks, and balancing a high-stress product job at Google with sweaty nights out in New York. Now, she could barely get out of bed. She took leave from work and holed up with her family, surviving on chunks of chocolate babka she'd eat late at night, when everyone had cleared out of the family kitchen. Reading about death, finding meaning in memories, and searching for signs from the other side consumed her days. But another, more frivolous concern gnawed at her. 'After you lose someone, you have to immediately decide whether you're going to be one of those people who posts or not,' Levine says. 'And I know people say, 'There's no right way to grieve,' but on social media—it almost feels like there is.' What do you share? When do you share it? And is it bad if you don't post at all? These were the questions that tormented Levine in the weeks after her father's death. 'It feels silly,' she says. 'You're like, 'Is this what I'm really thinking about?' But you are.' Grief gone viral Jensen Moore, a journalism professor at The University of Oklahoma, studies how people grieve on social media. '[Millennials and Gen Z] post their breakfast. They post themselves on the toilet. They've done everything,' she says. 'So mourning online is just an extension of living their lives online for everyone to see.' Ten days after her father's passing, Levine crafted a 350-word caption to accompany a photo of her father to post on Instagram. Comments and DMs from her community poured in, offering their memories and condolences. But Levine, a social media savvy young millennial, knew the line between sharing and scaring. 'I really refined my message,' she says. 'I was very cognizant of how uncomfortable I could make other people.' As social media reshapes how we share—and grieve—there are many for whom public mourning still feels gauche, even offensive. Vogue editor Chloe Malle notably loathes mourning-by-emoji. 'An Instagram feed is just too public a platform for meaningful mourning,' she wrote in her 2014 essay, 'Why We Should Give Up Public Mourning on Social Media.' Yet, others are crucified for not posting quickly enough—like when 90210 fans attacked Jenny Garth for her silence after Luke Perry's death, or when the internet turned on the Friends cast for waiting days to acknowledge Matthew Perry's passing. In one of her studies, Moore examined how people self-police online grief. 'It used to be, you would never post a picture of someone grieving or a photo of the deceased,' Moore says. 'This generation is posting TikToks of themselves crying.' In 2013, the millennial 'funeral selfie' trend broke the internet, triggering a flood of commentary about the generation's perceived apathy and vanity. Over a decade later and the conversation still hasn't moved beyond moral panic. 'Do I have a photo with them? It's the first thing you think of when someone dies,' says Jay Bulger, a 43-year-old filmmaker from D.C. 'It's a mad scramble to post.' When Kobe Bryant died tragically in 2020, social media became one giant memorial. But mourners were criticized. 'Why are you sobbing online about a basketball player you didn't know?' Moore recalls the pushback. Public grief often reads as strategic—an invitation for sympathy, likes, or cultural proximity. Some call this new wave of mourning content 'performative grief,' says Moore. 'Because those likes can potentially earn you more followers, or in some cases, money.' But for those genuinely trying to express their loss, the online landscape can feel like a minefield: sincere grief is often met with suspicion, judgment, or the assumption that it's all for show. 'I have friends who've been very vocal with their grief, and people didn't know how to handle it,' Levine says. She recalls a conversation with friends, criticizing someone's post for being too raw, too unfiltered. 'People just don't know what to do with grief. We don't know how to talk about it without freaking people out.' Read More: When the Group Chat Replaces the Group There are practical reasons for grieving online, says Pelham Carter, a psychology professor at Birmingham City University. It spreads the word. It offers catharsis and connection. Engaging with a deceased person's profile can help sustain a bond beyond the grave. But every post, photo, or story risks transgressing invisible social landmines of what is and isn't acceptable. 'There are these very nuanced rules that are hard to navigate, because they are unwritten,' Carter explains. 'But you get a feeling for when there's been a breach in etiquette.' For Jack Irv, a 30-year-old actor who grew up in New York City, the entire production of grieving on social media 'feels exhibitionist.' In his early 20s, he was part of the city's graffiti scene, climbing up scaffoldings to spray paint with some of the city's best artists. But 'graffiti writers die all the time,' he says. It was the first time he saw his network mourning publicly. 