diff --git a/source/_patterns/04-components/timeline/timeline.twig b/source/_patterns/04-components/timeline/timeline.twig
index bae16a6a16a40df58d6e4ffac7bcd9b5822cdb8d..97c60bb4f3a1e51368e1df0e9443509acb83f1ff 100644
--- a/source/_patterns/04-components/timeline/timeline.twig
+++ b/source/_patterns/04-components/timeline/timeline.twig
@@ -1,17 +1,17 @@
 {% set modifier_classes -%}
-    uw-timeline vertical-timeline vertical-{{ style }}  {{ modifier_classes }}
+    uw-timeline vertical-timeline vertical-{{ timeline.style }}  {{ modifier_classes }}
 {%- endset %}
 
 <ol class="{{ modifier_classes }}">
-    {% for year, timeline_item in timeline_items %}
+    {% for year, years in timeline.items %}
 
         <li>
             <span class="timeline-year">{{ year }}</span>
             <ol>
 
-                {% for month, days in timeline_item %}
+                {% for month, months in years %}
 
-                    {% if style == 'month' %}
+                    {% if timeline.style == 'month' %}
                         <li>
                             {% set date = year ~ "-" ~ month ~ "-1" %}
 
@@ -19,9 +19,9 @@
                             <ol>
                     {% endif %}
 
-                    {% for day in days %}
+                    {% for days in months %}
 
-                        {% for entry in day %}
+                        {% for entry in days %}
 
                             <li class="timeline-info">
                                 {% if entry.image %}
@@ -35,7 +35,7 @@
 
                     {% endfor %}
 
-                    {% if style == 'month' %}
+                    {% if timeline.style == 'month' %}
                             </ol>
                         </li>
                     {% endif %}
diff --git a/source/_patterns/04-components/timeline/timeline.yml b/source/_patterns/04-components/timeline/timeline.yml
index 37545d5f01681bac77588bbd4eaee4d5b1b2e760..7240904e4aca16d212366139e5660d895751de58 100644
--- a/source/_patterns/04-components/timeline/timeline.yml
+++ b/source/_patterns/04-components/timeline/timeline.yml
@@ -1,227 +1,109 @@
 ---
-style: 'month'
-timeline_items:
-  1966:
-    6:
-      8:
-        -
-          headline: 'June 8, 1966'
-          content: 'The Polyphemus moths have begun to emerge from their cocoons - 7 females and 2 males emerge in one day. I put the females into 3 separate mating boxes and leave them by an open window so that they can release their pheromones. By 1 am, they have called in a couple of male moths. I mate two of the females with wild males.'
-      9:
-        -
-          headline: 'June 9, 1966'
-          content: 'I release all the moths except one of the pregnant Polyphemus moths which I keep in a paper bag to lay her eggs.'
-          image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_9.jpg?itok=9i7qSooF'
-      11:
-        -
-          headline: 'June 10-11, 1966'
-          content: 'The female Polyphemus has laid a total of 103 eggs. Half of these eggs are now in the Ecology Lab under modified temperature and humidity conditions. As a control measure, the other half of the eggs have been placed in a natural area, their habitat was not modified in any way so that they are subject to natural conditions.'
-          image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_10.jpg?itok=rZoYiTP_'
-      13:
-        -
-          headline: 'June 13, 1966'
-          content: 'A total of 10 males and 1 female Cecropia Moths have emerged, which is a stark contrast to the sex ratio of the Polyphemus moths. I will attempt to mate the female tonight using the same method as the Polyphemus moths. I will also be releasing the males tonight, but I have tagged them with small stickers to prevent inbreeding should they find their way back to the female through her pheromones.'
