The last safari – The final chapter of Inhabitants of the Microworld

Dear followers, subscribers and, above all, friends of Science into Images.

Today we are publishing the LAST VIDEO of our series Inhabitants of the Microworld: THE LAST SAFARI.

During these two months we have shared 46 TRIPS TO THE TINY WORLD, to that world that we can hardly see with the naked eye, and it has been a real pleasure that you have wanted to join us.

It has been TWO MONTHS of intense work and great joy. The joy of reading your comments on each of the videos; the joy of seeing the involvement of some of you, who have even extended the brief information in the videos through explanations on the social networks; the joy of seeing how you have shared our content with your contacts, extending the network of friends; the joy of seeing some of the media echoing our work; and, above all, the joy of knowing that you have also shared our joy.

From now on, our YouTube channel will be a little more relaxed. We will no longer publish a daily video. But that does not mean that we will stop publishing.

We are preparing a NEW VIDEO SERIES that we will start to share with you soon and we will talk about it in more detail in a few days.

In the meantime, every week we will continue to publish NEW COLORING BOOKLETS on our website Science into Images so that children and not so young people can continue to learn and enjoy the wonderful beings that inhabit this almost invisible world.

By the way, don’t miss the one dedicated to us by Vanessa Linares (you know she’s our headline artist), which we’ll be publishing this afternoon. It’s called “SCIENCE INTO IMAGES. A day of work with us” and it explains how we work to offer you our contents about the micro world. We hope you like it as much as the ones we have published so far.

So this is not a farewell but a “see you later”. We hope that you won’t leave us during this short period of preparation and that you will continue to share the contents of Science into Images. The more we are in this community, the more visibility we can give to those organisms that are so important for the functioning of all ecosystems. At Science into Images we believe they deserve it.

A big hug, folks.

SEE YOU SOON!

Jara and Rubén / Science into Images.