In my happy place 🖤 . . . 📸: @mattjames52 https://www.instagram.com/p/CE-gO63h0P7N06T5OqKqpOBiGlTA3rF1fDJ0qU0/?igshid=bx6oji50zdv7

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Today's Document
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
Cosimo Galluzzi

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

ellievsbear
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
Peter Solarz
Monterey Bay Aquarium
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

Discoholic 🪩

JBB: An Artblog!
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Stranger Things
Xuebing Du
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@nebligerbauer
In my happy place 🖤 . . . 📸: @mattjames52 https://www.instagram.com/p/CE-gO63h0P7N06T5OqKqpOBiGlTA3rF1fDJ0qU0/?igshid=bx6oji50zdv7
Okay current John Mulaney is great but seeing pictures from his childhood is just so adorable!!
POV: you’re Princess Diana
Seen in the window at Gulf of Maine Books in Brunswick, Maine. Photo: Bill Roorbach
Except America wasn’t an endless expanse of forest with no certain borders. At least not while human beings inhabited it. The idea that native peoples did not cultivate or shape our land and that we had no borders is white propaganda meant to dehumanize and de-legitimize native peoples.
This illustration here show Apalachee people using slash and burn methods for agriculture. Fires were set regularly to intention burn down forests and plains. Why would we do this? Well because an unregulated forest isn’t that great for people, actually. We set fires to destroy new forest growth and undergrowth, and to remove trees, allowing for easier game hunting, nutrient enriched soil, and better growth rates for crops and herbs we used in food and medicine.
Pre-Colonial New England, where my tribe the Abenaki are from, looked more like an extensive meadow or savannah with trees growing in pockets and groves. Enough woodland to support birds, deer, and moose, but not too much to make hunting difficult. We carefully shaped the land around us to suit our needs as a thriving and successful people. Slash and burn agriculture was practiced virtually everywhere in the new world, from the pacific coast to chesapeake bay, from panama to quebec. It was a highly successful way of revitalizing the land and promoting crop growth, as well as preventing massive forest fires that thrive in unregulated forests. Berries were the major source of fruit for my tribe, and we needed to burn the undergrowth so they could grow.
That changed when white people invaded, and brought with them disease. In my tribe, up to 9 in 10 people died. 90% of our people perished not from violence starvation, but from disease. Entire villages would be decimated, struck down by small pox. Suddenly, we couldn’t care for the land anymore. There weren’t enough of us to maintain a vast, carefully structured ecological system like we had for thousands of years. We didn’t have the numbers, or strength. So the trees grew back and unregulated. We couldn’t set fires anymore, and we couldn’t cultivate the land. And white people would make certain we never could again. Timber, after all, was the most important export from New England.
Endless trees and untamed wilderness is a nice fantasy. But it’s a very white fantasy, one that erases the history of my people and of my land. One that paints native peoples are merely parasites leeching off the land, not masters of the earth who new the right balance of hunting and agriculture. It robs us of our agency as people, and takes our accomplishments from us. Moreover, it implies that only white people ever discovered the power to shape the world around them, and that mere brown people can’t possibly have had anything to do with changing our environment.
Don’t bring back untamed wilderness. Bring back my fire setters, my tree sappers, my farmers and my fishers. Bring back my people who were here first.
Sources: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Native_American_use_of_fire#Role_of_fire_by_natives
https://www.fs.usda.gov/Internet/FSE_DOCUMENTS/fsbdev3_000385.pdf
http://www.sidalc.net/repdoc/A11604i/A11604i.pdf
For those curious I recommend reading Changes in the Land: Indians, Colonists and the Ecology of New England. https://books.google.com/books/about/Changes_in_the_Land.html?id=AHclmuykdBQC&printsec=frontcover&source=kp_read_button#v=onepage&q&f=false
O’ho. Our tribe used to do regular controlled burns in the brush in CA to prevent- guess what? Uncontrollable wildfires. (also it keeps the poison oak down and helps some plants propagate) And before yall panic these methods worked because they were sustainable. You can’t survive if you destroy your resources; tribes knew how to make sure they could come back to a harvest ground next year and harvest again. There was still plenty of wilderness and it was often healthier for a touch of human help here and there. people used to be all over this continent.
Donuts, 2019 - Minolta X-370 @bare-cove
🌱Some helpful tips to keep healthy house plants🌱
Me looking at flowers: if I was a fairy I would totally use this as a dress
People who buy locally sourced food, support homesteading, reduce plastic use, engage in the restocking of forests that have been depleted, re-use things instead of throwing them up, recycle, compost and/or give a preference for cruelty-free products made by small business people are doing far more for the environment to me than some of you who merely keep discussing which diet should be forced on everyone while all you do is to still consume a fair amount of overpriced products you get from big markets no matter what you eat and spread fake news on social media. There’s no 100% ethical consumption under capitalism, yes, but you could do better and you know that. If you can’t do every nature-friendly activity, because it’s understandable that not all of them are affordable and possible to everyone, at least try your best to do some of them and encourage others to try it. No change is possible without action.
Please say hello to:
The Sims™ 4 Nifty Knitting Stuff Pack* and its new icon
the cottage 🌿 (from a scene in dyspodcast)
Ana Zilhão
Rain in the pumpkin patch and if you listen closely you can hear my neighborhood owl couple hooting in the background
By @sarakofi on instagram
@WeHeartIt/entry/246656930
[id: Gif shows a person wearing a white floral patterned dress, putting their hand out to touch the tall grass as they step through it. End id.]