clip studio paint : hi you can create complex and detailed drawings of ocs with me! or do realistic animations! me: leon
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
Cosimo Galluzzi
styofa doing anything
ojovivo
Sade Olutola

Kaledo Art
todays bird

if i look back, i am lost

tannertan36

Kiana Khansmith
taylor price
Peter Solarz
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
Today's Document

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Origami Around
Stranger Things
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
dirt enthusiast

pixel skylines
seen from Malaysia
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@voxareia
clip studio paint : hi you can create complex and detailed drawings of ocs with me! or do realistic animations! me: leon
throwback thursday: apologies 🥀
GEMMA ARTERTON as Clara Webb BYZANTIUM dir. Neil Jordan, 2012
I had eyes that cut through lies, I had lungs that breathed eternity. Felt I’d lived my whole wretched life just to prepare me for that moment.
BYZANTIUM (2012)
Paintings by Mia Bergeron
This artist on Instagram
It's been years since I started seeing nutrient flows constantly in my daily life, and the more I study agriculture, the more I see them.
See, every time you harvest something, you take the nutrients in that item away from the soil, and they go somewhere else. When I put a banana peel in my compost bin, I think (a little gleefully) about how I've just added an exotic, different profile of nutrients to my own property--but I also think about that distant banana plantation that lost tons of nutrients per year to US grocery stores, and I wonder what they replaced those nutrients with.
The farmer across my field grows corn, which gets harvested for feed. Corn is a nitrogen-hungry crop. Every year, that corn sucks up nutrients, which get harvested and shipped away. The farmer, being a conventional farmer, mostly replaces those with a conventional fertilizer. Nitrogen is often applied to fields in the form of ammonia fertilizer, which is made via a process that binds nitrogen in the air with hydrogen from natural gas. This feels like a vast resource, but of course we know it's not inexhaustible and not without cost.
Ideally, said farmer does soil tests and applies a carefully considered amount of ammonia. It is taken up by the growing plants and relatively little is lost. Possibly (often), though, some of the ammonia is leached out via rain and ends up in waterways, where it causes plant overgrowth and algal blooms, which harm the waterways in several ways, and turn those nutrients from a resource into a contaminant.
Meanwhile, the corn is also uptaking a variety of other nutrients from the soil which the commercial fertilizer is NOT replacing. Year by year, those nutrients get shipped off to distant feedlots and depleted in the soil. Eventually, those nutrients are gone from my neighbor's field and, quite possibly, languishing in a manure lagoon somewhere in, say, Indiana, where one can only hope it's properly treated and made into compost. But, you know. Not necessarily.
When I buy compost at the store, it's usually based in either cow manure or "forest products". Hopefully, depending on brand, those forest products MIGHT be collected municipal yard waste. Which is pretty good. Those suburbanites don't want their leaves, I do, win/win.
Except that because those suburbanites raked their yard waste, they now need at some point to fertilize their trees, shrubs, and turf grass. Meanwhile, they've eliminated habitat for the many insects that use leaf litter to either overwinter or reproduce. They may not be counting the costs, but the costs don't stop existing.
The ebb and flow of nutrients is something that, in the current system, goes utterly unregarded by most of the people taking part in the process. Even gardeners bring nutrients onto their soils mostly without thinking about the places those nutrients came from. I think in a sustainable world, that needs to change.
Also probably we need to do a hell of a lot more cover-cropping.
𝕬𝖗𝖊𝖎𝖆'𝖘 2025 𝕽𝖊𝖆𝖉𝖘
❧ Slewfoot by Brom reading speed: 2 nights rating: 100/10 review: 🐐 ❧ The Salt Grows Heavy by Cassandra Khaw reading speed: 5 nights rating: 10/10 review: 🧜♀️ ❧ Diavola by Jennifer Thorne reading speed: 7 nights rating: 5/10 review: 🍷 ❧ I Who Have Never Known Men by Jacqueline Harpman reading speed: 5 nights rating 10/10 review: 🚍 ❧ One Dark Window by Rachel Gillig reading speed: 10 nights rating: 8/10 review: 🌲
Little drawing I did in memory of the Prince of Darkness
Instagram: beccajonesart
The witching hour 🌙🔮✨
IG: @capnscarletblade & @nianightsong
How I painted Star Shower~ I really love painting transparent materials, there's just something so fun about the way light reflects and refracts ✨
Dove (Demo Ver)
midnights full of music
(another traffic box illustration set!!)
a poem by Halina Poświatowska (translated by Agata Szymańska)
Worlds Apart — the Harpy and the Mermaid