-          image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_13.jpg?itok=-TIDW7D8'
-      16:
-        -
-          headline: 'June 16 - 18, 1966'
-          content: 'Successfully mated a Cecropia moth at 2:40 am on June16th, and over the next 2 days she laid 153 eggs into a paper bag.  However, she presented odd behaviour while laying eggs, and laid thick bundles of 10-20 eggs on her legs rather than on the bag. Usually a female will lay groups of 3 eggs randomly, and never on her own body. I removed them from her and pulled apart the eggs before the substrate used to stick eggs to leaves completely dried. However I do not know if I have accidentally damaged any eggs in the process, despite my carefulness. This will be interesting to observe once the caterpillars begin to hatch in 10-14 days. '
-          image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_16.jpg?itok=18idxfuY'
+timeline:
+  style: 'month'
+  items:
+    1966:
+      6:
+        8:
+          -
+            headline: 'June 8, 1966'
+            content: 'The Polyphemus moths have begun to emerge from their cocoons - 7 females and 2 males emerge in one day. I put the females into 3 separate mating boxes and leave them by an open window so that they can release their pheromones. By 1 am, they have called in a couple of male moths. I mate two of the females with wild males.'
+        9:
+          -
+            headline: 'June 9, 1966'
+            content: 'I release all the moths except one of the pregnant Polyphemus moths which I keep in a paper bag to lay her eggs.'
+            image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_9.jpg?itok=9i7qSooF'
+        11:
+          -
+            headline: 'June 10-11, 1966'
+            content: 'The female Polyphemus has laid a total of 103 eggs. Half of these eggs are now in the Ecology Lab under modified temperature and humidity conditions. As a control measure, the other half of the eggs have been placed in a natural area, their habitat was not modified in any way so that they are subject to natural conditions.'
+            image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_10.jpg?itok=rZoYiTP_'
+        13:
+          -
+            headline: 'June 13, 1966'
+            content: 'A total of 10 males and 1 female Cecropia Moths have emerged, which is a stark contrast to the sex ratio of the Polyphemus moths. I will attempt to mate the female tonight using the same method as the Polyphemus moths. I will also be releasing the males tonight, but I have tagged them with small stickers to prevent inbreeding should they find their way back to the female through her pheromones.'
+            image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_13.jpg?itok=-TIDW7D8'
+        16:
+          -
+            headline: 'June 16 - 18, 1966'
+            content: 'Successfully mated a Cecropia moth at 2:40 am on June16th, and over the next 2 days she laid 153 eggs into a paper bag.  However, she presented odd behaviour while laying eggs, and laid thick bundles of 10-20 eggs on her legs rather than on the bag. Usually a female will lay groups of 3 eggs randomly, and never on her own body. I removed them from her and pulled apart the eggs before the substrate used to stick eggs to leaves completely dried. However I do not know if I have accidentally damaged any eggs in the process, despite my carefulness. This will be interesting to observe once the caterpillars begin to hatch in 10-14 days. '
+            image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_16.jpg?itok=18idxfuY'
 
-    7:
-      8:
-        -
-          headline: 'June 8, 1966'
-          content: 'The Polyphemus moths have begun to emerge from their cocoons - 7 females and 2 males emerge in one day. I put the females into 3 separate mating boxes and leave them by an open window so that they can release their pheromones. By 1 am, they have called in a couple of male moths. I mate two of the females with wild males.'
-      9:
-        -
-          headline: 'June 9, 1966'
-          content: 'I release all the moths except one of the pregnant Polyphemus moths which I keep in a paper bag to lay her eggs.'
-          image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_9.jpg?itok=9i7qSooF'
-      10:
-        -
-          headline: 'June 10-11, 1966'
-          content: 'The female Polyphemus has laid a total of 103 eggs. Half of these eggs are now in the Ecology Lab under modified temperature and humidity conditions. As a control measure, the other half of the eggs have been placed in a natural area, their habitat was not modified in any way so that they are subject to natural conditions.'
