Great-tailed grackle / zanate mayor (Quiscalus mexicanus), primping and preening after a bath. At the Glendale Recharge Ponds, Glendale, Arizona.

Kiana Khansmith
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#extradirty
Monterey Bay Aquarium

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2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
official daine visual archive

occasionally subtle

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@mycoculture
Great-tailed grackle / zanate mayor (Quiscalus mexicanus), primping and preening after a bath. At the Glendale Recharge Ponds, Glendale, Arizona.

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Calvin and Hobbes - It’s July Already
There are some animals you only see in pictures with very little to compare its size to that make you go into cardiac arrest once you find out how big/small they actually are
This shouldn't be physically possible. Herons should not be this small
While very neat looking, Ranatra (Hemiptera, Nepidae) are relatively inept in the water, and move so slowly that sometimes other Hemipterans may lay their eggs on them. They are fierce predators however, eating other insects as well as small fish and tadpoles when they are able to catch them with their raptorial legs (Voshell, JR. 2002).
Hemiptera, Nepidae, Ranatra. French Creek, Jefferson County, NY.
Long-furred Rice Rat Oecomys trinitatis
it has a wide distribution in Central America and South America, being found in southern Costa Rica, Panama, Colombia, Venezuela, Trinidad and Tobago, Guyana, Suriname, French Guiana, much of Brazil, eastern Ecuador, and eastern Peru. Its nests are located near the ground and its litter size ranges from two to four young.
img source

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I've been using this tool called tumblr-utils to back up my tumblr blogs. it creates a locally navigatable archive of a given tumblr url's posts, which is more convenient than the post soup you get from tumblr's native blog export feature.
what that means is that I have a folder on my computer with the name of my url with an index.html file in it, and when i click on that file to open it in a browser I get a simple page with a list of years and months. selecting a specific month will send me to a list of the posts i made or reblogged in that month, similar to tumblr's own archive page. the contents of the post including images are stored locally on your machine.
It can also make a separate index file that organises posts by tag, which is great if you're a consistent tagger, but it will list every single tag you've ever used so it can take a while to find the tag you're looking for in the list if you're a habitual tag commentator. generating the tag archive also takes a while depending on how many posts have to be processed.
you can make it back up any blog as long as it's not set to private. I have backups of both my main and sideblogs and it keeps them in separate folders.
it's had some trouble going all the way back to the start of my main blog in 2012 just by sheer volume of posts, but by making it fetch posts from one month at a time I've been able to go back to 2015 (that's tens of thousands of posts), which was good enough for my purposes.
it might be a little scary to use if you've never touched the command line before, but there's both text and video instructions to set it up and using it is just a matter of typing the command and letting it do its thing in the background.
This document has a really good guide for setting it up, along with some other options for backup. I've been using tumblr utils for a while myself, and I run an incremental backup once a week.
Also I have to spread this beautiful kakapo image (by Andrew Digby) I saw this evening on bluesky... her baby lint... protecting my mould spore...
#1 thing you can do to be a better driver is to be at peace with going the wrong direction for a little while.
like it is not the end of the world if you miss your turn. all the roads are connected to all the other roads. you will find your way very quickly.
unless you're experiencing a genuine emergency, dont even think about making a sudden movement, ESPECIALLY across one or more lanes, just to avoid missing a turn
just relax. be at peace with the way the universe has led you. who knows you might discover something you never would have seen, like a nice restaraunt or a park you didn't know about. just. fucking relax
The best driving advice I ever got was "you get there when you get there."
Miss a turn? It's okay. You get there when you get there.
Left the house late? Nothing you can do about it now. You get there when you get there.
Stopped by a train, or an accident on the highway? It's out of your hands. You get there when you get there.
I know all of these things can be anxiety-inducing. But by the time you're in the car experiencing them, no crazy maneuver will make a meaningful difference in the time it takes to get where you're going, and that maneuver will be at the cost of your safety and others.
Nothing is more important than your life.
You get there when you get there.
Wait wait wait. To tell apart the different lines of the chicks (I assume), you put the eggs in little mesh baggies?! Like for fruit???!!!! Please please please post a picture of the bags of freshly picked quail chicks, that is a very funny mental image and I’d like to see it for real
Freshly peeled quails
(also, again, they are way more comfy and relaxed in the bags than out of them. They just snooze quietly until they are gently poured forth into a tagging bin for me to band and put in the brooder)
This dog has the best ears of any animal ever
Biscuit

