(via Meilna1965)
Claire Keane

oozey mess

⁂
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
hello vonnie
Cosimo Galluzzi
Xuebing Du
occasionally subtle
Cosmic Funnies

Kaledo Art

Discoholic 🪩
cherry valley forever
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$LAYYYTER

#extradirty
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
Mike Driver

roma★

titsay
Not today Justin

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@condensingdust
(via Meilna1965)
Ten Mistakes New Herb Gardeners Make (and How to Avoid Them!)
Mistake 1: Growing from seed. When you first start out trying to grow fresh herbs, I recommend you begin by trying to grow from seedlings rather than planting your own seeds. These great little starter plants are widely available in grocery stores in the late spring. For the same price as a packet of fresh herbs from the produce section, you can buy your own little starter plant. Lots can go wrong in the seed to seedling transition (including not thinning out plants properly), so its probably best to begin by skipping that complicated task or you are in danger of washing out before you really begin.
Mistake 2: Starting with the wrong varieties. I recommend you start by trying to grow fresh basil. It is the perfect trainer herb. First, basil grows quickly, allowing you to observe the effects of your care more easily. Second, basil leaves wilt visibly when not watered enough, but recovers well if you water the wilted plant. This makes basil a great ‘canary in the mineshaft’ to help you figure out how much water is enough.
Mistake 3: Watering herbs like houseplants. Instead, water herbs a moderate amount every day. While some houseplants flourish with one solid watering per week, most delicate herbs require moderate and regular watering. This is particularly true during hot summer months. If you have good drainage at the bottom of your pot (at least a drainage hole, possibly rocks beneath the soil), it will be difficult to water herbs too much.
Mistake 4: Not cutting early and often. As a novice gardener, it may seem like your puny little plant just isn’t ready for a trip to the barber, but then you will find yourself sitting there wishing for leaves without much success. Again, basil is a great herb to practice pruning. As with all herbs, you want to cut the herb just above a set of growing leaves. With basil, when you cut the plant that way, the originally trimmed stem will no longer grow. However, two new stems will grow around the original cutting, creating a “V” shape (see the photo above, can you spot the Vs?). If you don’t trim basil aggressively, it will continue to grow straight up, and become too tall and top-heavy. Making your first trim approximately 3-4” above the soil produces a nice sturdy plant. Of course you want to be sure you are always leaving a few good sturdy leaves on the plant (see below). As it continues to grow, continue to prune it approximately every 3-4" for a nice solid plant. I like to let it grow for some time and then cut back to within 2-3 inches of the original cut. After only a few early trial cuts, this usually makes for a nice clipping with plenty of basil to use for a pizza.
Mistake 5: Taking the leaves from the wrong place. When you are just starting out it seems to make so much sense to pick off a few big leaves around the bottom of the plant, and let those tender little guys at the top keep growing. Wrong. Leave those large tough old guys at the bottom alone. They are the solar panels that power your herb’s growth. Once your plant is big enough to sustain a decent harvest, keep on taking from the top, as you have been when you were pruning. That way you get all those tender new herbs that are so tasty, and your plant gets to keep its well developed solar power system in place. Plus, if you pluck from the base and leave the top intact, you get a tall skinny plant that will flop over from its own weight (and yes, I know this from experience). When you pluck from the top, instead of clipping off just below a pair of leaves, you want to clip off just above a pair of leaves. It is a bit counter-intuitive as a novice, but trust me it works. The place where the leaf joins the stem is where new growth will occur when your plant sends off new stems in a V.
Mistake 6: Letting your plants get too randy. If you are pruning regularly, this may never become an issue, but unless you are growing something for its edible flowers, be sure to cut back herbs before they start growing flowers. My friend once brought me to her backyard garden and pointed, frustrated, at her wimpy, small basil plants. “I just keep tending them, but they don’t even produce enough leaves to put on a salad!” she lamented. I pointed to the glorious stalk of flowers at the top of each plant, “That’s your problem” I explained. Because herbs are kind of like college boys: if you give them half a chance, they will focus all their energy on procreation and neglect growth. If you want leaves, keep cutting off the little flower buds whenever you find them (see photo above), and it will encourage your plant to focus on growing more leaves.