-          image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_10.jpg?itok=rZoYiTP_'
-      13:
-        -
-          headline: 'June 13, 1966'
-          content: 'A total of 10 males and 1 female Cecropia Moths have emerged, which is a stark contrast to the sex ratio of the Polyphemus moths. I will attempt to mate the female tonight using the same method as the Polyphemus moths. I will also be releasing the males tonight, but I have tagged them with small stickers to prevent inbreeding should they find their way back to the female through her pheromones.'
-          image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_13.jpg?itok=-TIDW7D8'
-      16:
-        -
-          headline: 'June 16 - 18, 1966'
-          content: 'Successfully mated a Cecropia moth at 2:40 am on June16th, and over the next 2 days she laid 153 eggs into a paper bag.  However, she presented odd behaviour while laying eggs, and laid thick bundles of 10-20 eggs on her legs rather than on the bag. Usually a female will lay groups of 3 eggs randomly, and never on her own body. I removed them from her and pulled apart the eggs before the substrate used to stick eggs to leaves completely dried. However I do not know if I have accidentally damaged any eggs in the process, despite my carefulness. This will be interesting to observe once the caterpillars begin to hatch in 10-14 days. '
-          image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_16.jpg?itok=18idxfuY'
+      7:
+        8:
+          -
+            headline: 'June 8, 1966'
+            content: 'The Polyphemus moths have begun to emerge from their cocoons - 7 females and 2 males emerge in one day. I put the females into 3 separate mating boxes and leave them by an open window so that they can release their pheromones. By 1 am, they have called in a couple of male moths. I mate two of the females with wild males.'
+        9:
+          -
+            headline: 'June 9, 1966'
+            content: 'I release all the moths except one of the pregnant Polyphemus moths which I keep in a paper bag to lay her eggs.'
+            image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_9.jpg?itok=9i7qSooF'
+        10:
+          -
+            headline: 'June 10-11, 1966'
+            content: 'The female Polyphemus has laid a total of 103 eggs. Half of these eggs are now in the Ecology Lab under modified temperature and humidity conditions. As a control measure, the other half of the eggs have been placed in a natural area, their habitat was not modified in any way so that they are subject to natural conditions.'
+            image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_10.jpg?itok=rZoYiTP_'
+        13:
+          -
+            headline: 'June 13, 1966'
+            content: 'A total of 10 males and 1 female Cecropia Moths have emerged, which is a stark contrast to the sex ratio of the Polyphemus moths. I will attempt to mate the female tonight using the same method as the Polyphemus moths. I will also be releasing the males tonight, but I have tagged them with small stickers to prevent inbreeding should they find their way back to the female through her pheromones.'
+            image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_13.jpg?itok=-TIDW7D8'
+        16:
+          -
+            headline: 'June 16 - 18, 1966'
+            content: 'Successfully mated a Cecropia moth at 2:40 am on June16th, and over the next 2 days she laid 153 eggs into a paper bag.  However, she presented odd behaviour while laying eggs, and laid thick bundles of 10-20 eggs on her legs rather than on the bag. Usually a female will lay groups of 3 eggs randomly, and never on her own body. I removed them from her and pulled apart the eggs before the substrate used to stick eggs to leaves completely dried. However I do not know if I have accidentally damaged any eggs in the process, despite my carefulness. This will be interesting to observe once the caterpillars begin to hatch in 10-14 days. '
+            image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_16.jpg?itok=18idxfuY'
 
-    8:
       8:
-        -
-          headline: 'aug 8, 1966'
-          content: 'The Polyphemus moths have begun to emerge from their cocoons - 7 females and 2 males emerge in one day. I put the females into 3 separate mating boxes and leave them by an open window so that they can release their pheromones. By 1 am, they have called in a couple of male moths. I mate two of the females with wild males.'
-      9:
-        -
-          headline: 'aug 9, 1966'
-          content: 'I release all the moths except one of the pregnant Polyphemus moths which I keep in a paper bag to lay her eggs.'
