I don’t know why I did this.

JBB: An Artblog!
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almost home
Claire Keane
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
$LAYYYTER

oozey mess

shark vs the universe

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
One Nice Bug Per Day
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
wallacepolsom

Product Placement
dirt enthusiast

⁂

Kaledo Art
sheepfilms

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he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

seen from China
seen from United States
seen from Iraq

seen from T1
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Canada
seen from Colombia
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from T1

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
@sleep-flavored-tea
I don’t know why I did this.
I don’t know why I did this.
Eight uses for leftover pumpkin flesh
1. Fashion leftover pumpkin into a nest shape on a lofty, flat surface to attract the orange vegetable hawk, a fierce hunter who lines its nests with the remains of its victims. You can entice the hawk to stay by scattering a few helpless carrots around the local area. Note that your area may not actually want its own orange vegetable hawk; they need constant prey or they will start going for chips and putting up negative reviews of the neighbourhood on the avian web.
2. Lightly dessicate and put on the end of a sharp stick for an unique room decoration which also contains a sharp stick. Every room should have one
3. Add a little salt and puree to a smooth paste. Travel back in time to Dallas on the morning of the 22nd of November, 1963. Lightly coat the stairs in the local book depository building with the mixture, causing Lee Harvey Oswald to slip and fall, thus missing the window of opportunity to carry out the assassination.
4. Donate it to a living pumpkin which desparately needs a transplant. For example, one of those pumpkins which is being used as an adorable mouse house in a children’s book.
5. Compress into a cuboid block and freeze. Store until you next have some leftover pumpkin flesh. Compress that into a block and freeze as well. Repeat as necessary. Pass these instructions on to your offspring. In five thousand years’ time, when eternal Winter unexpectedly sweeps down from the North, this is how your distant descendents will build the orange tower famed in song and story, and they will honour your name with gin.
6. Drop it behind you as you navigate the maze. If you become lost, you can use it to follow your trail back to the start; or, alternatively, you may have attracted one or more large herbivores to your trail. In this case you may not have a path back, but you will have a new-found furry friend who will love you for life and eat the pumpkins you grow in the cottage in the maze.
7. Scatter it with contaminated pumpkin juice thieved from a high-security lab fridge at midnight, raising it from the dead as a rindless abomination to shamble around your vegetable patch evermore. If you are done with growing vegetables but finding this decision hard to reconcile with healthy eating advice, having zombie pumpkins can be a great excuse. It is definitely healthy to not go near them. They may even help you establish a running routine.
8. Find a portal to an alternate reality. Tip the pumpkin flesh through. If enough people do this often enough, eventually the alternate reality will be overgrown with pumpkin plants. I find pumpkin plants aesthetically pleasing and plan to retire there. Thanks.
Do you think they would be friends?
(Click for better quality!)
The debut of my Bundt pan. Chocolate zucchini cake with cherries and chocolate frosting.
this looks beautiful and I love it even if it’s zucchini
Inktober 8 - The Promised Neverland
I honestly haven’t expected much from this anime, for no other reason than the main characters are kids. But boy, was I surprised. It’s insanely good.
skykids tryna outrun the krill like
‘when the krill gets you’ moodboard
thatgamecompany: posts this
The entire fandom:
lookit this highbrow cultured meme i made
right before rain
@ other writers: how the hell do you write short things????
I think it involves blood magic.
@ other writers: How in the hell do you write long things????
It definitely involves blood magic.
@ writers: how in the hell do you write
its blood magic all the way down
@ writers: How do you learn blood magic?
it definitely involves writing
I cannot emphasize enough, museums/zoos/aquariums and the like are at an incredibly dangerous point right now, and it’s breaking my heart that not only is it happening, but it’s happening so much more quietly than it deserves. The main people I have seen sharing information about the crisis museums are in right now are others in the field, and while I know it’s not out of malicious ignorance, because people love these places and don’t want to see them gone, it’s scary that these places are dying with so much less fanfare than some of the other institutions threatened by the current situation in the US.
