The Sound of Music (1965) dir. Robert Wise

shark vs the universe

JVL
h
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

Love Begins

ellievsbear
almost home

pixel skylines
AnasAbdin
Show & Tell
ojovivo

Kaledo Art

roma★
Stranger Things

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
Keni
noise dept.

Origami Around

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣

seen from Brazil

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Bangladesh

seen from Singapore
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
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seen from Germany

seen from Malaysia
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@sheepoflunacy
The Sound of Music (1965) dir. Robert Wise
Remembering Rosa the sea otter
Hello Aquarium family. It’s with great sadness that we share that our beloved sea otter Rosa passed away today. At 24 years old, Rosa was the oldest resident otter at the Aquarium and one of our most experienced surrogate moms, having raised 15 stranded sea otter pups in her time with us.
While Rosa spent the last few months behind the scenes getting extra special care from our staff, she was the matriarch of the Sea Otters exhibit. Beloved and cherished by millions of visitors and fans of the live Sea Otter Cam, she was instantly recognizable thanks to her blonde head (eclipsed only by Ivy as our most grizzled of kelp grizzlies) and her signature head-all-the-way-back swimming style.
“Rosa was one of our most playful sea otters, and even at 24 years old, she would still be seen frolicking and wrestling with the younger otters when she instigated it,” said Melanie Oerter, curator of mammals. “Rosa was usually found sleeping against the window while on exhibit with her chin tucked tight into her chest and her tail swishing back and forth.”
After being found stranded as a four-week-old pup in September 1999, Rosa became part of the Aquarium family before our sea otter surrogacy program even took shape. Our Sea Otter Program staff raised her by hand for nearly seven months before releasing her to the wild.
Rosa eventually returned to the Aquarium once again in March 2002 when she didn’t take to life outside of human care, and she immediately became a fixture in the formative years of our sea otter surrogacy program as a caring adoptive mother for rescued pups destined for wild release.
She was a delight to work with, though she certainly had her expectations of our staff according to the many Sea Otter Mammalogists who trained (were trained by?) Rosa over the years.
"Rosa was an incredibly smart otter! Generally calm and patient with the staff. However, she could be defiant at times and there would be no convincing her to do something she did not want to do," said Oerter. "She would often just look at us or swim away. I believe she was the one who was really training us all of these years. I certainly learned a lot from working with such an incredible otter. It has been a privilege and to say we will miss her is understated."
Rosa relaxed into retirement from surrogacy in 2019, acting as a companion and cornerstone in the ever-changing raft of otters in our care.
Wild female sea otters live between 15 and 20 years, and reaching the age of 24 is a testament to the exceptional care Rosa received throughout her life from our Veterinary and Animal Care teams. In recent years, she began showing signs of age-related health concerns. In the last few weeks, her health had been deteriorating. After an exam, the veterinary and animal care teams made the difficult choice to humanely euthanize Rosa because those health conditions were compromising her quality of life. She passed away peacefully, surrounded by her caretakers.
Rosa’s legacy lives on both at the Aquarium with our other resident sea otters Kit, Selka, Ivy, and Ruby, and in the wild, where sea otter pups she raised continue to raise pups of their own, contributing to the recovery of their species and their ecosystems along the California coast.
Rosa was an inspiration to millions as a charismatic ambassador for her threatened species while playing a leading role in the story of sea otter recovery from near-extinction during the fur trade. Rosa will be greatly missed by all of us who got to know her over the years.
To celebrate Rosa’s long life, please feel free to share photos and stories of your encounters with Rosa at the Aquarium in the comment section on this post, in her memory and for the staff and volunteers grieving her loss. Thank you all for being such a big part of Rosa’s life. 🦦♥️
people will act like a character being a little bit of a cunt sometimes is a flaw and not a positive trait but they are wrong
this one got me
Well, we kind of have no choice but to live. So I think your best bet is just to learn how to suffer existence.
PALM SPRINGS (2020) dir. Max Barbakow
once again, the southern accent is the only valid one
Southern Beatrice is now the only valid Beatrice
For anyone who doesn’t know, there’s a strong sect of Shakespeareans who would say that (something like) this *is* as close as we get to what most of the actors in Shakespeare’s companies would have sounded like.
"ACAB"
Santiago de Chile, janvier 2023
Tiina Törmänen
i've had several retail and food service jobs and they were all so much harder than whatever i'm doing in this office right now. it honestly feels like cheating. service industry workers should be paid $100 per hour with full benefits including the right to kill one customer per year
im 100% of the opinion that once your service or product becomes something you cannot reasonably go through life without, it should be free.
if you have to make people work, and they need a computer and a cellphone with internet to even get a job, then those should be free and it shouldn't be shitty ones either.
people have to have shelter. housing, heat, water, and electricity are all needed for daily life here, it should be fucking free because there's no reason to have people die to exposure in a 'developed' country.
food should be free. why do we not provide food to the hungry? we throw out hundreds of thousands of pounds of it every year.
THE BANSHEES OF INISHERIN (2022) Dir. Martin McDonagh
This was SUCH A GOOD MOVIE
I just wanna get high 😔
Bombings are only "acceptable" if you sign the proper paperwork and hold all the power
Nothing is more pleasing than a sloppy, muddy hole! This western toad [Anaxyrus boreas] was found enjoying such a hole in Tollhouse, California, by photographer A. A. White.