-          image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_9.jpg?itok=9i7qSooF'
-      10:
-        -
-          headline: 'aug 10-11, 1966'
-          content: 'The female Polyphemus has laid a total of 103 eggs. Half of these eggs are now in the Ecology Lab under modified temperature and humidity conditions. As a control measure, the other half of the eggs have been placed in a natural area, their habitat was not modified in any way so that they are subject to natural conditions.'
-          image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_10.jpg?itok=rZoYiTP_'
-      13:
-        -
-          headline: 'aug 13, 1966'
-          content: 'A total of 10 males and 1 female Cecropia Moths have emerged, which is a stark contrast to the sex ratio of the Polyphemus moths. I will attempt to mate the female tonight using the same method as the Polyphemus moths. I will also be releasing the males tonight, but I have tagged them with small stickers to prevent inbreeding should they find their way back to the female through her pheromones.'
-          image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_13.jpg?itok=-TIDW7D8'
-      16:
-        -
-          headline: 'aug 16 - 18, 1966'
-          content: 'Successfully mated a Cecropia moth at 2:40 am on June16th, and over the next 2 days she laid 153 eggs into a paper bag.  However, she presented odd behaviour while laying eggs, and laid thick bundles of 10-20 eggs on her legs rather than on the bag. Usually a female will lay groups of 3 eggs randomly, and never on her own body. I removed them from her and pulled apart the eggs before the substrate used to stick eggs to leaves completely dried. However I do not know if I have accidentally damaged any eggs in the process, despite my carefulness. This will be interesting to observe once the caterpillars begin to hatch in 10-14 days. '
-          image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_16.jpg?itok=18idxfuY'
-
-  1967:
-    1:
-      8:
-        -
-          headline: 'Jan 8, 1967'
-          content: 'The Polyphemus moths have begun to emerge from their cocoons - 7 females and 2 males emerge in one day. I put the females into 3 separate mating boxes and leave them by an open window so that they can release their pheromones. By 1 am, they have called in a couple of male moths. I mate two of the females with wild males.'
-      9:
-        -
-          headline: 'Jan 9, 1967'
-          content: 'I release all the moths except one of the pregnant Polyphemus moths which I keep in a paper bag to lay her eggs.'
-          image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_9.jpg?itok=9i7qSooF'
-      10:
-        -
-          headline: 'Jan 10-11, 1967'
-          content: 'The female Polyphemus has laid a total of 103 eggs. Half of these eggs are now in the Ecology Lab under modified temperature and humidity conditions. As a control measure, the other half of the eggs have been placed in a natural area, their habitat was not modified in any way so that they are subject to natural conditions.'
-          image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_10.jpg?itok=rZoYiTP_'
-      13:
-        -
-          headline: 'Jan 13, 1967'
-          content: 'A total of 10 males and 1 female Cecropia Moths have emerged, which is a stark contrast to the sex ratio of the Polyphemus moths. I will attempt to mate the female tonight using the same method as the Polyphemus moths. I will also be releasing the males tonight, but I have tagged them with small stickers to prevent inbreeding should they find their way back to the female through her pheromones.'
-          image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_13.jpg?itok=-TIDW7D8'
-      16:
-        -
-          headline: 'Jan 16 - 18, 1967'
-          content: 'Successfully mated a Cecropia moth at 2:40 am on June16th, and over the next 2 days she laid 153 eggs into a paper bag.  However, she presented odd behaviour while laying eggs, and laid thick bundles of 10-20 eggs on her legs rather than on the bag. Usually a female will lay groups of 3 eggs randomly, and never on her own body. I removed them from her and pulled apart the eggs before the substrate used to stick eggs to leaves completely dried. However I do not know if I have accidentally damaged any eggs in the process, despite my carefulness. This will be interesting to observe once the caterpillars begin to hatch in 10-14 days. '
-          image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_16.jpg?itok=18idxfuY'
-
-#  -
-#    year: '1966'
-#    month:
-#      -
-#        name: 'jul'
-#        entries:
-#          -
-#            headline: 'jul 8, 1966'
-#            content: 'The Polyphemus moths have begun to emerge from their cocoons - 7 females and 2 males emerge in one day. I put the females into 3 separate mating boxes and leave them by an open window so that they can release their pheromones. By 1 am, they have called in a couple of male moths. I mate two of the females with wild males.'