I came across an article from NPR the other day suggesting that unless something changes, ONE-THIRD of museums in the entire country (a loose term that includes certain places like aquariums as well) could be dead before the end of the year (source). A third! Can you even imagine the incalculable loss? And it goes so far beyond the services museums generally provide to the public, like field trips or a place to go on the weekends – not that those aren’t important. But museums do so much more than that. If these places die, where do their collections go? Often there’s no one else who can take them in, and as someone who has spent a significant amount of time in the bellies of museum collections, most people have no idea how many specimens or artifacts would become homeless and in danger of being lost forever. In the case of zoos and aquariums, what happens to their animals? Another friend of mine mentioned on Facebook the other day that the Aquarium of the Pacific is not only in dire need right now, but that a person they know who works with them has said that if they close, they’ll have to euthanize a significant number of their animals. And for the places that do survive, they won’t be unchanged. The science museum I used to work for isn’t in danger of permanently closing – yet – but still had make the incredibly difficult call to do a 39% reduction in staff positions, meaning that even when they reopen, the jobs that I and over a hundred and fifty people held before the pandemic – educating, running programs, engaging with visitors on an extra personal level – won’t exist anymore. Another friend of mine doing a museum studies degree has said that even the Smithsonian (the SMITHSONIAN) had to make a similar call and many of her friends doing work there are now jobless.
Your local museum isn’t getting help from the government. Museums, zoos, and aquariums have had to beg desperately for stimulus money that hasn’t manifested. These are non-profits, that rely on revenue from visitors and memberships for the most part, and as they are responsibly staying closed for everyone’s safety, they aren’t getting visitors. Without some form of help, they are going to drop off the face of the planet, or appear at the other end of this as gutted shells of their former selves.
If you want to help, you have two options: get money into the hands of these places directly, or put pressure on your representatives to offer museums and other institutions like them some kind of federal stimulus money. If you can afford it, this is a great time to get a membership to a place you love – many of them are even offering special online programming for members, so it’s more than just a donation. Or you could make a donation, if that’s a more practical amount for you to spend, because at this point anything helps. And if you can’t do that (or even if you can), yell at your senators and representatives to do something. Many places even are offering guidelines for the sorts of things to talk about, like this script from the Monterey Bay Aquarium (although repetitive scripts are less likely to have an impact than individual e-mails, something is still better than nothing, and you could even read over it to figure out how to formulate your own message).
I’m not usually one to beg people to signal boost something, but it’s breaking my heart that this issue is being ignored. Every day it feels like I have to explain these places are struggling to someone else who didn’t know it was a problem, and while I don’t blame them for not knowing, I want people to know. I want people to be aware that we are at risk of losing some of our most valuable cultural and educational institutions, not find our after all this is over that they’re gone. Please talk with people you know about what’s going on. We need our museums. And right now, they need us too.
Cal Tech laid off 40% of its museum work force in June. The Field had to start layoffs in June and I frankly would not be surprised to see a second round soon.
American Natural History Museum had to lay people off as early as MARCH.
I know a medium sized maritime museum on the northeast coast that went from 30+ staff members to SEVEN two weeks ago.
Monterey Bay Aquarium started a second round of layoffs two days ago (July 27 2020).
Museums and cultural institutions are being GROSSLY ignored in aid talks in both the senate and the house right now.
Your local favorite museum WILL NOT survive this. Call your representatives. Call your mayors. Call your governors. And If you can, donate. Right now especially, anything you can give us a lifeline.
Didn't want to derail the last post I reblogged (about Serbia), so I'm making my own)
! I know only like 8 people follow me but like if 8 people find out about an issue they didnt know about then I think that's great tbh
OK SO
another country with a heap of problems right now is Belarus. I've reblogged posts about it before and yes I'm refusing to stop cause I see nothing about it anywhere.
Belarus has had the same president since 1994. Since he came into power, the country hasn't had a SINGLE FAIR ELECTION.
Covid-19 has caused many problems there. The country still hasn't imposed any official measures. The president has been quoted as saying 'I don't see any viruses here' and the country has had horrendous amounts of cases, I'm not even sure if the figures are accurate, they could be fabricated.
There is an election this year. Protests broke out in Belarus because of the imprisonment of the president's strongest competitors in the election. Random people have been arrested off the streets and the police have been violent.
The worst part is that there's very little media coverage.
Please reblog this, or at least research the topic it would mean a LOT
:/ i wish “bad guy” by billie eilish came out 7 years ago :(
explain