I've felt this emotion before
Xuebing Du
Peter Solarz
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

@theartofmadeline
KIROKAZE
đŞź

blake kathryn
almost home
styofa doing anything

pixel skylines

Kiana Khansmith
Claire Keane

Love Begins
hello vonnie
Misplaced Lens Cap
we're not kids anymore.

shark vs the universe

Monterey Bay Aquarium
trying on a metaphor
seen from United States
seen from Indonesia
seen from United States
seen from Croatia
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Germany

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from France
seen from Germany
seen from Croatia
seen from Indonesia
seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from Canada
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
seen from Germany
@zosimaz
I've felt this emotion before

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
it's 1pm at the marsh! come on down, we've got
đđđđ˝đžđđ đˇđđ đˇđđśđ¸đđˇđžđđšđ!!!
It is important to note that he cannot actually use the scope with that helmet. He is very stupid. Both of these things are crucial to the vibe. To raise the visor such that he could actually (sort of) use the scope he would also be on some level guilty of wrongthink himself, and whether or not he does this is dependent upon the specific author and how they want to portray the character: a hardass rebellious free thinker will raise the visor to shoot the orphan, and perhaps consider feeling bad about it. A hardass righteous warrior will keep the visor down, shoot the orphan anyway by virtue of their great faith, and feel satisfaction. Neither will ever either miss or simply not shoot the orphan, regardless of the author or the character.
Also, there a bugs and mushrooms and cows along with space elves trying to kill him.
also the only reason everything is Like That is because frog gods didn't want to give some people the cure for cancer, which made them so mad they tried to genocide the frog gods which created hell
... And in the process of doing so the people aligned with star gods, were deceived and enslaved by them and turned into soulless robots. But later they turned the star gods into batteries anyway. And then went to hibernation.
one fight at a time
A South Dakota mining company has canceled a drilling project in the Black Hills after opposition from Native American tribes and local grou

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
"Bus drivers deserve a break"
London bus drivers are fighting back against fatigue. Adbusting in Brixton, Elephant & Castle and Central London.
Le costume historique, 1888
On this day, 13 May 1985, Philadelphia police attacked the home of Black liberation and environmentalist group MOVE with automatic weapons, then dropped a bomb on it, killing five adults and six children, destroying 61 homes in the predominantly Black neighbourhood, and making 250 people homeless. Almost 500 police officers fired over 10,000 rounds of ammunition into the house, which was filled with women and children, while other officers blew holes in the walls with explosives. The police commissioner then ordered the house to be bombed, which they did using an improvised device made from C4 given to them by the FBI. Only two people survived the blast and ensuing fire: Ramona Africa, and Michael Ward, aged 13. While no officials were prosecuted, Ramona Africa was subsequently jailed for seven years on riot and conspiracy charges. The incident occurred during the tenure of Philadelphiaâs first Black mayor, a Democrat named Wilson Goode. The children killed were named Katricia Dotson (Tree), Netta, Delitia, Phil, and Tomasa Africa and the adults were Rhonda, Teresa, Frank, CP, Conrad, and John Africa. In April 2021, it was revealed that anthropologists at Princeton and the University of Pennsylvania had the bones of one of the children, unbeknownst to the families. * Learn more about institutional white supremacy in the police in this book: https://shop.workingclasshistory.com/products/the-end-of-policing-alex-s-vitale https://www.facebook.com/workingclasshistory/photos/a.296224173896073/1986639618187845/?type=3
1917