-#          -
-#            headline: 'jul 9, 1966'
-#            content: 'I release all the moths except one of the pregnant Polyphemus moths which I keep in a paper bag to lay her eggs.'
-#            image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_9.jpg?itok=9i7qSooF'
-#          -
-#            headline: 'jul 10-11, 1966'
-#            content: 'The female Polyphemus has laid a total of 103 eggs. Half of these eggs are now in the Ecology Lab under modified temperature and humidity conditions. As a control measure, the other half of the eggs have been placed in a natural area, their habitat was not modified in any way so that they are subject to natural conditions.'
-#            image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_10.jpg?itok=rZoYiTP_'
-#          -
-#            headline: 'jul 13, 1966'
-#            content: 'A total of 10 males and 1 female Cecropia Moths have emerged, which is a stark contrast to the sex ratio of the Polyphemus moths. I will attempt to mate the female tonight using the same method as the Polyphemus moths. I will also be releasing the males tonight, but I have tagged them with small stickers to prevent inbreeding should they find their way back to the female through her pheromones.'
-#            image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_13.jpg?itok=-TIDW7D8'
-#          -
-#            headline: 'jul 16 - 18, 1966'
-#            content: 'Successfully mated a Cecropia moth at 2:40 am on June16th, and over the next 2 days she laid 153 eggs into a paper bag.  However, she presented odd behaviour while laying eggs, and laid thick bundles of 10-20 eggs on her legs rather than on the bag. Usually a female will lay groups of 3 eggs randomly, and never on her own body. I removed them from her and pulled apart the eggs before the substrate used to stick eggs to leaves completely dried. However I do not know if I have accidentally damaged any eggs in the process, despite my carefulness. This will be interesting to observe once the caterpillars begin to hatch in 10-14 days. '
+        8:
+          -
+            headline: 'aug 8, 1966'
+            content: 'The Polyphemus moths have begun to emerge from their cocoons - 7 females and 2 males emerge in one day. I put the females into 3 separate mating boxes and leave them by an open window so that they can release their pheromones. By 1 am, they have called in a couple of male moths. I mate two of the females with wild males.'
+        9:
+          -
+            headline: 'aug 9, 1966'
+            content: 'I release all the moths except one of the pregnant Polyphemus moths which I keep in a paper bag to lay her eggs.'
+            image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_9.jpg?itok=9i7qSooF'
+        10:
+          -
+            headline: 'aug 10-11, 1966'
+            content: 'The female Polyphemus has laid a total of 103 eggs. Half of these eggs are now in the Ecology Lab under modified temperature and humidity conditions. As a control measure, the other half of the eggs have been placed in a natural area, their habitat was not modified in any way so that they are subject to natural conditions.'
+            image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_10.jpg?itok=rZoYiTP_'
+        13:
+          -
+            headline: 'aug 13, 1966'
+            content: 'A total of 10 males and 1 female Cecropia Moths have emerged, which is a stark contrast to the sex ratio of the Polyphemus moths. I will attempt to mate the female tonight using the same method as the Polyphemus moths. I will also be releasing the males tonight, but I have tagged them with small stickers to prevent inbreeding should they find their way back to the female through her pheromones.'
