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@grey-gryphon

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how often are you getting a headache
daily
weekly
monthly
couple times a year
yearly or less
how often are you getting a tummy ache
daily
weekly
monthly
every couple months
yearly or less
Ok so thanks for voting on this but i need you to reblog it too
Breakfast Quesadillas Recipe (3 Easy Ways)
Follow for recipes
Is this how you roll?

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it sucks that the overwhelming majority of medical messaging around salt/sodium is "evil poisonous substance that you're definitely already eating way too much of," because like. you do still need it. (trust me, as a POTS-haver, I've had to completely rewire my own brain about salt.) and you need more salt when the entire northern hemisphere is hot enough to fry an egg on. ever tried sucking down the recommended 64oz of hydration per day entirely as water, only to find you're peeing constantly without any of the purported benefits of being "hydrated"? assuming you don't have another medical condition that causes frequent urination, your body probably needed more salt/electrolytes to be able to hold onto that water and make use of it. if there was ever a time to keep a sports drink/pedialyte/etc within constant reach, it's when the heat index is 110°F/43°C.
has anyone figured out how to turn off the thing where you love your pet so much it slides inexorably into grief-borrowing
âFor me this glass is already broken. I enjoy it; I drink out of it. It holds my water admirably, sometimes even reflecting the sun in beautiful patterns. If I should tap it, it has a lovely ring to it. But when I put this glass on the shelf and the wind knocks it over or my elbow brushes it off the table and it falls to the ground and shatters, I say, âOf course.â When I understand that the glass is already broken, every moment with it is precious.â
I have an issue with being so sad knowing it will end that I have trouble enjoying the now...
nimble, a border collie-papillon mix, wins the 12â class in the 2024 masters agility championship. the first time a mixed breed has won at westminster ever.
context explaining why the announcer is screaming, this is supposed to take a high level competitive agility dog 40 seconds
This video makes me cry every time itâs on my dash and I canât even iterate why.
Like the dog doesnât even know itâs a competition and sheâs made history. She(?) just is happy and knows she made her owner happy too.
The face of a being with only a wind storm between their ears, moments before unleashing it unto the world
always a pleasure to see this girl on my dashboard
RIP Sam Neill: âItâs not a happy place, America, and I wasnât happy there. Iâm interested in the condition of America now. It beggars belief whatâs happening there now. When you hear a slogan like Make America Great Again, it makes a sort of weird sense because America could be great again, but at community level. Not with the sort of strange billionaires making weird decisionsâ
A fancy arrangement of spices and legumes - Bago, 2017

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Day 286 of quarantine I have discovered www.webstaurantstore.com
It is, I BELIEVE, a website intended to be used by restaurants for bulk ordering food and utensils. And this is bringing me such unbounded delight scrolling through and recognizing that I, a single individual, ALSO can order ridiculous obscene enormous offensive-to-all-common-sensibilities shipments of BULK FOOD, to my LITTLE LITTLE APARTMENT, for PENNIES on the dollar. I have this god given power to flood my entire living space with bulk grains and it is one single button click away from my reality.
30 POUNDS of chocolate for $100. 20 POUNDS of peas for $13?? $13!!!! I will wake up every single morning from now on knowing that a box of donuts and a sack of dried split peas heavy enough to bodily injure someone both carry equal monetary weight. 25 POUNDS OF ONION POWDER for $50. Do you understand the enormity? the accessibility? the potential here? With the single click of the button I can put myself in a position of bequeathing more than a humanly comprehensible amount of onion powder in my will. AND IT WOULD ONLY COST ME $50 TO MAKE THIS A REALITY.
But what gets me
What truly gets me
is the 50 POUND BAG OF RICEÂ
FOR LESS THAN $20
Do you know how much that kills me? How much Iâm losing my mind? that I can order MYSELF WORTH OF RICE for something to the tune of $50? IÂ can OUT-RANK MYSELF WITH RICE, DEMOCRATICALLY OVERRULE MYSELF WITH RICE, IN MY OWN APARTMENT for the fucking PENNIES that is $50
Iâm so sorry for the normal person Iâll be after quarantine because the cabin-fever version of me Iâm inhabiting right now is perhaps just uninhibited enough to follow through on this dream Iâve just discovered of out-ricing myself.
real talk though, if you had a large number of people in your community who wanted a particular food item and couldnât afford it (for instance if youâre in a food desert and need produce or if youâre a part of a large disabled and/or overworked community who all need prepared frozen food), you could pool funds and get an order from a supply store like this.
it requires organizing for finance management, ordering, transport, and distribution, but if you build a stable mutual aid network, itâs genuinely within the realm of possibility.
