The Mottley Law Firm - April 2026

PRST STD US POSTAGE PAID BOISE, ID PERMIT 411

8001 Franklin Farms Drive, Suite 125 Richmond, Virginia 23229

INSIDE THIS ISSUE

MottleyLawFirm.com | (804) 823-2011

1

Purpose Over Pay

2

Embracing the Gift of Time After the Kids Fly

The Case for Real Conversations

3

Courtroom Chuckles

Crab Rangoon Mac and Cheese

4

In the Footsteps of Earth’s Greatest Journeys

FOLLOW THE HERD LET WILDLIFE MIGRATIONS PLAN YOUR NEXT TRIP

Great Journeys Overhead An adventure that’s for the birds, the flamingo flight in Tanzania is a colorful sky show unlike anything else. The flocks take to the air from June to September and January to March, following mighty rains. Go nocturnal in November as millions of fruit bats hang from trees and flutter in the dark searching for snacks. These night flyers put on an eerie display at dusk in Zambia every year and may change your mind about the critters.

Are you planning your next vacation but don’t know where to start? Why not try following the herd? Every year, animals all over the world hit the road, sky, or sea for impressive migrations, and you can get a front row seat to nature’s big show. From massive groups of wildebeests crossing the Serengeti to flocks of flamingos turning the Tanzania sky pink, these seasonal journeys are one-of- a-kind experiences for your bucket list.

Nature’s Grand Processions If you want to go big, the Great Migration across the Serengeti is one of the largest annual animal voyages on the planet. Thundering groups of wildebeests, zebras, and gazelles can be spotted from July to August as they search for water and food. Travel to Sri Lanka’s Minneriya and Kaudulla National Parks if you want to snap a photo of a pachyderm. Between July and October, hundreds of Asian elephants meet up there for an ancient tradition called “The Gathering.”

Voyages at Sea Set a course for the high seas to witness the longest

migration of any mammals as thousands of giant humpback whales swim across the planet. They cruise from the coasts of South Africa and South America to the warm waters of the Pacific and make stops in the icy seas of Antarctica. Though they come in much smaller packages, the trek of sea turtles to their nesting beaches has been an epic sight for over 100 million years. You can see them swim from the Indian Ocean to the shores of Sodwana Bay in South Africa before they lay their eggs.

4 | (804) 823-2011

Made with FlippingBook Ebook Creator