+            image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_13.jpg?itok=-TIDW7D8'
+        16:
+          -
+            headline: 'aug 16 - 18, 1966'
+            content: 'Successfully mated a Cecropia moth at 2:40 am on June16th, and over the next 2 days she laid 153 eggs into a paper bag.  However, she presented odd behaviour while laying eggs, and laid thick bundles of 10-20 eggs on her legs rather than on the bag. Usually a female will lay groups of 3 eggs randomly, and never on her own body. I removed them from her and pulled apart the eggs before the substrate used to stick eggs to leaves completely dried. However I do not know if I have accidentally damaged any eggs in the process, despite my carefulness. This will be interesting to observe once the caterpillars begin to hatch in 10-14 days. '
+            image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_16.jpg?itok=18idxfuY'
 
-#  -
-#    year: '1966'
-#    month: 'jul'
-#    entries:
-#      -
-#        headline: 'July 8, 1966'
-#        content: 'The Polyphemus moths have begun to emerge from their cocoons - 7 females and 2 males emerge in one day. I put the females into 3 separate mating boxes and leave them by an open window so that they can release their pheromones. By 1 am, they have called in a couple of male moths. I mate two of the females with wild males.'
-#      -
-#        headline: 'July 9, 1966'
-#        content: 'I release all the moths except one of the pregnant Polyphemus moths which I keep in a paper bag to lay her eggs.'
-#        image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_9.jpg?itok=9i7qSooF'
-#      -
-#        headline: 'July 10-11, 1966'
-#        content: 'The female Polyphemus has laid a total of 103 eggs. Half of these eggs are now in the Ecology Lab under modified temperature and humidity conditions. As a control measure, the other half of the eggs have been placed in a natural area, their habitat was not modified in any way so that they are subject to natural conditions.'
-#        image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_10.jpg?itok=rZoYiTP_'
-#      -
-#        headline: 'July 13, 1966'
-#        content: 'A total of 10 males and 1 female Cecropia Moths have emerged, which is a stark contrast to the sex ratio of the Polyphemus moths. I will attempt to mate the female tonight using the same method as the Polyphemus moths. I will also be releasing the males tonight, but I have tagged them with small stickers to prevent inbreeding should they find their way back to the female through her pheromones.'
-#        image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_13.jpg?itok=-TIDW7D8'
-#      -
-#        headline: 'July 16 - 18, 1966'
-#        content: 'Successfully mated a Cecropia moth at 2:40 am on June16th, and over the next 2 days she laid 153 eggs into a paper bag.  However, she presented odd behaviour while laying eggs, and laid thick bundles of 10-20 eggs on her legs rather than on the bag. Usually a female will lay groups of 3 eggs randomly, and never on her own body. I removed them from her and pulled apart the eggs before the substrate used to stick eggs to leaves completely dried. However I do not know if I have accidentally damaged any eggs in the process, despite my carefulness. This will be interesting to observe once the caterpillars begin to hatch in 10-14 days. '
-#        image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_16.jpg?itok=18idxfuY'
-#  -
-#    year: '1966'
-#    month: 'aug'
-#    entries:
-#      -
-#        headline: 'aug 8, 1966'
-#        content: 'The Polyphemus moths have begun to emerge from their cocoons - 7 females and 2 males emerge in one day. I put the females into 3 separate mating boxes and leave them by an open window so that they can release their pheromones. By 1 am, they have called in a couple of male moths. I mate two of the females with wild males.'
-#      -
-#        headline: 'aug 9, 1966'
-#        content: 'I release all the moths except one of the pregnant Polyphemus moths which I keep in a paper bag to lay her eggs.'
-#        image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_9.jpg?itok=9i7qSooF'
-#      -
-#        headline: 'aug 10-11, 1966'
-#        content: 'The female Polyphemus has laid a total of 103 eggs. Half of these eggs are now in the Ecology Lab under modified temperature and humidity conditions. As a control measure, the other half of the eggs have been placed in a natural area, their habitat was not modified in any way so that they are subject to natural conditions.'
-#        image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_10.jpg?itok=rZoYiTP_'
-#      -
-#        headline: 'aug 13, 1966'
-#        content: 'A total of 10 males and 1 female Cecropia Moths have emerged, which is a stark contrast to the sex ratio of the Polyphemus moths. I will attempt to mate the female tonight using the same method as the Polyphemus moths. I will also be releasing the males tonight, but I have tagged them with small stickers to prevent inbreeding should they find their way back to the female through her pheromones.'