'You get forced into action,' Irv explains. 'It's like proving who is closer. There's a competitive aspect.' Social media can breed competition and comparison, which extends to online grief, says Moore. 'Who's grieving better, who wrote the best eulogy, who posted the best photo, who was closest,' she says. Irv resents the tone of these posts—'It's like a long rambling story about the time they spilled making pasta together.' It feels cheap, he says, that intimacy gets flattened into a caption. Irv recalls in one instance, an acquaintance who was not especially close to the deceased, became the loudest mourner online. 'It made us all feel strange,' he says. Navigating grief's social hierarchy online can be fraught, Carter says. Posting too soon or too often can give the impression you were closer to the deceased than others believe you were. 'It's bumping yourself higher up in the hierarchy than people feel you should be,' says Carter. 'But it's very hard for us, especially in the throes of grief, to acknowledge that there are different forms of closeness.' Who gets to mourn online? In a 2022 study, Carter and co-author Rachel King found a striking disconnect: participants saw their own grief posts as genuine—but assumed others were just seeking attention. Most cited a 'genuine outpouring of grief' as their reason for posting. Yet they believed others were abusing the process. 'There was a hypocritical side,' Carter says. 'People assumed their grief was sincere—but others' were performative.' In 2019, Jennifer, 30, who asked that TIME not include her real name because of the sensitivity of the circumstance, lost a close friend to suicide. The loss sent shockwaves through her tightknit friend group. 'Privately, there were vulnerable conversations between friends where the grief felt real,' she recalls. 'But online, something shifted.' On Instagram, she says, the mourning felt curated. 'It felt more like perception management than actual grief.' In the weeks after her friend's death, unspoken rules emerged. 'The etiquette was: those closest to the deceased had the right to post, and their posts should be engaged with. If you weren't in the inner circle, the rule was: don't post,' she says. These rules were administered via cold shoulders and whispers. Digital anthropologist Crystal Abidin interviewed young people experiencing the first death of a friend to explore a core question: who gets to grieve, how, and why? She found the tension had less to do with competition between mourners and more to do with how grief was received by the inner circle. The young women in Abidin's study outlined unwritten rules: who gets to grieve first, who gets to grieve more, and what must stay private. Breaches often came down to timing—like posting before a partner or family member. On Facebook memorial pages, they didn't want the first post coming from a random friend. 'There's weight given to your tie to the deceased,' Abidin says. As consumers of the internet, 'we're savvy,' says linguist Korina Giaxoglou, author of A Narrative Approach to Social Media Mourning. 'Even at our most sincere, we still want our posts to reach and engage—that's what posting is.' But that doesn't make us hypocrites, she adds. 'You can want attention and still be fully present in your grief.' Read More: When TikTok Trends Send Kids to the Emergency Room In Western culture, open grief is often frowned upon, Giaxoglou says. There is an understanding that 'during the bereavement period you shouldn't seek attention.' But in other cultures, grief is communal. In the Asia Pacific region, where Abidin conducts much of her research, grieving loudly and publicly is 'how you show that you're a part of that community.' She says, 'It's not uncommon in some funerals to hire mourners whose jobs are to cry, because the louder the cries, the more it shows how loved this person was.' As younger generations move grief from bedrooms and chatrooms to public profiles, conversations around death are returning to the public square. 'As a community, we need to see these expressions in order to recover,' Giaxoglou says. 'Otherwise, it's like we're hiding our emotions.' A year later, Levine has developed a dark humor about grieving online. 'In some ways, if you don't post about your grief, it's like—did you even care?' she says with a smile. She remembers staring at her Instagram grid, wondering how to follow up a memorial post of her father: 'What's my re-entry going to be? I don't want to signal that I'm over it. I'll be grieving forever.' Years later, Levine is once again making funny videos on TikTok. 'I look back now, and wonder what changed where I was like, 'Okay, now I can post a sunset again.''


