equagga:

kaijutegu:

bogleech:

bogleech:

A rare giant hellbender salamander found dead because some hiker’s rock-stacking collapsed on her.

I didn’t even know rock stacking was a thing until this year but there are many ways it disrupts the environment.

*Ever since it caught on as a form of white hipster “meditation” there are actually so many hikers who stack rocks now as a hobby that it collectively pollutes streams with sediment that the rocks would otherwise be filtering and reduces the populations of countless organisms that grow and nest among said rocks.

http://www.wideopenspaces.com/rock-stacking-natural-graffitti-ecological-impact/

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/stacking-rocks-wilderness-no-good-180955880/

http://www.takepart.com/article/2016/08/25/new-graffiti-national-parks-fight-stone-stackers/

“There is merit to everyone doing some part to heal wounds to fragile riparian ecosystems that are already enduring a slow death by a thousand cuts.”

Flipping over rocks at all changes their very nature. It doesn’t even matter if you put them back afterwards – when you lift up a stone that has laid among other stones and been shaped just-so by the current, if it had properties that made it appealing to stream creatures as nesting and resting places, you’ve changed them.

Even scientists are moving away from flipping stones to seek out animals. Genetic sampling is the method preferred in this day and age, as filtering DNA out of the water column hurts nothing.

Leave the stones be. As much as every naturalist itches to peek beneath them, and as much as every dipshit wants to stack them on top of one another, it’s not the right thing to do.

@lewdbees 

Alzu is here for his date. He’s brought a giant, half-cooked steak in the general shape of a heart, a pot of honey, a bit of extra lube to go with the lube his cock makes on its own, and a nice big glass plug. And he appears to be hoping the steak can be a snack for after. Unless Taur boi needs the energy.

Positioning might be a bit odd, but he is something near 7 feet tall, and he’s very flexible. And strong. He’s gonna keep that cutie busy allll night.

Instagram post by Central Texas Pig Rescue • Jan 20, 2018 at 1:52am UTC

golvio:

centraltexaspigrescue: FACT
FRIDAY!!! It’s time to talk again about Breeder Specific Terms (those
sneaky half-truths that breeders use to get you to buy their pigs)!

SIZE: “Same size as a medium dog/cocker spaniel/bulldog.” “No taller
than 14/16 inches.” Pigs are very dense animals and breeders won’t
highlight this. Franklin weighs 110lbs, double the weight of a typical
bulldog but his dimensions are roughly the same. A healthy adult mini
pig will typically weigh 80-250lbs. Comparing dogs to pigs is like
comparing apples to oranges.

DIET: “When kept to/fed my
correct diet.” “When given my special diet.” These “diets” are
starvation, not a special formula that only the breeder knows. There is
NO such thing as a “micro/teacup” pig, they are starving pigs. They
might stay smaller but they will have lasting impacts on their health
and typically die quite young. No healthy adult pig is 35lbs, if you
have a size limit a pig is not the right pet for you.

“ADOPTION”: This
pops up on a lot of breeder websites to make buyers feel good about
buying their product. Any pig bred to be sold is a product and is in no
way, shape or form an “adoption.” It’s just a trick to make you feel
like you are saving a pig; a pig that was bred and born to make money
for the breeder and provide them with an income. It’s sugar coating the
situation to entice buyers.

“MINI PIG”: while “micro/teacup/nano” pigs
are just not real, “mini pig” is a real classification of pigs. However,
a mini pig is simply a pig that weighs less than 400lbs. These are not
12, 25 or 60lbs or a special breed of pigs. The “mini” simply means a
pig that is smaller than a 600-1,200 farm pig. It is also prudent to be
wary of anyone who doesn’t let you come to their property, says that
pigs don’t need to see a vet or should only see their recommend vet, or
who sell pigs under 10lbs and less 8 weeks old.

Instagram post by Central Texas Pig Rescue • Jan 20, 2018 at 1:52am UTC

wizardshark:

fizzy-dog:

tilthat:

TIL that carrots aren’t actually good for your eyes… it’s just a myth that the British government fabricated during WWII. They wanted to keep their newly developed radar system secret from the Germans and had to find some way to explain how they were suddenly shooting down a lot more planes.

via reddit.com

germany: how are you guys destroying our planes so easily?

british guy who’s about to invent the myth about carrots being good for your eyes: oh you haven’t heard?

the best part though is that the germans BELIEVED IT

legionoftuna:

lesbuchanan:

Summer Olympics: Who can run the fastest? 🙂 Who can swim the fastest? 🙂 Who can do the best somersault? 🙂 

Winter Olympics: WHO CAN MAKE IT TO THE BOTTOM OF THIS ICE SLIDE OF DEATH AND SURVIVE?? WHO CAN GET AROUND THE RINK WITHOUT GETTING THEIR HANDS SLICED OFF BY EVERYONE ELSE’S FEET BLADES?? CAN THIS GUY DO A 1080 DEGREE FLIP WITHOUT DYING?? 