-#        image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_13.jpg?itok=-TIDW7D8'
-#      -
-#        headline: 'aug 16 - 18, 1966'
-#        content: 'Successfully mated a Cecropia moth at 2:40 am on June16th, and over the next 2 days she laid 153 eggs into a paper bag.  However, she presented odd behaviour while laying eggs, and laid thick bundles of 10-20 eggs on her legs rather than on the bag. Usually a female will lay groups of 3 eggs randomly, and never on her own body. I removed them from her and pulled apart the eggs before the substrate used to stick eggs to leaves completely dried. However I do not know if I have accidentally damaged any eggs in the process, despite my carefulness. This will be interesting to observe once the caterpillars begin to hatch in 10-14 days. '
-#        image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_16.jpg?itok=18idxfuY'
-#  -
-#    year: '1966'
-#    month: 'sep'
-#    entries:
-#      -
-#        headline: 'sep 8, 1966'
-#        content: 'The Polyphemus moths have begun to emerge from their cocoons - 7 females and 2 males emerge in one day. I put the females into 3 separate mating boxes and leave them by an open window so that they can release their pheromones. By 1 am, they have called in a couple of male moths. I mate two of the females with wild males.'
-#      -
-#        headline: 'sep 9, 1966'
-#        content: 'I release all the moths except one of the pregnant Polyphemus moths which I keep in a paper bag to lay her eggs.'
-#        image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_9.jpg?itok=9i7qSooF'
-#      -
-#        headline: 'sep 10-11, 1966'
-#        content: 'The female Polyphemus has laid a total of 103 eggs. Half of these eggs are now in the Ecology Lab under modified temperature and humidity conditions. As a control measure, the other half of the eggs have been placed in a natural area, their habitat was not modified in any way so that they are subject to natural conditions.'
-#        image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_10.jpg?itok=rZoYiTP_'
-#      -
-#        headline: 'sep 13, 1966'
-#        content: 'A total of 10 males and 1 female Cecropia Moths have emerged, which is a stark contrast to the sex ratio of the Polyphemus moths. I will attempt to mate the female tonight using the same method as the Polyphemus moths. I will also be releasing the males tonight, but I have tagged them with small stickers to prevent inbreeding should they find their way back to the female through her pheromones.'
-#        image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_13.jpg?itok=-TIDW7D8'
-#      -
-#        headline: 'sep 16 - 18, 1966'
-#        content: 'Successfully mated a Cecropia moth at 2:40 am on June16th, and over the next 2 days she laid 153 eggs into a paper bag.  However, she presented odd behaviour while laying eggs, and laid thick bundles of 10-20 eggs on her legs rather than on the bag. Usually a female will lay groups of 3 eggs randomly, and never on her own body. I removed them from her and pulled apart the eggs before the substrate used to stick eggs to leaves completely dried. However I do not know if I have accidentally damaged any eggs in the process, despite my carefulness. This will be interesting to observe once the caterpillars begin to hatch in 10-14 days. '
-#        image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_16.jpg?itok=18idxfuY'
-#  -
-#    year: '1966'
-#    month: 'Dec'
-#    entries:
-#      -
-#        headline: 'Dec 8, 1966'
-#        content: 'The Polyphemus moths have begun to emerge from their cocoons - 7 females and 2 males emerge in one day. I put the females into 3 separate mating boxes and leave them by an open window so that they can release their pheromones. By 1 am, they have called in a couple of male moths. I mate two of the females with wild males.'
-#      -
-#        headline: 'Dec 9, 1966'
-#        content: 'I release all the moths except one of the pregnant Polyphemus moths which I keep in a paper bag to lay her eggs.'
