Proud owner of zero funko pops
Cosimo Galluzzi

oozey mess
Stranger Things

Kiana Khansmith

JBB: An Artblog!

JVL
NASA
One Nice Bug Per Day

@theartofmadeline
Peter Solarz

shark vs the universe
Game of Thrones Daily
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
Sade Olutola
h
will byers stan first human second
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
almost home
KIROKAZE

★

seen from France
seen from Algeria

seen from Saudi Arabia

seen from Malaysia
seen from Bangladesh
seen from India

seen from United Arab Emirates
seen from Brazil

seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from United States

seen from Argentina
seen from Ukraine
seen from South Africa

seen from France

seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from Netherlands

seen from Germany

seen from Germany
@monotropa-uniflora
Proud owner of zero funko pops
Ghost pipe (Monotropa uniflora), a plant that parasitizes other plants via their mycorrhizal fungi
@monotropa-uniflora
Ah! Favorite flower!
Real reason I'm going to Alaska
there is so much fucking happening here
this is the kinda life I wanna be living
Can anyone cover my shift on Sunday
A grassroots project to build biomass-heated greenhouses aims to alleviate food insecurity in the communities most affected by it.
When Eva Dawn Burk first saw Calypso Farm and Ecology Center in 2019, she felt enchanted. Calypso is an educational farm tucked away in a boreal forest in Ester, Alaska, near Fairbanks. To Burk, it looked like a subarctic Eden, encompassing vegetable and flower gardens, greenhouses, goats, sheep, honeybees, a nature trail and more. In non-pandemic summers, the property teems with local kids and aspiring farmers who converge on the terraced hillside for hands-on education.
Calypso reminded Burk, 38, who is Denaakk’e and Lower Tanana Athabascan from the villages of Nenana and Manley Hot Springs, of her family’s traditional fish camp in the Alaskan Interior, where she spent childhood summers. “I just felt like I was home,” Burk said. “(Calypso) really spoke to my heart.”
[Continue Reading]
A half gallon of milk can cost up to $13 in the Alaskan town I'm starting in this school year. Definitely saving this to use in class
Gets put on the no fly list for telling the TSA that a can of springy snakes is a pipe bomb
very weird feeling to introduce myself to somebody and wonder when it is normal to mention the alaska thing. like hi I'm Harry I'm gonna be the one science teacher in a place where there are no paved roads and a medium pizza costs $35.
And while I'm just a simple folk and ain't any magnum donged fuck machine to begin with, does suck knowing I can't even consider entering a relationship when in a month I will be 4,000 miles away in a secluded town of 260 people
drove 2 hours to a show and found a kirb
I'm obsessed with his tweet and the mere amount of raw, unadulterated cope you can just taste in it.
Imagine being Notch, you sold your baby to a gigacorporation that is making 10 times the cash they paid you just out of e-celeb propaganda alone in a year, FREE publicity btw.
At least you still got the fandom's support, right? Nah. The fans of your creation loathe you (rightfully) because you decided to be a shameless QAnon transphobe loonie and spew nonsense on Twitter dot com, where you get constantly ratiod by people simply shitposting under your post.
This is some high tier cuck content.
And to top it all off, he even went back on his deal with Game Makers Toolkit to delete his Twitter.
can science side of tumblr rise from the grave to explain how it’s only 73 degrees outside, but i turn my AC off for an hour and the temperature inside climbs from 71 to 79?
outside wind
inside no wind
me starting july 29 2021
in case anybody who knows who i am is itching for a life update, pretty soon I'm gonna be flying up to Alaska to teach high school science in a town of less than 300 people in a school district bigger than my home state