This idea is called a buyers club (or buying club, buying coop, etc) and itâs a great time-tested method of mutual aid. And there are guides and tools for starting your own at managemy.coop
stop making shows about americans in europe⌠try europeans in america instead. the outrage of not knowing exactly what something costs at a store,, no public transport,, everyone smiling in your face and waiters scaring you by constantly popping up at your table⌠ice in your water for some reason,, the kind of culture clash i want to see!!
fuck emily in paris i want françois in texas
ivan in west virginia
all his neighbours immediately distrust him because heâs russian and they havenât gotten over the red scare and also no one new has moved in to the town in almost a decade
but then he participates in podunknowheresvilleâs annual lawnmower race with a monstrosity made from scrap metal and far too much duct tape and he wins second place in a neck-and-neck final round against sam americason, the most anti-russian man in the village
and ivan is scared that he blew his one chance to get accepted by the community but then sam jumps off his lawnmower and pats ivan on the back and says âyou did good, brother. iâm sorry i misjudged you. looks like hillbillies are the same no matter what country we come from. youâre just like us, ivan. guess our redneck town has room for a little extra redâ and everybody laughs and the credits roll while the ussr national anthem gets played on a banjo and washboard
Seconding Ivan in West Virginia
Yevgeny Charushin, Snow Leopard
USA Native Plant Resource Masterlist
Because Google is totally useless and won't help you with ANYTHING
iNaturalist: Take photos of living things you see, post them, and the community will identify them for you. Data from iNaturalist is used in scientific research.
Wildflower.org Plant Database: Enter search criteria and find some plants. Very useful if you're looking for plants with specific qualities or know what you have in mind.
Native Plant Finder: This website is still in beta and is a work in progress, but it will show you plants for your area ranked by the number of butterflies that use them for their caterpillars.
WildflowerSearch: AMAZING resource for identification and for learning about new plants. Shows you where plants are native/not native, TONS of search filters.
Native Plant Trust: A New England organization, but probably useful to anyone.
Northern Forest Atlas: Great images and identification resources for trees; has good pictures of bark, seeds, buds, leaves.
FloraFinder: Another plant database site that's being slowly built up by a passionate nerd.
MonarchWatch milkweed by USA ecoregion: Tells you what milkweed species you should plant for monarch butterflies.
Native Beeology: Not plants, but a closely related subject.
I will add more and post an updated list as I find more.
Seems legit
we all hear about kudzu being introduced as "erosion control" in the South but I don't think contemporary people understand on a gut level what that means
these are images from a 1930s pamphlet that endorsed kudzu, entitled "stop gullies: save your farm"
It was Bad.
Invasive plants need to be understood as part of a much larger cycle of incredible violence against the land.
For context: erosion on that scale occurred as a result of our clear-cutting entire states. The land east of the Mississippi used to be covered in old-growth forest to an extent that we literally canât imagine anymore, because most of us have never seen a forest over 100 years old. It turns out if you remove all vegetation from a landscape, you end up with a bunch of loose soil ready to move downstream. A fast-growing plant that covers everything in dense vegetation sounds like salvation when youâre surrounded by 40-foot deep gullies that get wider with every rainstorm.

