alittlequeer18:

alittlequeer18:

nunyabizni:

peterjasonquill:

literally-for-roasting:

literally-for-roasting:

cara-likes-cereal:

Save a lesbian from conversion therapy

My name is Cara and I live with my abusive family. My mom saw me kiss a girl and shaved my head

This was me before

This is me right now

She’s sending me to conversion therapy in a week and I really need funds to get a room before that happens.

I have a Venmo where my username is @CaraSchaum

Every bit helps! Thank you

If you can’t donate please reblog

Do NOT donate to this person @cara-likes-cereal. They are at least partially lying about their situation, and might be completely lying. The photo with long hair is from 2016, she got a pixie cut in JANUARY of this year. Something is not adding up 

this person isn’t being truthful, do not donate to them until they are completely honest, protect yourself

Please be safe with your money. People who know her in real life say she’s a compulsive liar and that this may be a scam.

Post is barely a week old and she’s deactivated, yeah it’s a scam.

It makes me sick that people do these things. There are people out there that really are forced into conversion therapy and have these horrible things done to them because of their sexuality. To scam money from a very supportive group of people makes you almost as worse as those that force people into conversion therapy. If you have donated money to this person I am sorry that this has happened.

Just a little more proof here you guys. Please if you’ve reblogged the original post update it so people will know it’s a scam and will stop giving her money.

myfrogcroaked:

Did you know? Frogs do not drink from their mouths like you do. Most absorb water and gasses directly through a thin layer of skin on their belly and pelvic region called the ‘drink patch.’

Original video by FootLoosePickleJuice on reddit at: https://redd.it/90bu6w

In other words, this is the perfect way to offer a dehydrated frog a drink. You can see this lil guy settling down all comfy to soak up lots of water. It’s also why frogs are so vulnerable to toxins. 

sundavr:

bettsplendens:

snowflakeeel:

any idea what these guys are? We just got them in at work and i love them.

The two greenish cichlid-esque ones are baby sunfish, nearly impossible to tell what kind they are at this point. They’re territorial as adults and will get at least 6 inches long, so they’ll need a pretty big tank, or need to be taken back to the river and swapped out for more babies when they start to mature. The smaller ones with the flat head tops are gambusia, aka mosquitofish. The ones with orange fins are, I think, some kind of shiner. They need to color up some once they get more comfortable. More cover would help them color up slightly, like some shelter at one end of the tank, but they need lots of room to zoop back and forth. They also need plenty of oxygen, you usually find them in fast-moving water. Try adding some sticks and driftwood in, everybody involved will want plenty of space to hide.

Orange fins are probably red horse shiners! I’ve pulled ones over a foot long and as thick as my calf out of rivers while doing electro-shocking studies. Only the mosquito fish make good pets to most keepers, with the possible exception of the sunfish depending on the species. Green sunfish typically max out at 4 inches even in the best habitat though they’ve been recorded at 6 inches. Any others would need a 75+ gal tank, and the shiners are just giant waste machines

Green sunfish get nearly 6″ and have very large mouths. Those don’t look like greenies, the mouths aren’t big enough. They’re pretty good aquarium fish if you only keep one, but you need a large tank. 
Aim for longear sunfish. A 45g tank with a single longear sunfish and a handful of gambusia is entirely viable, they’re one of the smaller sunnies. 
For smaller tanks, darters are amazing. They need high water flow, but a 20+ gallon tank with a powerhead at one end will keep darters very happy, and they’re beautiful little fish. Check in streams with lots of rocks and little to no mud or plant life. 

snowflakeeel:

any idea what these guys are? We just got them in at work and i love them.

The two greenish cichlid-esque ones are baby sunfish, nearly impossible to tell what kind they are at this point. They’re territorial as adults and will get at least 6 inches long, so they’ll need a pretty big tank, or need to be taken back to the river and swapped out for more babies when they start to mature. The smaller ones with the flat head tops are gambusia, aka mosquitofish. The ones with orange fins are, I think, some kind of shiner. They need to color up some once they get more comfortable. More cover would help them color up slightly, like some shelter at one end of the tank, but they need lots of room to zoop back and forth. They also need plenty of oxygen, you usually find them in fast-moving water. Try adding some sticks and driftwood in, everybody involved will want plenty of space to hide.