Game of Thrones Daily

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Misplaced Lens Cap

Love Begins
dirt enthusiast
Acquired Stardust
Today's Document
Cosmic Funnies
Sweet Seals For You, Always
Stranger Things
we're not kids anymore.
Monterey Bay Aquarium
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

titsay
i don't do bad sauce passes

@theartofmadeline
No title available

shark vs the universe
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
hello vonnie
seen from Malaysia

seen from France

seen from Singapore

seen from Croatia
seen from Türkiye

seen from Türkiye
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Türkiye

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Singapore
seen from United States
seen from T1

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Iraq

seen from Iraq

seen from Singapore

seen from United States

seen from United States
@aglayalilich
William Miller - Ruined Polaroids
“Grasses found in meadow and moorland of Great Britain.” Harmsworth’s Universal encyclopedia. n.d. Color added.
Internet Archive
sorry
Monica Piloni: Série Hybris, 2013
website
Mother Medicine
“I think there’s a rich ream of horror, from The Haunting of Hill House to Ghostwatch, that delves into the idea that certain places can simply go wrong – and once these bad environments have been established and ostracised by society, they can’t be exorcised. They simply keep accruing power through the individual stories that play tragically out in their shadow.
“I mention a real-life example of that kind of bad architecture in one episode; the Pope Lick Bridge in Kentucky, a place that looks and feels so sinister that it developed its own local folklore about a goat-man who attacks people who stray too close to the edge – and which has ended up resulting in deaths as visitors peer over the side trying to get a peek at the monster.
“I find this kind of stuff fascinating, because it plays into my own paranoia about environments, and my dislike of ghost stories with explicably human antagonists. Like David says in the first episode, people aren’t frightening. Places are frightening.
“If I’m sitting alone at home on a dark and stormy night, and I glance nervously up towards the bedroom doorway, my fear is not that my house is being haunted by a spirit called Mabel who died in the 19th century at the age of fourteen and is constantly seeking her favourite teddy bear… because all of these details both humanise her and make her ridiculous.
“My fear is that there will be something standing in the doorway, because the doorway is where things come to stand.
“Because unoccupied spaces, in our imaginations, must find something to fill them.”
— from “The Saturday Interview: ‘I Am in Eskew’ podcast”
I met her, and I was blocked by her.
barnsanctuary on ig
i need to talk to god. rats should be bigger
Orbicella annularis
A fiber art study of coral polyps
not to shill on main but
for all your good cow needs
Do not separate them
ALEKSANDRA CZUDŻAK
Tony Santoro's Guide to Illegal Tree-Planting
You’ve heard of guerilla gardening. Now get ready for
gangster botany
He’s selling shirts now and I really want one.
This is so extremely relevant to my pasture tree research!!
crime pays but botany doesn’t is a treasure trove I love this dude so much, his rage and anger towards invasive species and his passive aggressive statements about the backwards attitudes in the united states has been resonating with me super hard lately. I wish he would do more midwestern botany vids eventually and talk about invasive earthworms in geologically stratified zones and their effective promotion of the negative feed back loops in invasive plants that alter soil chemistry with their allelopathicity.
Rogan Brown’s paper sculptures depict complex scientific processes and organisms. See more here.