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a couple months ago someone sent me an ask asking if Iâd ever heard of Boquila trifoliolata and I was like âno way. this canât be realâ and i looked it up and it was and I forgot about it until just now when my supervisor and I got sidetracked and I looked it up again to prove to her that itâs real and found out that not only does this plant vaguely mimic the leaves of whatever plant itâs vining on, it does it when it climbs on fake plants too so any theories about how it does it that include gene transfer or chemicals or touching it in any way are just out the window and those were like, the only theories the original researchers had about how it might be doing it. so anyway I am screaming and crying and whatnot
The more you read the better this gets â from Krulwich, Nat Geo 2016:
Boquila feels more like a cuttlefish or an octopus; it can morph into at least eight basic shapes. When it glides up a bush or tree that itâs never encountered before, it can still mimic whatâs near. And thatâs the wildest part: It doesnât have to touch what it copies. It only has to be nearby. Most mimicry in the animal kingdom involves physical contact. But this plant can hangâliterally hangâalongside a host tree, with empty space between it and its model, and, with no eyes, nose, mouth, or brain, it can âseeâ its neighbor and copy what it has âseen.â
(Artifical plant modeling & c. discussed in White & Yamashita, Plant Signaling & Behavior, https://doi.org/10.1080/15592324.2021.1977530)
Donât like this at all! Thank you!!
One theory from that above White & Yamashita paper is that Boquila does this using plant ocelliâa very basic type of eye! If youâre interested in a brief infodump about ocelli: Many animals have ocelli, like jellyfish and insects. Hereâs a picture of a wasp headâyou can see its two main eyes to the side, and those three dots in the middle are ocelli.
(Photo cred: Assafn, Wikipedia)
These ocelli donât form sharp images, but instead probably detect light and shadow for sleep patterns, directionality, flight stability, etc.
Some reptiles and amphibians also have a light-sensitive third eye called a parietal or pineal eye! Itâs similarly right on top of their heads. Again, theyâre not forming complex images, but instead use general light information to regulate other things. Itâs also why even tame reptiles may bolt if you reach at them from directly overhead, out of range of their normal eyesâthat third eye sees an incoming shadow and goes HAWK, RUN.
So with that in mind, plant ocelliâŚBasically they think the upper epidermal cells have evolved to have a particular convex dome shape that focuses light. I donât know what proportion of cells are ocelli, if itâs just some or all, but basically the leaf itself IS the âeyeâ.
Plant ocelli were first proposed over a century ago but they havenât been well studied since then. Cyanobacteria (a photosynthetic bacteria) focus light. Arabidopsis thaliana has been documented to recognize other Arabidopsis plantsâŚbasically when competing for resources, if the Arabidopsis recognizes itâs competing with other Arabidopsis plants, theyâll cooperate and move leaves so that they donât shade each other, ensuring each plant has access to nutrients. But if the competing plant isnât Arabidopsis, screw âem, theyâll shade it. Crepy & Casal narrowed this down to a light-based response, not just chemical identification, so itâs possible Arabidopsis is visually identifying friend from foe. At any rate, thatâs about the extent of plant ocelli research that I was able to find. So this Boquila thing is cool and weird.
What we donât yet know is how precisely Boquila is seeing the world. Boquila is clearly getting some level of resolution in order to be able to copy shape, size, AND color. Unlike an insectâs 2-3 ocelli, it has tons, so even crude data over a lot of inputs might lead to a pretty good picture. The paper also says the mimicry gets more accurate over time, so there appears to be some learning involved. I would also love to know if it has some equivalent of depth perception! If the target plant is near vs. far, does Boquila produce the same appropriately sized mimic leaf? Does it adjust? Theyâre going to keep studying it so hopefully we have some answers in a few years!
Anyway hereâs a picture of the variation of Boquila mimic leaves.
(Photo cred: Gianoli figure)
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On the one hand, this is fascinating, on the other hand âsome plants can see youâ is a terrifying thought, thank you for this
I just don't understand how anything could "see" without any sort of nervous system to process the information??
Garden update! Welcome to the jungle:
Everything is still growing well, some of the corn is starting to tassel and the sunflowers are starting to open. I need to get a bunch of stakes. Everything is so crowded it's making it hard to get around. My original plan this year was to get an arch, but with all the car issues I wasn't able to. So now the squashes are EVERYWHERE.
The bush beans are producing a lot and the vines are climbing everywhere. I was finally able to set up the structure for the bean tower after painting the railing myself.
I am starting to be a little alarmed at some bugs. I've been spraying the leaves and I have neem oil and castille soap if I need it, but I don't like to use it because it gets the predators too.