Roger and Gail Greene have started to see something a little funny through the window of their home: A flock of robins ...
The Chengdu Snow Village—a newly opened destination in China’s southwestern Sichuan province—had attracted tourists over the ...
“Most precipitation will fall in the Far West, Southwest, Rockies, and eastern U.S., especially Tennessee and surrounding ...
January 2025 was the hottest on record—a whole 1.7°C above pre-industrial levels. If many climate-watchers expected the world ...
Currently, 79% of Idaho lands are abnormally dry or are in drought, the report said. Drought conditions improved last month in western Idaho in response to the high snowpack percentages at the ...
The Inland Empire and Orange County had received less than a half-inch of rain through mid-January, and that total was ...
A dog died ‘hungry’, ‘frightened,’ and ‘in pain,’ after being left alone in a house in Sheffield for over a week, heard a ...
And since dry January is over and some people might have given up on their new year's fitness resolutions. Or if you're having trouble following through on your goal, it's not too late to get back ...
Dry January may be over – but that doesn’t necessarily ... Pub profits decline during January as Brits look to avoid alcohol (Getty Images/iStockphoto) "If you go back to drinking regularly ...
“Dry January” is over for those who embraced the self-imposed 31-day alcohol ban to mark the beginning of the new year. But the trend could continue, according to a nationwide poll.
DRY January is finally over. And if you decided to ban booze last month, your body and mind will be thanking you big time, especially if “silly season” was a little ­sillier than planned.
Dry January may be over – but that doesn’t necessarily mean everyone should go back to business as usual. Every new year, millions of people across the UK commit to a month of abstinence from drinking ...