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Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Think you need to add 2 more to your tribute list. If i could show you the mess I've made imagining you in all the graphic ways... anyhow. Ding Ding ;)
Mean.... You could, that's how the confirmed list works ya know :p and we can just... not post the ask or submission or however you send it. We enjoy proof of the gifts offered in tribute.
the last egg and last toast or happy saturday breakfast imaginary constructs and also the reward for finishing all of the eggs is more eggs and the reward for more eggs is carbonara or happy future carbonara imaginary constructs
A txentx (one of my many alien species) attempting to rein their planet’s equivalent of a horse. The bump on the back of the “horse”’s head is coated with an adhesive that sticks firmly to fur, but completely dissolves with the application of a special oil.
The two species are in the same biological order, but different families.
Land vertebrates on their planet evolved from a lobe-finned fish equivalent with only two fins, hence them only having two skeletal limbs. The dominant vertebrate clade, which these two belong to, evolved to manipulate objects with an extremely complex multi-pronged tentacle-tongue.
The things on their sides / chests are breathing openings, and the “tails” are insect-style abdomens holding some of the internal organs.
They have purple fur (including the “horse”, its fur is just really short and sleek) to blend in with the purple plants of their world. The skin underneath is usually yellow-green - the txentx here has bald feet.
These aren’t some munchkins or some edible balls. These are Bokashi/Mabuhay Balls! These are made of clay soil and effective micro organisms and proven to help clean toxic waterways or tributaries. The technology came from Japan and Philippines adapted it. They are called Mabuhay balls for it gives life. Mabuhay from buhay = life. It gives life to toxic bodies of water like esteros. A size of a tennis ball can clean 1,000 liters of toxic water. In some places, this creating Mabuhay balls is already a source of livelihood as they earn 2.00 or 3.00php per ball made. One of the successful esteros where these balls were used was the Estero de Santibañez in Paco, Manila. Kapit Bisig Para sa Ilog Pasig of ALKFI’s Bantay Kalikasan trains communities along esteros create Mabuhay Balls with the help of its partners.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
myall creek, north queensland, australia
Just added to the Stranger Danger catalog:
Burned Out -- With a subtitle of reflections on working in a domestic violence safe house, this zine covers the nearly four years that Sari (of Hoax zine) spent working as a domestic violence and sexual assault advocate at a safe house in New Jersey. It’s split into five sections, covering why and how Sari began their work, interacting with service recipients via a crisis hotline or in person, dealing with nonprofit bureaucracy, encountering outside opinions on this line of work & Sari’s personal experiences as they are connected (or not) to that work, and reflections on their job now that they no longer there. At times this zine made my heart heavy, but it’s a worthwhile, powerful read if you are up for it.
Dig Deep #8 -- This issue of Dig Deep (the first in two years!) is split into three sections: Part 1 covers Heather’s shifting relationship with zines and her feelings surrounding stepping down as an organizer of the Chicago Zine Fest. Part 2 recaps her goal of sending 100 pieces of mail in 2016, along with all of the ways that letters and postcards weave their way into her life and strengthen her relationships. Part 3 reveals her process of trying to be good to herself and to others. It has eleven sections, covering things like setting intentions, finding gratitude, etc. She lists the specific movements & habits that she depends on to take care of herself & her community, and she encourages you to do the same.
Hoax #13 -- The theme Hoax #13 is feminisms and spaces, and it just may be my favorite one yet. As always, Hoax makes room for wide-ranging interpretations of the theme, meaning that the specific topic of each essay varies, and that is precisely what makes this zine so good. This one includes writing on the ways that bodies can take up space or become invisible, on the idea of safe(r) spaces (in relation to workplaces, our communities, and the world at large), a brief history of fagazines, passing on the internet, and so much more. I kept having to put this zine down & come back to it, because many of the essays made me pause & reflect. I bet the same will happen to you, too.
Tributaries #6 -- JC, who has long since been diagnosed with Juvenile Rheumatoid Arthritis, shares what it was like when her hand stopped working like it used to. Unable to move three fingers, and in increasing pain, she writes about the fear of having your body betray you, of how to present your body in ways that can be shielded from inquisitive strangers but taken seriously by healthcare providers. Doctor's appointments & x-rays explain JC’s diagnosis, and as she prepares for her fifth major surgery, she reveals the deep emotions behind what’s to come. JC is one of the world’s kindest, loveliest humans, and I am thankful that she continues to share her experiences through her writing.
Tributaries #7 -- I could say that this issue of Tributaries is about JC’s wrist surgery & her recovery process, but it is so much more than that. It’s about how to survive events that change who you are, physically and emotionally. It’s about how to lean on those who care for you and how to reconnect with the world when you are pulled out of your daily routine. It’s about healing and rebuilding and growing stronger. JC’s writing is gorgeous and she is very open with everything that she feels. This zine is how every zine should be. Highly recommended.
Get ‘em over at Stranger Danger!
Once-dried tiny tributary serves as shelter for wintering fish
Hokkaido University researchers have found that more than 10,000 stream fish migrated to a small tributary only four months after it had dried out during the summer, suggesting that even remnant tributaries are critical wintering habitats.
Depending on their body growth and seasonal changes, many stream fish migrate between small tributaries and a river’s main stem, or between different environments such as rapid and slow-moving water habitats. Finding a wintering habitat is key for fish to survive in frigid locations such as Hokkaido, the northernmost island of Japan. But such habitats have been only scantly surveyed due to the difficulties associated with undertaking fieldwork during the harsh winter season.
In 2013, the team, led by Associate Professor Itsuro Koizumi of the university’s Faculty of Environmental Earth Science, located a small tributary of the Otofuke River (in the Tokachi River System in central Hokkaido) that had dried out during the summer. When the team surveyed the tributary again in September, after water had returned, the researchers discovered only several rainbow trout, while aquatic insects such as stoneflies, mayflies and caddis flies were almost nonexistent. During another survey conducted at the end of November, however, the team caught a considerable number of fish, mainly rainbow trout, Siberian stone loach and Japanese dace.
In order to perform quantitative research, five reaches between the source of the tributary and its junction with the main river were sampled, and the number of fish in the tributary was statistically estimated.
Read more here.
Provided by Hokkaido University