speciesofleastconcern:

image

(via not-the-conversation-starter)

163,304 notes11 months ago
bunnyshadeow:
“it has been 3 zillion years ever since i draw a pokemon
”

bunnyshadeow:

it has been 3 zillion years ever since i draw a pokemon

(via projectsnt)

16,110 notes11 months ago
cryptid-creations:
“ Daily Paint 2010# Planteater Daily Book and Prints available at: http://ForgePublishing.com/shop
For full res WIPs, art, videos and more: https://www.patreon.com/piperdraws
Twitter • Facebook • Instagram • DeviantART​
”

cryptid-creations:

Daily Paint 2010# Planteater

Daily Book and Prints available at: http://ForgePublishing.com/shop

For full res WIPs, art, videos and more: https://www.patreon.com/piperdraws

Twitter  •  Facebook  •  Instagram  •  DeviantART

(via kitana-coldfire)

1,027 notes11 months ago

How Do You Solve a Problem Like a Giant Floating Bog? →

scorpionbutch:

wilburwhateley:

“Floating islands are common in Minnesota; it’s the size of this one that’s causing all the fuss. Sue Galatowitsch, a wetland ecologist at the University of Minnesota, says the island likely weighs at least 1,000 tons and could extend 30 feet below the water. Technically, it’s a floating bog. A natural assemblage of peat moss festooned with cattails and tamarack trees, the bog is more than four acres across—that’s about 64 tennis courts. ‘A bog that size,’ Galatowitsch says, “can kind of do whatever it wants.“

image

An aerial view of the bog. (x)

“A bog that size…can do whatever it wants.”

(via timurmurtazin)

18,853 notes11 months ago

How Food Looks Before It’s Harvested.

biochromium:

pr1nceshawn:

Sesame Seeds

image

Cranberry

image

Pineapple

image

Peanut

image

Cashew

image

Pistachio

image

Brussel Sprouts

image

Cacao

image

Vanilla

image

Saffron

image

Kiwi

image

Pomegranate

image

exactly 1 minute ago i had absolutely no idea what the plants sesame seeds and peanuts came from look like and i am shocked and surprised

(via conspicuouslad)

327,459 notes11 months ago
weirdbuzzfeed:
“ blueoniattack:
“ weirdbuzzfeed:
“ addictionmarvel:
“ weirdbuzzfeed:
“ minixxblog:
“ buzzfeed:
“Yes, that is an explosion of pollen. Yes, I feel like sneezing now.
”
did this tree just bust a nut
”
Scientifically, yes! ”
Why are you...

weirdbuzzfeed:

blueoniattack:

weirdbuzzfeed:

addictionmarvel:

weirdbuzzfeed:

minixxblog:

buzzfeed:

Yes, that is an explosion of pollen. Yes, I feel like sneezing now.

did this tree just bust a nut

Scientifically, yes!

Why are you so excited

:-)

That makes the bulldozer a giant dildo, right?

:-(

(Source: bzfd.it, via funfetti-cakke)

53,029 notes12 months ago
valkai:
“ bunney:
“This image brings an incredible sense of calmness
”
@catnippackets
”

valkai:

bunney:

This image brings an incredible sense of calmness

@catnippackets

(Source: commonchant, via sakimcgee)

107,388 notes1 year ago
cameoappearance:
“ jumpingjacktrash:
“ the45thpresidentialruger:
“Never talk to me or my 42 trees again
”
it amuses me to see people being surprised/impressed/amused by this setup, because it’s extremely common on the plains. if you don’t plant a...

cameoappearance:

jumpingjacktrash:

the45thpresidentialruger:

Never talk to me or my 42 trees again

it amuses me to see people being surprised/impressed/amused by this setup, because it’s extremely common on the plains. if you don’t plant a windbreak, your heating and cooling bills are huge, and storms do things like throw the lawnmower through the living room window, take the roof off, or cake the entire north side of the house with six inches of solid ice.

evergreens remain bendy even in the coldest weather, so – wait, no, not the coldest. i remember when i was a kid it got down to like -45 and the norway pines around my house were cracking like gunshots as the sap froze.

maples, incidentally, make that noise around -20f, and i hear it at least once every winter here in southern minnesota. but i only ever heard norway pines make it that one time.

so anyway that’s why we plant pine trees around our houses. because otherwise the wind would freaking kill us.

This is informative and perfectly sensible under the circumstances but I also cannot resist the temptation to compare it to planting stuff all around the boundary of your lot in The Sims

(Source: odge1492, via kittytish101)

277,956 notes1 year ago

systemshocker:

just ate an orange… no scurvy for me thank you… #NoScurvy

(via crunchie-roll)

42,128 notes1 year ago

solarpunk-aesthetic:

This adorable little robot is designed to make sure its photosynthesising passenger is well taken care of. It moves towards brighter light if it needs, or hides in the shade to keep cool. When in the light, it rotates to make sure the plant gets plenty of light. It even likes to play with humans.

Oh, and apparently, it gets antsy when it’s thirsty.

The robot is actually an art project called “Sharing Human Technology with Plants” by a roboticist named Sun Tianqi. It’s made from a modified version of a Vincross HEXA robot, and in his own words, it’s purpose is “to explore the relationship between living beings and robots.”

I don’t care if it’s silly. I want one.

(via sakimcgee)

246,845 notes1 year ago