Corn cob

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2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
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hello vonnie

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One Nice Bug Per Day
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Janaina Medeiros
dirt enthusiast

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oozey mess

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@figggs
Corn cob

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#And he's dead serious (and right)
Vintage wind-up toy bear (USSR, 1920s-30s)
2002
Sass machine! Photo from my collection, no date/info.

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Lone tree at the park
No Wizard That There is or was.

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Kyle Maclachlan and Linda Evangelista for Steven Meiselās witty 1992 campaign for Barneys New York
damon albarn performing at glastonbury (1994)
Itās so fun that for the low, low price of 5.99 a month I can watch a manās soul die in real time.
you guys wanna go to basrarās?
Fish eye perspective of a cat eating

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Hilda by Duane Bryers
More Hilda!!
in this family we love and support Hilda.
Yes! Hilda!
What i love about this artistās depictions of women is even the sexualized ones the woman is always genuinely happy and enjoying herself. Frolicking or making funny faces, sheās living her life and looking sexy while doing it, not sitting in a sexual pose for the audienceās view.
I always forget about Hilda and am so pleased when she randomly shows up on my dash. Always makes my day
I love Hilda so much and I want her to be happy
My favorite thing is how Hilda is always doing something and having a BLAST! Sheās not posing coyly for anyone, sheās having her own adventures and itās not about the viewer at all
Always reblog Hilda!
HILDA MY LOVE
vegans make peace with honey
no shut up do it
vegans will pretend not to hear when natives tell them their agave products are unsustainable because they have whimsical feelings about, and i cannot stress this enough, the freedom of hive insects
Prove it.
I have not seen any evidence tonsugges they are harmed or die in the process of production. They do regurgitate the nectar as part of the process to concentrate it into honey (an interesting process) but they do not suffer any injury during this process. If they did, the cost to produce honey, which is done naturally as a measure to survive over winter and through times of lower availability, would outweigh the benefits. If you kill several bees to produce enough honey to make one more bee, It makes no sense. Any animal that did that would die, even with human intervention.
Do you have any sources which suggest otherwise? Iād be interested to hear of this (relatively publicly available) information was false or misunderstood.
Bee farmers use whats called a honey maker. Itās a crude devices. It similar to a meat grinder. They force the bees in and grind them up. What comes out is a paste. That paste is later filtered into what we know as honey
This is the funniest thing Iāve ever read
@zoologicallyobsessed please show us pics of your bee grinder
they might be falsely thinking about a honey extractor machine. but all these do is you place the beehive frames inside and a motor rotates it at a speed that removes the honey, which is then tapped through a tap at the bottom.Ā
ā¦do they think they put bees in that and spin them around until they vomitā¦?
bee carnival
bad and naughty bees get put into the b e e c e n t r i f u g e to extract their honey
Vegans coming after beekeepers is one of my major teeth grinding annoyances. For many reasons, because thereās so many lies. And to go one step further because itās such a waste. You see, the strongest vegan argument is that they donāt want to exploit animals or take from them without their consent.
⦠but⦠Bees consent. NO. IāM NOT KIDDING.
How? Bee hives arenāt kept on leashes. Theyāre outside, the bees can travel miles every day. They follow their queen. Who is also outside, not on a leash, and can travel miles every day. If she doesnāt like the hive for any reason - for example: it got too hot, too cold, too messy, too filled with sugary stuff and they need more space⦠then the queen leaves. And with her the hive.
The queen stays in the hive because the hive is the best place to live. Period. Done. End of. If the hive is staying with the beekeeper itās because the keeper is doing their job correctly and keeping them happy because the bees can, and do, leave bad beekeepers.
Of all the animals we have domesticated as livestock, bees are the ones you can most easily argue are consenting participants in their keeping.
Here it is. The bee post is back
I feel compelled to explain the misconception part for anyone who doesnāt know anything about beekeeping and finds any of this confusing. This might be a little redundant, but Iām scratching an itch.
Harvesting honey does not murder bees.
The device pictured above does not mash up bees or their hives.
Thereās no ethical concern when it comes to eating honey, itās totally ethical as food is concerned.
Bees manufacture honey using pollen. They store it in the cells of their hive, where itās used as food for the colony, particularly the larvae growing into the next generation of bees.
When you harvest honey, you remove parts of the hive that are being used to store the honey, without taking any bees along for the ride. Those parts of the hive are then put into a device, like the centrifugal extractor shown above by gemstone-gynoid, where the parts are spun really fast to pull extract the honey. The honey gets collected on the walls of the extractor, drips down, and can then be filtered and bottled for human use.
So.
It turns out that bees love making honey and can make more of it than theyād ever need. It also turns out that beekeepers taking care of hives and harvesting their honey keeps bees healthy and thriving, more so than theyād normally accomplish on their own. And we really need bees healthy and thriving because they help us grow an astonishing amount of food by pollinating plants.
Like, thereās no need to have a conversation about this, anyone who claims that harvesting honey requires that you kill bees is lying. Either they donāt know anything about beekeeping and are just repeating a lie someone else told them, or they know that theyāre lying and theyāre just straight up trying to deceive people. Neither is a good look.
And just one more point of clarification ā ācells of the hiveā doesnāt mean the anatomical cells of the beesā bodies, it means the little holes in the honeycomb of the physical structure of the hives, which they build using beeswax. Think of it like a bee pantry. They put their honey in the pantry, but since theyāre working hard every day, they often make wayyyyyy too much of it. So the beekeepers come along and take the extra honeycomb that the bees donāt need and arenāt going to use, but they leave plenty behind for the bees to eat. Additionally, if anything happens to the hiveās honey supplies in the winter, the beekeepers can supplement their food by either giving some honey back or giving them sugar water. Also, fun fact! When beekeepers extract the honey from the comb, they often leave all their equipment out afterwards so the bees can come along and clean up, re-collecting any traces of honey or wax left behind, which get put back into the hive and recycled. Any leftover waste (dirt and grime from old comb, for example, or bees that died natural deaths of old age) makes great fertilizer for the plants that produce the pollen the bees make next year. No waste!
Vegans, the bees are not going to stop making honey if theyāre left to their own devices in the wild. The bees are just doing a thing that bees do. Eating honey is not exploitation, itās sustainability. That said, if youāre still worried about the ethics, Iād recommend looking up some local beekeepers/honey farms in your area and reaching out to them for more education! Iāve known a lot of beekeepers that are really excited about doing education and outreach to teach people about the importance of pollinators, the partnership between bees and beekeepers, and the process of how honey is collected. Some honey farms will even give you a tour of their process so you can see in person how itās made and that itās not a harmful or exploitative process for the bees at all! (and of course eating local honey gives you an amazing connection to your local environment, both spiritually and physically?? like apparently eating local honey can help with seasonal allergies??? itās really cool)