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
2,300-Year-Old Saddle Blanket from the Altai Mountains of Siberia: this saddle cover was preserved in the frozen barrows of Pazyryk for more than two millennia
This elaborate saddle blanket dates back to about 400-300 BCE. It was discovered in the Pazyryk barrows, located in the Altai mountains of Siberia, where it had been preserved in the permafrost for more than 2,000 years. It's made of felt, leather, horsehair, and gold foil.
Above: the appliquĂŠs at the center of the saddle blanket
The central design features two identical appliquĂŠs, each depicting an ibex being pinned down by a griffin.
Above: close-up of the appliquĂŠs
The sides of the saddle cover are also decorated with circular pendants made of felt; each of these pendants is trimmed with leather, encircled by tufts of horsehair, and embroidered with a stylized depiction of a ram's-head. A pair of horned tigers can also be seen at the base of each pendant.
Above: the pendants that hang from each side of the saddle cover
This artifact is attributed to the Altaic nomads of Siberia, who formed part of the larger group of cultures that are collectively known as the Scythians (or Scytho-Siberian peoples).
According to the Hermitage Museum:
Saddles used by the ancient Altaic nomads differ from those used today. They had no wooden base and consisted of two leather cushions filled with reindeer and horse hair and sewn together on one side. Felt saddle covers were traditionally decorated with scenes showing a beast of prey tearing to pieces a herbivorous animal.Â
The Scythians were among the first cultures to begin using horses as mounts, and they invented one of the earliest forms of saddle. They were extremely skilled and accomplished riders, and their early mastery of mounted warfare enabled them to gain control over vast sections of Eurasia. That dynamic led to the development of a very noticeable "horse culture," with horses playing a critical role in many different aspects of Scythian life (and afterlife):
The horse was an essential part of Scythian life and was the most important and multipurpose animal used by the nomads. Initially, the Scythians reared large herds of horses mainly for their milk and hides, but eventually were among the first people to harness the horse as a mount.
By the 7th century BCE, the Scythians were already master horsemen and controlled a vast corridor of land that stretched across southern Siberia, from the Black Sea to the fringes of northern China. This expanse of land was greater than the Achaemenid Persian Empire, which the Scythians outlasted.
The Scythians produced many horse-related artifacts that have been discovered at sites throughout Eurasia, but this saddle cover is one of the most elaborate and most well-preserved examples of that tradition.
Above: the saddle cover from Pazyryk
Two other artifacts from Pazyryk have previously been featured on my blog -- a 2,300-year-old plush bird and an elaborate horse headdress.
Sources & More Info:
Hermitage Museum: Saddle Cover
World Archaeology: Do the Clothes Make the Horse? Roles, Statuses, and Identities in the Pazyryk World
University of Washington: Artifacts from Southern Siberia/Pazyryk
Expedition: The Textiles from Pazyryk (PDF)
Cambridge University Press: The Origins of Saddles and Riding Technology in East Asia
Routledge: Pazyryk Culture Up in the Altai
University of Leicester: At Home, with the Good Horses (PDF) (this is a really great paper)
Turkish Oushak handwoven traditional rugs
Ai discourse turning me into some religious fundamentalist. I don't want to engage in rational debate anymore, it's just evil and flies in the face of god. It's an abomination we must be punished for our hubris
Run! âApe Escape 2001â PlayStation 2 Using an English translation patch.

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
Yaâll might wanna grow some hyperaccumulators (such as sunflowers, oyster mushrooms, mustard greens, vetiver, etc) around your house and/or in your garden for a few years before you plant leafy vegetables so you donât end up consuming heavy metals.
If youâre uncertain, most state universities have soil testing labs that offer cheap, easily understood soil tests that can tell you for sure whether youâve got lead, arsenic, etc. in your soils.
searching for âuniversity extension soil test [your state]â will probably turn up helpful info!
This is a good thing to note, (also sunflowers are very pretty and easy to grow when youâre first learnign how to garden) but also searching â(nearest university) Extensionâ and â(your county) Extensionâ is GREAT because thereâs ALL KINDS of cool services out there if you want to get into growing your own food or helping the local enviornment or installing solar panels on your house or buying livestock or- Thereâs a lot, itâs AWESOME, itâs usually stunningly low-cost and itâs veyr, very solarpunk so I encourage all of you to take a gander at the programs offered.
The Cooperative Extension System is run in each state by the stateâs land grant university/ies (which might not be the ones you think, in NY itâs Cornell rather than any of the SUNYs): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cooperative_State_Research,_Education,_and_Extension_Service#Cooperative_Extension_System Itâs also where all 4H programs are based!
Some also offer classes! Theyâre taxpayer funded, so that means the wealthy ones can offer tons of resources. If you canât find much going on in your state, nearby states may also have excellent info that can apply to your area. Some of the famous heavyweights are Cornell / New York and UC Davis / California, tons of research, plant breeding programs, and all around useful info coming outta those places.
As a botanist Iâm contractually obligated to add this any time I see posts about phytoremediationâif you do this you CANNOT let the sunflowers/msuhrooms/etc decompose back into your garden. You cannot add them to your compost pile. That just puts the heavy metals right back into your soil!!!! You need to bag them up and dispose of them elsewhereâtraditional landfill waste is probably going to be easiest for most people.
These plants ACCUMULATE metals. They do NOT break them down. Youâre pulling them up from the ground and storing them in the plant tissue, so, donât consume or compost that tissue afterwards.Â
I love the AP videos section