Mistake 7: Using tired soil with no nutrients. Tired soil that has been sitting in your garden or lawn for ages often looks grey and a little depressing. Would you want to grow in that stuff? Give your plants a dose of the good stuff and they’ll thank you for it. I grow my herbs in a combination of potting soil, used coffee grounds (with a near-neutral PH, available for free at Starbucks), and organic compost. If I have some on hand, I also throw in crushed egg shells. Those without access to compost (and no deep commitment to organic growing) may find Miracle grow useful. My momma swears by it for tomatoes. A diluted solution of Miracle grow occasionally can help many herbs flourish.
Mistake 8: Getting in a rut. There is an element to passion about herb gardening. In order to be good at it, you need to feel rewarded. So don’t stick too long with one or two herbs just because they work. Branch out to a few other basic herbs that you will use regularly in your kitchen. There are few things more rewarding as an urban foodie than being able to pop out to the fire escape to clip fresh herbs to use in my cooking. Once you have become comfortable with basil, I recommend moving on to try growing oregano, mint, rosemary and thyme. All are regularly useful herbs in the kitchen, and all are relatively easy to grow. You will notice that rosemary cleaves after cutting in a somewhat similar way to basil, but grows much more slowly, so the effect is difficult to notice. Some plants also respond to clipping by throwing out more full leaves at their base. I have long wanted to grow cilantro but have not had much luck with it.
Mistake 9: You mean there’s more than one kind of mint?When choosing herbs, read the label carefully. For example, there are two main varieties of oregano: Mediterranean and Mexican. Mediterranean oregano is the more common variety, and what you likely own if you have conventional dried oregano in your cupboard. I have Mexican oregano growing on my back fire escape. I love Mexican oregano in spicy dishes, for making beans from scratch, and often use it in tomato dishes where I don’t want the flavor to seem too much like marinara. Similarly, there are many different kinds of mint. You don’t want to be thinking of the pungent spearmint plant and accidentally take home the much more subtle (and not mojito savvy) applemint by mistake.
Mistake 10: Feed me Seymour! If you are planting in soil instead of pots, take care that your cute little herb seedling doesn’t become a giant plant that takes over your garden. A word of warning for oregano and mint: both can be voracious growers. If you are planting outside in a garden, rather than in pots, you may want to consider potting these herbs and then burying the pots in the ground. This will add a measure of control to the root systems of these herbs, which can otherwise take over a garden and strangle nearby neighbors. When in doubt, check out wikipedia, they usually are careful to point out which herbs are in danger of overwhelming your garden.
Some really useful info here if you’re new to herb gardening.
What was the last deck you used?
Mine was the Deviant Moon as I’m traveling and brought that and the Burning Serpent Oracle. Though I should have packed my Wild Unknown, sun and moon tarot and maybe a ‘plain’ Lenormand.
thesweeneytarot
Lol. Surprise surprise from me…. It was my sun and moon. :)
Last one I bought? The Heart Tarot. The cards are shaped like hearts and the artwork is beautiful.
s and m is a lovely deck! I’m waiting on a few decks - alchemical fourth edition,
78tarot
both 1st and second, New York Lenormand, Tubula Mundin and CONNECTED & FREE - THE ALCHEMIST’S ORACLE :)
I’ve got the fountain waiting at home in Sc for me and 78 tarot too.
I’m eyeing like another 20 though. Always. Lol
Chinese Tarot was my last used, bought? Maybe the golden tarot?
