
JVL
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almost home
wallacepolsom
YOU ARE THE REASON
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
hello vonnie

#extradirty

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ojovivo
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

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One Nice Bug Per Day
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
Game of Thrones Daily
$LAYYYTER

if i look back, i am lost
Claire Keane
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
seen from United States
seen from Iraq

seen from Germany
seen from Netherlands

seen from Brazil
seen from Saudi Arabia
seen from China

seen from Japan

seen from Germany
seen from Malaysia

seen from United States

seen from Poland

seen from Spain
seen from Guatemala
seen from New Zealand

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Iraq
@studygalll
i am nooooot locked the fuck in. im locked the fuck out. call the locksmith
yes. like you get me
😭😭😭🤪🤪🤪😔😔😔
my trick for getting through grad school is learning to navigate the quadrants with all their nuances
It's very endearing to me how many people are willing to keep an eye on a video feed so they can push a button and let a fish in the Netherlands get to the other side of a dam.
It is genuinely baffling to me, in a very kind and positive way, especially coupled with the local news continually going several shades of 'wtf, this thing is a roaring success again and we don't quite get why'. They've already quadrupled their capacity for simultaneous clicks and it's still nowhere near enough and there's just... Bewilderment.
I think people want to help the environment in small but tangible ways, which is hard right now because of.. well... because of The Horrors. And being able to say 'wow! I helped this creature cross a dam' makes you feel good.
I also think that most people can relate to a small, helpless creature trying to get from one place to another and there's a FUCKIN WALL in the way.
But to come back to point 1- Citizen Science fills a hole in the soul that wanted to go out on adventures and discover things when we were younger, but the study of it was hard or we didn't have the money or our schools were garbage. But you don't have to have a degree to do things like... press a button or download and use an app, or count or transcribe notes.
Anyways- here's some Citizen Science links if the Fish Doorbell makes you feel happy and you yearn for more ways to help scientists do stuff:
Foldit (folding proteins)
Fathomverse (sea animals)
Project Monarch (butterflies)
Bioblitz, an event where citizens identify as many species in an area within a period of time
Species Watch (animal species)
BOINC’s Compute for Science
Zooniverse is a website that hosts information on many citizen science projects
Label trees in aerial photos
Count cells in fossils and modern leaves
Digitize Atmospheric Data
Count penguins
US-based Citizen Science Database
eBird (bird identification)
Merlin (bird identification by sound)
iNaturalist (nature identification)
MapSwipe (collaboration between several Red Cross organizations and Doctors Without Borders, update vital geospatial data)
Smithsonian Archives Transcription Center
16/03/25
I’ve been poor at maintaining this blog alongside studying but I am getting back into the groove of it slowly. Rather than dwell on the bad, I have been focusing on the good.
I have been volunteering consistently since last summer in a second hand bookstore. I spend 4hours every week organizing, cleaning, facing, and selling books. For me it has been a fulfilling experience for me, as a regular weekly outing that leaves me feeling better after it. I’m able to help our local library through selling the books for funding, helping the older ladies who run it, and helping customers find books.
Through this, I have realized just how important books are in the community. I’ve been an avid reader for years, however, I never really thought about how essential books are. A majority of the patrons are the elderly in need of a story. Many retired and sometimes living alone, come and stock up on piles of books to keep them busy. For the younger generations, we keep ourselves busy thumbing away on our devices, while the older generation is more restricted to more physical means such as books and even puzzles if their eyes allow it. Men and woman alike file into the cramped cozy store with their coins to purchase a $0.25-0.50 book. I’ve helped countless store patrons scour the shelves for an author they loved, a book recommendation from a grandkid, or just listen to them explain their love for a series. The stacks of books people get through weekly showcase how essential books are for entertainment and wellbeing.
Through this experience I have been able to connect with so many in the community weekly and even build my book collection up. I have also helped collect duplicate books to build and deliver boxes to the local nursing homes to expand their personal libraries and prevent overstock from becoming trash. To help our local migrant school, I’m able to search through the shelves for diverse children’s books for the students and their teacher’s which I donate myself to help the store. While a small store that reels in not a lot of profit, it is such an important part of the community through offering affordable entertainment for the community, aiding the local library, and offering the elderly another third space to chat with others and nab some cool books.
This has been such a meaningful way for me to spend my gap year that has helped me since graduation and moving back home. I hope to volunteer up until I can continue school again and has been helping me practice reading physical fiction more often again. But I’m getting back into studying consistently which hopefully the reorganizing of my room can help. 😼
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