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[VIDEO AND PHOTOS TAKEN: MARCH 10TH, 2026 | Video and Image IDs: A video and six photos of a spiny brown and grey larval Pyractomena firefly crawling around on a human hand, its head looking around curiously and its back end curling up and pushing forward almost like how one would use a cane/walking stick /End IDs.]
The first I've seen of this kind's larvae! What a badass looking beast this thing is, and so curious too! It's like a doggy to me
hey. dont cry. 566 california condors, okay? 369 free flying.[1] it's gonna be okay.
for the record, in 1987 there were 27. [2] things can get better.
HEY. DONT CRY. 607 CALIFORNIA CONDORS, OKAY? 392 FREE FLYING. [3]
You Will Consider The Birthday Horse
fun fact I wish I had realized earlier: if you can't get rid of a stain you can just embroider stuff all over it

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31 Things I Want You to Know I Love About the Twin Cities When We're Not Under a Violent Occupation by Federal Agents
1. We're the home of A Klingon Christmas Carol, a.k.a The Christmas Carol "in the original Klingon." Actors in Klingon make-up, speaking Klingon, tell the story of a cowardly Klingon who is visited by three spirits and regains his honor.
2. People's Pride in Powerhorn Park, an escape from the corporate Pride downtown, with free food, free clothing exchange, and amazing local artists.
3. If the sidewalk in front of your house in St. Paul cracks, you can get it replaced with one with a poem stamped into it. Any resident of the city can submit a short poem in English or another language to a contest to be added to the bank of poems used.
4. The beautiful murals and mosaics down Lake Street, illustrating the different groups that have immigrated to the area over the years and the amazing artists they brought with them.
5. The Smallest Museum in Saint Paul, a defunct fire hose cabinet outside of Workhorse Coffee that features ever-changing small but beautiful, thought-provoking, and wonderful exhibits.
6. The cat tour where you walk through the Wedge neighborhood taking pictures of cats.
7. The secret art gallery in the alley behind the Mississippi Market co-op where someone has painted words onto shards of mirror.
8. A 20 foot pencil that gets annually sharpened.
9. Going to the closest Native American coffee shop every October and stocking up on bear grease for my aching back.
10. 2nd highest number of theatre seats in the country after New York, baybeeeeee!
11. I can't just list theatres or we'll be here all day, but the May Day Parade put on by Heart of the Beast Puppet and Mask Theatre with the most amazing and evocative puppets and masks.
12. When you're marching in a pro-immigrant rally down Lake Street and everyone is cheering and whooping and honking their horn and the Somali community members run out of their businesses with cold drinks in the summer and hot sambusas in the winter
13. The Aztec dancers
14. That moment when all the cottonwoods shed their fluffy white seeds in spring and it looks like we've been covered in snow again
15. That other moment in spring when the lilacs are blooming and you can't walk five feet without smelling a lilac
16. And then it rains and all the cherry trees bloom and the entire city smells like candy
17. All of the art on the Green Line stations tying directly into the history and culture of each neighborhood
18. Midtown Global Market, where you can get delicious Lebanese cheese, bubble tea, tacos, camel burgers, Scandinavian sandwiches, Alaskan Native hot sauce, and more, all under one roof
19. The Hmong farmer's market near my library, the most reliable place to get the vegetables I want that I can't find anywhere else and also a place I could buy an entire bushel basket of hot peppers if I wanted
20. Whoever is drawing fat chickens all over town
21. Whoever is drawing pubic hair on lamp posts
22. Fireweed Community Workshops, a masks-required woodworking workshop dedicated to making woodworking welcoming and accessible to people who aren't straight white men
23. Naomi Kritzer's incredibly specific local election guides every year, and the way she uses it to raise money for local classrooms
24. The little faucet at the back of the Saint Paul Cathedral with the sign that says 'free holy water'
25. The Ecuadorian women selling mango with tajin on the street corners when work lets out
25. The trails by the river where you can make a turn onto the beach and have an equal chance of coming across a beaver or a live college production of "Dune"
26. The U of M experimental garden where they've found a cactus that can survive Minnesota winters (it's from the mountains of Peru)
27. The way I have seen lost keys and ID badges get hung up on branches of trees and left there for the person to return and find, untouched, for months
28. Urban foraging wild grapes, serviceberries, and mulberries
29. That morning I walked into downtown St. Paul, frozen, silent, still, empty but for the pervasive and delicious smell of bacon, a mystery until I came upon a whole pig being slowly roasted over the coals in front of a fancy French restaurant
30. The roving bands of wild turkeys
31. The fact that you are never more than a 5 minute walk from a coffee shop, bike repair shop, or combination coffee shop/bike repair shop
Stupid muffin animal