Summer Triathlon: Don’t run too fast, you have to save your energy for a swim and a bike ride! 🙂

Winter Biathlon: I see you’ve been skiing for five miles now here’s your gun

mo-bu:

the woods are haunted, but not in the way youve been lead to believe by so many horror stories and whispered folk tales. the creatures within the trees just want to survive and see their home thrive, the trees are ancient and tired. they yearn for the gentle love of both the sun and the inhabitants of the world, outstretching their leaves to the sky in hope. when you stumble over roots and hidden paths with tears in your eyes, the ones from inside the woods are not following you to hunt you. they are not here to hurt you or kill you, instead they ache for you. they love you even from just a single glance and they know your pain. flowers spring up close to where you finally collapse, no matter what season it is. the woods is haunted, but not out to get you. it wants to heal with you.

Wait wait our idea of dirty medieval peasants is based on a *tax aversion scam*??? Please tell me more I need to know this. *bounces excitedly*

robstmartin:

brunhiddensmusings:

shortly after william the conquerer came to power he initiated something known as ‘the doomsday book’- he sent envoys to survey his new lands to record the properties he now controlled so they could pay accurate taxes. every acre of field, every mill, livestock, buildings and their relative size- all would be recorded to determine the wealth of each settlement so a percentage could be expected as rent. for an example of what this book meant;  the previous king was aware of and collected taxes from about 20 grain mills in england, william’s audit shot that number above 200. you dont know the meaning of ‘pedantic’ untill you start reading about medieval grain mills, theres a church that paved its floor with confiscated ‘illegal’ millstones to ensure that the town had to get its flour from the church’s official mill and one war simply about stealing the same millstone back and fourth for quite a few decades

of course word of these envoys traveled faster then they did, virtually every town they came to had time to claim they had far less taxable wealth then they actually did have by the time the audit arrived. in one of the more over the top cases an entire village pretended to have caught insanity- when the taxmen arrived they saw screaming laughing idiots with underwear on their heads so they left as fast as they could considering at the time insanity was thought to be literally contagious. it would be over five years before anyone tried to audit that town again. its safe to assume a large number of other villages also had sudden cases of strange diseases, mysteriously disappearing cows, or very large shrubberies and haybales shaped like buildings and you dont need to look over that hill either. thats not even touching how many small communities just plain didnt technically exist because they were too small, somewhere weird, or in legal limbo of who owned it

of course when the feudal part of feudalism started moving its gears you found that the local lord of that village was unlikely to divulge the exact amount of rents they could collect to THEIR lord either, knowing that the more they admitted to receiving the more they were expected to hand over. this was not exclusive to england either, the more you learn about feudalism the more you have to ask how all these minor lords out in the boonies kept having the money and soldiers to do all the political intrigue bullshit, the answer is also tax evasion. each village kept claiming it had fewer people living in shittier houses with less land and fewer livestock then they actually had, and each local lord kept claiming they were receiving less rents then they actually took so were also adverse to an accurate audit.

their knowledge of tax loopholes also extended to finding out that clergymen were either exempt from tax or received a far lower rate of tax, so proving you qualified as a clergyman was an endeavor that paid dividends. specifically to prove you were clergy you proved that you could read and write enough Latin to satisfy an official, so you could spend some money to hire someone to tutor you enough Latin to fake it. its estimated that due to this fully ten percent of medieval english households wrote ‘clergy’ on their tax forms.

another and even more extreme example was the peasants revolt of 1381, london was swarmed by the unwashed masses from all sides instigated by an official trying to collect (a lot of) unpaid poll taxes, an angry mob driving a teenaged king Richard II to retreat to a boat in the river, and culminating with 1500 peasants being executed by an emergency militia. this doesn’t sound like a huge success untill you dig into some of the details- peasants from a large number of villages all arrived at london at the same time, leaving dedicated forces specifically to stop ships from acessing london to break the siege, the peasants executed a select number of court officials and started burning paperwork- but systematically only burning the ones detailing who owned plots of land, debt records, and a few criminal records. the peasants who besieged london and scared the king into the river had successfully purged a whole lot of debts and reclaimed a lot of land in one very ballsy and highly coordinated move that relied on them being seen as illiterate dirt farmers with no ulterior motives besides pitchfork mob riot and trying to kiss the queen mother while they touch everything in the tower of london with their grimy hands

found it. this is… this is amazing. I did a BA in Medieval British History and we never, ever, once considered this. Not once. At a major Canadian university.

jfc this changes my entire brain