The deviant moon!
the deviant moon :D
Deviant Moon getting some ❤️❤️❤️
Tarot of the Pagan Cats, for me!
villancikos:
The Anatomy of a mermaid
yes, thanks.
i hate when people draws mermaid’s tail like it was some sort of goddamn suit on normal human legs like this:
it just doesnt work
yeah we wouldnt want to make our mermaids too unrealistic
this asks more questions than it answers. they don’t really have vestigial legs, like those aren’t even motile fins, so why do they still have fully formed hips, why hasn’t the pelvic bone changed significantly? and where did the tail come from?
[proto whale]
[orca skelly]
whales as we know them evolved from land animals that went back out to sea, and it’s all spine all the way down to the tail fin. the pelvis is vestigial to the point of being tiny and unrecognizable, and the rear leg structure is //gone//. and by the time they evolved all that, their forelegs had turned into proper fins and they didn’t have hourglass figures, because they built up walls of insulating fat and blubber where it was needed most - around the vital organs.
[walrus skelly]
which brings us to the walrus. as you can see the skeletal structure and the external appearance are fairly ursiform - the rear legs are basically still in there forming the tail, and the pelvis is intact, and above that it may as well still be a land animal. if mermaids did exist, as hominids who went back out to sea, and if they hadn’t evolved into basically dolphins, then a walrus skeletal system, complete with vestigial thigh bones inside a kind of muscle skirt, and with significant fat and blubber deposits //on the main body// would be most likely. which is to say, mermaids with human torsos and seagoing lower bodies would waddle around on their tails, have clearly defined thigh structures, and would be a hell of a lot rounder above and about the waist than they’re usually depicted.
which begs the question, then, if you see a mermaid and it’s a skinny little thing with a slinky waist and an eel-like tail and a perfect bosom and a coy smile, //why does it look like that//? because whatever that is? it is not a land animal that readapted to the sea. it is not your distant kin. it is a sea creature that adapted //to get your attention//.
maybe it’s all an illusion, a frilly mane, an hourglass shape, and narrow antennae that mimic the shape of human arms, waving lonely sailors into the water, only to realize too late the bioluminescent patterns of lipstick and pert breasts are to distract from what lies behind them - viselike jaws and row after row of stiletto teeth.
or maybe it’s all soft tissue, the gelatinous bell of a jellyfish folded into a pleasing shape, luring the unwary down to be caught up in a tail that is nothing more than thousands of barbed lines of stinging neurotoxin cells.
or it could be that the tail goes deep into a shadowy well, and the beautiful woman is a mask for a single enormous jaw, the internal skeleton just the endless spine and ribs of a vast and hungry sea snake.
or, perhaps most terrifyingly, the face is real but not the face of the eyes looking out of it - a human mask for an intelligence both cold and calculating, wearing an inviting smile to bring you within reach of the dagger behind it’s back. waiting to slice the skin off of you because it needs a new disguise, because it is shaped like you but does not look like you, because it must pass as you so it can go among you, so that by starlight it may go on land and into town, where your kin are sleeping, unsuspecting.
Jesus Christ back up a minute buddy
I am 100% on board with eldritch horror mermaids.
Can I set up something to just reblog this every time I see it? Like automatically? Because this is perfect and I love this.
Like I needed more reasons to be afraid of deep water..
handsoffthegoodstuff (Found this on my dash. Hope it helps you!)
IT DOES!!! THANK YOU SO MUCH I OWE YOU MY LIFE
Like I need someone to draw this tho
My best friend just taught me the greatest tarot trick: Is there something in your life that isn’t going your way? Shuffle your cards, sift through them and find the Wheel of Fortune card. The cards found on either side of it are insight into what you need to do to change your circumstances.
Oh this is nice. Quick and painless.
OH AND ANOTHER.
You may use the same method above for any of the trumps, searching for the trump that best represents your concerns. Love? Find the cards on either side of the Lovers. Concerned about new beginnings? Scope who is hanging out with the Magician. Etc.
I love doing this! I started doing it after learning the basics of lenormand, since this type of significator-centered spread is really common. Try it!