-#        image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_9.jpg?itok=9i7qSooF'
-#      -
-#        headline: 'Dec 10-11, 1966'
-#        content: 'The female Polyphemus has laid a total of 103 eggs. Half of these eggs are now in the Ecology Lab under modified temperature and humidity conditions. As a control measure, the other half of the eggs have been placed in a natural area, their habitat was not modified in any way so that they are subject to natural conditions.'
-#        image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_10.jpg?itok=rZoYiTP_'
-#      -
-#        headline: 'Dec 13, 1966'
-#        content: 'A total of 10 males and 1 female Cecropia Moths have emerged, which is a stark contrast to the sex ratio of the Polyphemus moths. I will attempt to mate the female tonight using the same method as the Polyphemus moths. I will also be releasing the males tonight, but I have tagged them with small stickers to prevent inbreeding should they find their way back to the female through her pheromones.'
-#        image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_13.jpg?itok=-TIDW7D8'
-#      -
-#        headline: 'Dec 16 - 18, 1966'
-#        content: 'Successfully mated a Cecropia moth at 2:40 am on June16th, and over the next 2 days she laid 153 eggs into a paper bag.  However, she presented odd behaviour while laying eggs, and laid thick bundles of 10-20 eggs on her legs rather than on the bag. Usually a female will lay groups of 3 eggs randomly, and never on her own body. I removed them from her and pulled apart the eggs before the substrate used to stick eggs to leaves completely dried. However I do not know if I have accidentally damaged any eggs in the process, despite my carefulness. This will be interesting to observe once the caterpillars begin to hatch in 10-14 days. '
-#        image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_16.jpg?itok=18idxfuY'
-#
+    1967:
+      1:
+        8:
+          -
+            headline: 'Jan 8, 1967'
+            content: 'The Polyphemus moths have begun to emerge from their cocoons - 7 females and 2 males emerge in one day. I put the females into 3 separate mating boxes and leave them by an open window so that they can release their pheromones. By 1 am, they have called in a couple of male moths. I mate two of the females with wild males.'
+        9:
+          -
+            headline: 'Jan 9, 1967'
+            content: 'I release all the moths except one of the pregnant Polyphemus moths which I keep in a paper bag to lay her eggs.'
+            image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_9.jpg?itok=9i7qSooF'
+        10:
+          -
+            headline: 'Jan 10-11, 1967'
+            content: 'The female Polyphemus has laid a total of 103 eggs. Half of these eggs are now in the Ecology Lab under modified temperature and humidity conditions. As a control measure, the other half of the eggs have been placed in a natural area, their habitat was not modified in any way so that they are subject to natural conditions.'
+            image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_10.jpg?itok=rZoYiTP_'
+        13:
+          -
+            headline: 'Jan 13, 1967'
+            content: 'A total of 10 males and 1 female Cecropia Moths have emerged, which is a stark contrast to the sex ratio of the Polyphemus moths. I will attempt to mate the female tonight using the same method as the Polyphemus moths. I will also be releasing the males tonight, but I have tagged them with small stickers to prevent inbreeding should they find their way back to the female through her pheromones.'
+            image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_13.jpg?itok=-TIDW7D8'
+        16:
+          -
+            headline: 'Jan 16 - 18, 1967'
+            content: 'Successfully mated a Cecropia moth at 2:40 am on June16th, and over the next 2 days she laid 153 eggs into a paper bag.  However, she presented odd behaviour while laying eggs, and laid thick bundles of 10-20 eggs on her legs rather than on the bag. Usually a female will lay groups of 3 eggs randomly, and never on her own body. I removed them from her and pulled apart the eggs before the substrate used to stick eggs to leaves completely dried. However I do not know if I have accidentally damaged any eggs in the process, despite my carefulness. This will be interesting to observe once the caterpillars begin to hatch in 10-14 days. '
+            image: 'https://uwaterloo.ca/ecology-lab/sites/ca.ecology-lab/files/styles/thumbnail/public/june_16.jpg?itok=18idxfuY'