Hello! Public service announcement as we move into summer hiking season.
If you use bear spray (also known as pepper spray), this is your reminder that:
It expires. Not sure if yours is? The expiration date should be written on the can.
If it's expired, you need to dispose of it at a household hazardous waste site and NOT through the regular trash. Failing to do so could result in the can rupturing when the garbage truck compacts trash and your friendly neighborhood garbage man does NOT deserve that.
yesterday i set free this cursed moon frog, next to the reishi i watched grow since it was just a little meatball. it didn't end well for the frog, but finn's burden was lifted
i ate the last bag of black pepper koka noodles with sautéed mushrooms on top of some greens. they were good
i haven't read any books about color naming systems in a couple of weeks, but last night, i dreamt i found a shade of purple named 'the evacuated dream.' a plate mounted on the yellowed page of an old book with the name printed below. my dream didn't include the name of the book so it was less than helpful in terms of my research
i dreamt i passed an army marching the other direction through the woods. they were close enough for me to see every individual's face, one by one. that dream didn't end there, but i don't want to write the rest down
this year, i'm watching dekalog backwards. it's hitting me harder than other times and i don't know if it's this order or this year
i have three undone tasks i need to do and i'm not going to do any of them today
Pepperspray in Japan isn't exactly the most legal thing to carry around. While Teruhashi could almost definitely get away with it with literally any excuse, she firmly believes that being questioned by the police would ruin her image even if she wasn't charged with anything.
However, you know what is legal and she has the perfect excuse for (which is that she often goes camping or hiking for school and fun)?