When reading for yourself, another good technique is to find your significator and see what cards are around it to get a peek at your general environment. I used to do this all the time for personal readings and it worked really well. You could also do this with another person’s significator.
Cool. It’s like putting Tarot and Lenormand techniques together. Very cool.
Reblog if you wouldn't mind if your partner had self harm scars. I want to prove a point to myself that I'm not repulsive.
There is hardly anything ‘scary’ about the tarot. It is simply a conversation between me, you, and the universe. If you’re lucky, there might even be some tea involved ♥
The Ugly Tarot Fairy (via theuglytarotfairy)
Hi! I was wondering if you could tell me a bit more about your 'getting to know you' spread for a new deck? It probably sounds silly but my new deck feels a bit 'reluctant' compared to my previous one, if that makes sense, and I was wondering if you had any pointers 😊
Hello! First off, you don’t sound silly at all. Some decks, just like some people, are a little shy or reticent when they meet someone and need a prompt to open up. Which is where Deck Interviews, like my Getting to Know You spread, come in.
The standard deck interview, which I first came across quite a few years ago, is a six card draw. However, as I’ve worked I’ve expanded on that and my current spread is a nine draw. Yes, this is because I’m quite attached to the magical significance of 3x3 but also because I’m one of those people who can’t resist tinkering to make things personal.
Caveat at this point to say everyone should please feel free to change this in anyway that feels right to you.
So, the spread itself:
The five cards in the bottom row focus solely on the deck:
1. What is your nature? Basically tell me about yourself, give me an idea of your character.
2. What are your strengths? Tell me what type of readings you’re going to excel at.
3. What do you like doing best? Which may at first glance look like a repeat of question 2, but it isn’t. I have observed that, again like people, some decks may not always enjoy doing the thing they are best at - I’m brilliant at maths but I get much more joy out of reading tarot and writing (which I’m good at but not as good as I am at maths).
4. What are your weaknesses? Tell me what type of readings you’re going to struggle with.
5. What do you not like doing? Again, like people, the thing your deck might like least may not correspond to what it is weakest at.
The three cards in the middle row focus on the immediate relationship between you and the deck:
6. How do you feel about me? (no explanation needed)
7. What do you think I need to learn? Tell me what you’ve come into my life to teach me/help me understand.
8. How can I work to achieve that? Tell me what you want us to focus on first.
The final card on the top row is looking ahead at the relationship between you and the deck:
9. Where do you see us going together? Tell me which path we’re on, in this journey we’re about to take together!
I hope that helps. If you do use it, or create your own deck interview spread from this, please do share the results!
If we agree that the Tarot does not work like a crystal ball and that the tarologist is not a seer—a talent that, according to esotericists, permits a vision of the consultant’s future—but a reader, we shall see that the Arcana form a language in which drawings and colors take the place of letters and words. Just as people speak French, Spanish, English, Japanese, and so forth, we can speak Tarot. And just as any human being, if he or she studies it, can learn to speak a new language, he or she can learn to read and translate the messages of the Tarot without needing to be a magician, a seer, or someone endowed with para psychological powers. The Tarot is a language within everyone’s grasp.
Alejandro Jodorowsky (via goddesswithinyou)
that is an amazing idea I will have to try that.
I love making my own scrubs. For one, I am pretty sure I am a kitchen witch, so I love making things myself in the kitchen, and two, it is usually much cheaper than buying a scrub because I already have the ingredients in my kitchen.
I like mixing brown sugar, coconut oil, and vanilla extract together for a body scrub that makes you smell like cookies. Or salt, olive oil, and lavender essential oil for a sweet, relaxing scrub.
For my face I mix used coffee grounds, cocoa, coconut oil, and honey.
For my lips I use white sugar, honey, and olive oil.
