I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

#extradirty

gracie abrams
occasionally subtle
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
trying on a metaphor

PR's Tumblrdome
Show & Tell

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Mike Driver
Today's Document

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣

tannertan36
The Bowery Presents
No title available
Claire Keane

pixel skylines
almost home

roma★
Sweet Seals For You, Always
seen from United States
seen from Vietnam
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seen from Indonesia

seen from Germany
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@gracklesong
Everybody give it up for columnar jointing
Woo! Yeah! Woohoo! Yippee! Hell yeah! Woo!
Yevgeny Charushin, Snow Leopard
Laura Boswell (British) "Wet Spring Wood", 2024. Reduction Linocut,
Debbie Harry on the Muppet Show S5E9 aired on jan 25, 1981
The Scream
Ed Archie Noisecat
from the website: The black snake represents pipelines that threaten the ecosystem that both the Orca and Salmon depend on for survival.
“The Scream, a 63″ tall exhibition of my craft, was conceived and carved while teaching at Pratt Fine Art in Seattle. It is a meditation on the colonial forces—fossil fuel projects, overfishing, climate change, and more—threatening our relatives under the sea, the killer whale. It is also a memorial to Tahlequah, the killer whale mother who swam with her dead calf balanced on her head for 17 days in the summer of 2018. That same summer, my family—my daughter Zia, my son Julian, and I paddled through the Salish Sea on the tribal canoe journey to Puyallup. Each paddle stroke and each cut, a prayer for our relations and our Earth.”
-Ed Archie NoiseCat
The morning we depart marks the fourth day that an orca, nicknamed Tahlequah, has made headlines for carrying the corpse of her dead calf with her in a so-called “tour of grief.” Tahlequah’s display of mourning—keeping her lifeless child afloat for thousands of miles, nudging the baby’s body forward with her head—serves as a morbid reminder of the grim outlook for the southern resident orca population: They number just 75 whales and have not seen a single successful birth in three years. Little surprise, then, that the Center for Whale Research estimates the population has a five-year window to reproduce, after which they will fade into memory.
Native people, particularly on Canoe Journey, follow Tahlequah’s story closely. Many Salish consider killer whales kin. The Lummi, whose homelands lie north of Seattle and who paddle their canoe not far ahead of ours, call the charismatic mammals qwe lhol mechen, which means “our relative under the water.”
The bond is spiritual, but it’s also one of shared suffering. Tahlequah’s calf died largely from social forces: fishermen netting her salmon, industry polluting her waters, and ships disrupting her hunting grounds. Indigenous peoples know these grievances—and the struggle to protect food and water from those who would pilfer without hesitation—all too well.
Many Native communities know Tahlequah’s grief. It was not so long ago that experts spoke of Indians the way they speak, today, of the southern resident orcas: as endangered, vanishing, the last of their kind. We Indigenous have returned from that catastrophic brink, but the specter of death and disappearance still haunts us. A survey of Native women in Seattle found that 94 percent, or 139 out of 148, were raped or coerced into sex at least once in their lifetime. There is a ghastly trend of Indigenous women and girls going missing and turning up murdered across the United States and Canada. At the end of 2017, Native Americans and Alaska Natives made up 1.8 percent of missing cases in the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s National Crime Information Center database even though they represent just 0.8 percent of the overall population.
-Julian Brave NoiseCat “In the Salish Sea, Native American Communities Bond Over a Rigorous Canoe Voyage” Pacific Standard, 11 Oct 2018
Rinjiro Hasegawa
Cat and Yarn 1930 Private collection
Post-flood Mexican buoy memes
And they keep on coming
Post-flood Mexican buoy memes
A Treasured Treasury of Beloved Characters (2024).
Wool felt, cotton lawn, strawboard, embroidery & poly cotton thread, recycled PET stuffing, armature wire, plastic eyes.
Here is a collection of characters I met when I was small, all of whom have stayed with me every day since. They are housed, stitched and squished in this felt book, akin to their arrangement in my brain.
Posters available here.
Wind Turbines, Palm Springs, California image credit: David McNew via: The Guardian
David Cusick was a Tuscarora (Haudenosaunee) artist who self-published the first known English-language record of Indigenous stories told BY an Indigenous writer-illustrator. His book is called David Cusick’s Sketches of Ancient History of the Six Nations and you can read it for free online.
Congrats to Mr. Carrazco for giving the Meta translation AI some kind of panic attack
Today's wasp of the day is Ropalidia saussurei!
Credits: photo 1, photo 2
Most other wasps that have green on them are not a true green, and instead only appear green due to what is called "structural color"— the micro-make up and surface of the scales reflect light to make it appear that color as opposed to true pigment, which is a chemical mix that results in the color. This is why so many green wasps (and birds for that matter) have a metallic sheen to them, as the angle the light hits at will also effect the perceived color.
There are only a handful of wasp species with true green pigment, the majority of which can only be found in Madagascar.
"Oh, What a Busy Day!" by Gyo Fujikawa
Getting Ready to Eat......
yiou can only reblog this post on july 17th dont reblog it on any other day or you will be boiled
what the fuck
you can't boil me it's july 17th