Tom's Guide
9 hours ago
- Tom's Guide
This underrated plant has filled my yard with color all summer — and it's ideal for container gardening
There's a little-known plant that I discovered just a few years ago, and now it's become one of my favorite plants that I add to my yard for summer color. While I always plant hydrangeas, lavender, and pelargoniums — as they are among my favorite flowers — I'm also going to be adding this pretty plant to my regular list of must-haves to enjoy in my garden. And surprisingly, this plant that I find exquisite is not spoken about as much in gardening circles as my other favorites, but I want to change all that. My latest favorite is Lantana camara. The Royal Horticultural Society describes it as an 'evergreen shrub with sometimes prickly stems bearing wrinkled, ovate leaves and terminal clusters of salver-shaped flowers 1 cm across.' I don't think the description does it justice, and when you see it for yourself, you'll understand why. I first came across it at a local yard sale, where a nearby plantsman was selling an array of delights at the front of his house. He'd left an honesty box for payments, and as the plant was unlabelled, I had no one to ask what it was. Then, after posting a picture of it on Instagram, a garden designer friend told me it was a Lantana camara. Although I'm all for asking garden friends for advice, if I needed to identify a plant today, I'd quickly take a snap of it and use one of the latest plant finder apps, like Palmstreet or Pl@ntNet, to discover what it was. Get instant access to breaking news, the hottest reviews, great deals and helpful tips. With a diameter of 12 inches across the top and 6.5 inches across the bottom, this 2-gallon pot is suitable for indoor and outdoor plants. It also comes with a saucer to prevent indoor or outdoor furniture becoming damaged with water marks. The pots feature an attractive vine design. Lantana camara is referred to as common lantana or 'Florida Flower', and it's a species of flowering plant in the verbena family that's native to the American tropics. It's a perennial shrub that typically grows to around 6.5 feet and can form dense thickets, but it can also be grown as an annual in locations that experience frosts. However, the downside of growing lantana is that it can be invasive in many areas, including Florida, Arizona, and Hawaii, which is why in these locations it's best grown in a container, which just happens to be my preference. The flowers are small and tubular, with each one having four petals, and they are arranged in clusters. The flowers come in red, yellow, white, pink and orange, although I favor the pink and yellow combo. Tutti fruityAlthough it's not obvious unless you rub the petals, the flowers have a tutti fruity smell, and there's even a variety that goes by the name — Lantana 'Calippo Tutti Frutti'. It's a tender evergreen shrub that grows to 18 inches. The Royal Horticultural Society states that its blooms 'emerge yellow, then change color to orange, then red, and finally pink as they age, with all colors appearing in a single flowerhead.' Lantanas are ideal if you're looking for a low-maintenance plant that will fill your borders and containers with color. I've stuck to using it as a container plant so far, but I'm tempted to plant it in my borders too. And apart from bringing color to your backyard they are a magnet for bees, butterflies and hummingbirds, and will reward you in droves. Growing conditions Lantana thrives in warm, sunny conditions and will tolerate heat, drought, and full sun, and it will keep flowering throughout the summer, rewarding you with colorful blooms. It will grow well in U.S. hardiness zones 7-11, but check the variety before you buy to see if this differs. Lantana prefers a well-draining, neutral soil and temperatures about 55°F, and will appreciate a humid environment and being kept moist. Plus, if the temperature stays above 55°F year round, you can expect it to keep blooming too. However, be careful if you have pets, as Lantana is toxic to dogs and cats. 1. Lantana will do best where it can get six hours of sunlight per day. 2. Keep it well watered and don't let the soil dry out. 3. Grow it in a container in tropical and subtropical regions to avoid it becoming invasive. It will prefer a pot with restricted root growth rather than a container that's oversized, so ensure you add a well-draining soil. 4. Deadhead the spent blooms to encourage further blooms.