For all my scrubs, I do not really use measurements except for the essential oils (you only need a couple of drops). I start with a little bit of each ingredient and then keep mixing and adding until it gets to the consistency I like. Also, your scrubs will keep in an air-tight container for up to a week (longer if you store them in the fridge), so if you make too much, save it in an extra jar. However, you should only use scrubs once or twice a week so as not to irritate your skin.
you’re a doll, thank you for telling me this.
“shouting into the void” is one of my favorite expressions. idk what it is about it, but that ominous factor is just
this was really hard to do without recycling card meanings from other spreads and i’m really happy with all of it. and i think i’m going to make some more harry potter inspired spreads, starting with the houses
if you use it, tag me with #iggymarauder if you post the results :D
GET ON MY BLOG
I'd love a tarot hug! Such a lovely idea.
Sure thing! Thank you so much :)
Eight of Wands
Things are lining up for you! Although life may feel a little chaotic, know that things are slowly but surely aligning in your favor! The moment is almost perfect to carry out your plans but wait just a little longer. You will know when the precise time has come and everything will work out as you have planned it!
*hugs*
ah more waiting! I guess I know that I'm still in a waiting game, but I can't wait until the waiting is over :) Thanks!
3 Cards of Kindness
1. Forgive yourself for… 2. Be proud of yourself for… 3. Love yourself for…
I SWEAR TO GOD THIS COMMUNITY ASKED ME MULTIPLE TIMES TO START DOING MORE TINYCHATS AND HERE I AM WITH MY TINYCHAT ROOM OPEN FOR 10 MINUTES AND NOBODY BUT MY BOYFRIEND IS IN THERE. THIS IS WHY I DON'T OPEN CHATS FOR YOU BITCHES. be there or be square -xoxo deev
omg
I’m fucking serious. If nobody shows up I’m gonna have a bitch fit.
guess I missed it :( Was a little awkward time for the west coast for me, thought I'd be able to catch the later half but it wasn't going on still when I got on.
Why is oak considered a masculine tree? What is it about it that makes people think “masculine ”?
I don’t know much besides biologically, but oak trees are found in places that experience fire ecologically. They even encourage conditions for fire by dropping all those leaves on the ground. Some species of oak need fire to suppress the other trees and shrubs or else they will get crowded out, like in prairies and a savannah. Maybe that has something to do with it?
Cool biological information. Didn’t even know oaks grew on the prairies or savannah (I was ultimately thinking of English Oak when I made the post, and we don’t tend to get wildfires or natural fires much at all afaik).
But this information you’re giving here, correct me if I’m wrong, is saying that oak is masculine because it is connected with fire and so inherits some of fire’s attributes. Therefore you are saying that fire is masculine (otherwise how could it impart the trait of masculinity to oak by association)? Why is fire masculine?
I don’t really think of fire as masculine, just following the little bit of information you provided in your original question and trying to connect what I know of Oaks to some sort of association I could see others making. Just as I now see that your original question was meant more as questioning the whole premise, I think the way it is worded can easily be interpreted as looking for information to back up that association. Along that association and line of logic (fire = masculine, Oak catches fire, Oak = masculine - but rather my original line of thinking was backwards of this, using the original info as a starting point), then I could see people making that connection of Oaks as masculine. I have heard of fire being referred to as masculine, much like water is referred to as feminine - but I am not saying I identify with those associations. In reality, the Oak is capable of producing both male and female (as defined biologically) reproductive organs on the same tree - although they use different techniques so that one tree is pollinated by other individuals and not itself. So really the Oak does not (scientifically speaking) follow a gender binary. Is there such a thing as masculine and feminine energy? I don’t know. It does not really seem that way. Are there other (better) words to use? Active, passive? I don’t know. I don’t really use energy terminology, unless we’re talking metabolism and ATP.
Many of the Oaks in the Midwest of USA (at least this is what I am familiar with) are in what would be prairies and savannahs if fire suppression was not so prevalent. But there is also swampy oaks, operating outside of the influence of regular fire. :)