![snowbeast](/images/avatar-guest.jpg)
The DAMN reflection she said 7 comments
snowbeast
· 6 years ago
I do it today with my kid. I make it apply to phones sometimes too.
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More rice! 10 comments
snowbeast
· 6 years ago
Criminy, this is an amazing breakthrough! Scientists world-wide have been trying to develop salt-tolerant crops for decades (centuries on a macro-genetic level). Any relation to industrial product quality or a form of politics is in your mind.
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Check out this girl dancing on Lone Digger 4 comments
Motherhood 1 comments
Relax with this nostalgia 9 comments
snowbeast
· 6 years ago
Lol the whistly part is my ring signal. Great flick, I adore Peter Ustinov. If you ever run across "Hot Millions" starring him and Maggie Smith, be sure to see it.
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So my boss has this talent.. 15 comments
snowbeast
· 6 years ago
Not only that, but finding this many 4+ leaf clovers in a small area is a clear indication a pesticide/herbicide has been used. I used to work at an orchard that tested various chemicals and I found 4, 5, 6 and even 7 leaf clovers ALL the time. It was rather alarming.
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Dog bread 1 comments
snowbeast
· 6 years ago
People who abuse animals like this should not be allowed to own any! Oh and they should be given the same treatment: castrate and force feed them like a foie-gras-to-be.
Artistic dog 3 comments
snowbeast
· 6 years ago
He looks so sad, he must be artistically unappreciated in his own lifetime.
1
Cecropia Moth Caterpillar taken on Samsung Galaxy S5 7 comments
snowbeast
· 6 years ago
Cecropia caterpillars are lovely. We kept one as a pet at work (apple orchard) one summer. It went through fun changes, the colored knobs swell and sink into the body. They metamorph into big brown moths but I didn't stay around long enough to see that.
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Ready your weapons 8 comments
snowbeast
· 6 years ago
This reminds me of that Japanese chef who got himself neutered then served up his genitalia to a select few. The pic post-amputation but pre-braising with button mushroom garnish.
Well played 44 comments
snowbeast
· 6 years ago
You're welcome :-) I am a (very mature) archaeology student myself. I didn't cite references but this subject is well-researched and easy to find. Here is one reference just for fun: https://www.nature.com/articles/nature16990
Well played 44 comments
snowbeast
· 6 years ago
Homo erectus utilized fire and cooked his food. This is evident in the archaeological record (dated remains of cooking fires), and as yet he is the first Homo spp. proved to have cooked food. Tooth size in post-H. erectus lineage (i.e including neanderthalensis and us) has decreased markedly, including our canines. It takes less jaw and tooth strength to chew cooked food, and the cooking makes more energy and nutrients available. This is a main reason that our brain complexity has increased so much in the past 1 million years.
Summary: We are omnivores. We evolved from omnivores. Eat whatever the hell you want.
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Edited 6 years ago
Summary: We are omnivores. We evolved from omnivores. Eat whatever the hell you want.
This hurts the most.. Being a doggo owner it hurts the most x( 9 comments
snowbeast
· 6 years ago
If you speak to them comfortingly and pet them, they understand - as do cats. Mine always started purring a few seconds into my apology.
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