Archive for March, 2021

nneilperry:yellowstone national park, wyoming

Tuesday, March 23rd, 2021

nneilperry:

yellowstone national park, wyoming

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/646478195055558656.

Shipwrecked tea time with Sean and Mary Kate 7:59 – 8:08 (just Sean and MK not Yulin if you can)

Tuesday, March 23rd, 2021

“Has anyone asked if Sean is a good kisser?”

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/646477931002150912.

one-more-offbeat-anthem:like i know my mutuals don’t look like their icons but also yes they do

Tuesday, March 23rd, 2021

one-more-offbeat-anthem:

like i know my mutuals don’t look like their icons but also yes they do

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/646472945979588608.

ardley:Moss GreenPhotographed by Freddie Ardley – Instagram…

Tuesday, March 23rd, 2021

ardley:

Moss Green

Photographed by Freddie Ardley – Instagram @freddieardley

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/646459312466706432.

Happy birthday Lies!!

Tuesday, March 23rd, 2021

Thanks!

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/646457194179592192.

cosmonautroger:b/c I’m that way, here’s the whole thing:

Monday, March 22nd, 2021

cosmonautroger:

b/c I’m that way, here’s the whole thing:

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/646429126275842048.

stephiramona:.

Monday, March 22nd, 2021

stephiramona:

.

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/646406455899144192.

jacindaelena: Greenland by Nicola Abraham

Monday, March 22nd, 2021

jacindaelena:

Greenland by

Nicola Abraham

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/646387608956583936.

allthingseurope:St. Kilda, Scotland (by David Pratt)

Monday, March 22nd, 2021


https://ift.tt/3pHKBUS

allthingseurope:

St. Kilda, Scotland (by David Pratt)

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/646368719950512128.

jackiechanadventures: When squidward is frozen and preserved until being unfrozen several years into…

Monday, March 22nd, 2021

jackiechanadventures:

When squidward is frozen and preserved until being unfrozen several years into the future then using a time machine to eventually return to the present, he goes back to a time where he was currently being frozen at the krusty krab. There are two squidwards on the current timeline.

– squidguy95

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/646367460492230656.

Is it me or is the anti movement… really american? We have that stereotype over here that americans are super uptight about sex and super shy about it and obsessed with purity and hiding it from the children and stuff. Idk as a european it always striked me as a product of american culture

Monday, March 22nd, 2021

it’s very, very American. While there are certainly antis who aren’t American, many of them are.

I have a lot of theories as to why this is, but a lot of them are covered in this post: anti-shipping as the cool new trend (while it’s mostly about the age bracket of anti-shippers as of June 2017 (this time last year), it’s an americentric post talking almost entirely about US phenomena).

tl;dr version? anti-shipping is:

  • the natural result of growing up both LGBT+/queer and marinated in American-flavored Puritan Christianity/purity culture 
  • with a side order of valuing safety over freedom 
    • b/c you’ve always had freedom of information 
    • but you’ve never known a sense of security 
    • thanks to lifelong internet access 
    • paired with post-9/11 paranoia.
  • add a dash of radical feminism/exclusionist thinking

  • never being taught how to think critically, and
  • zero education on sex of any kind, and

viola: anti-shippers. 

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/646366285442203648.

zesty-mordant:tiktoksformyfriends:Oh, my heart!point of order: Trent doesn’t actually know…

Sunday, March 21st, 2021

zesty-mordant:

tiktoksformyfriends:

Oh, my heart!

point of order: Trent doesn’t actually know Derrick is lying at the end.

okay. carry on.

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/646318634005938176.

themazette: sunset

Sunday, March 21st, 2021

themazette:

sunset

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/646315890119458816.

etherdreamsmag: Art of “ Paul Hamer ”

Sunday, March 21st, 2021

etherdreamsmag:

Art of “ Paul Hamer ”

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/646296985052282880.

geopsych:Shaded stream, August.

Sunday, March 21st, 2021

geopsych:

Shaded stream, August.

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/646278118021185536.

Sometimes when I’m birdwatching

Saturday, March 20th, 2021

Sometimes when I’m birdwatching

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/646225271568187392.

checkyoungo: Noordvaarder Terschelling.Experiment to make new…

Saturday, March 20th, 2021

checkyoungo:

Noordvaarder Terschelling.
Experiment to make new land.

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/646206396642230272.

checkyoungo: Sunset on Terschelling.Zonsondergang.

Saturday, March 20th, 2021

checkyoungo:

Sunset on Terschelling.
Zonsondergang.

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/646187513574309888.

Birdwatching at the Bay!

Saturday, March 20th, 2021

anonsally:

After my successful birdwatching outing on Wednesday, I thought I would try something different today. 

Keep reading

This is all quite fabulous.

When you say eBird considered several of the species infrequent, I believe you’re talking about the feature where it puts little colored circles next to the bird’s name when you’re entering it in your checklist in the app. I use the IOS app, not the Android version of the app that I believe you’re using, but my guess is that feature is the same on both platforms. And yes, that’s based on eBird submissions from the surrounding area. I’m not sure how big the area it uses is, but it makes sense that shoreline-specific species might show up as infrequent based on their only being reported on lists from the shore, and having their incidence diluted, so to speak, from all the non-shoreline lists being submitted nearby that don’t have them. But that’s cool! Congrats on “leveling up” to infrequent birds! 🙂

The other thing that will probably happen to you at some point is you’ll trip one of the “filters”, which are manually curated settings created by the local volunteer eBird reviewers to flag observations that are unusual enough that they are automatically routed to the reviewer queue for evaluation. That happens if you report a particularly rare bird, or if your count of a species is high enough that it looks unusual. That will prompt you in the app to provide more details to help the reviewers decide whether to officially “confirm” the observation or not. You shouldn’t be worried if that happens; the process is all very low-key and friendly and respectful, and even if the reviewers end up deciding the evidence isn’t sufficient to confirm the sighting it will still be there in your view of your list. It just won’t show up in searches for that species, or in the official data products that researchers get from eBird.

The folks you saw with a spotting scope: yeah, that’s a popular tool for shorebirds and waterfowl in particular. Since you’re looking at birds that are far away and not moving around too much, a scope on a tripod is super helpful. They typically have magnifications that start at 15x or 20x and can go up higher from there, and you get an amazing view that is way better than handheld 7x or 8x binoculars. But they’re a pain to haul around, and good ones are expensive, so you tend to see them only being used by fairly obsessive types, and then again, only when conditions favor their use. Once we get out of the pandemic you might think about trying to attend a local Audubon chapter or birdwatching club’s outing; usually the leader of such trips will bring a scope and share views with the participants (again, pre-pandemic; these days scope-sharing with people not in your bubble is very much frowned upon). I still remember the first time I looked through a leader’s scope at a bird (it was a woodpecker). I was 12 at the time, and it totally rocked my world. “I’ve got to get me one of these,” I remember thinking, and a couple of Christmas/birthdays later I’d saved up enough to do just that.

I’m so glad you got to see the Anna’s Hummingbird display flight. Indeed spectacular! If you get lucky you might also see the Allen’s Hummingbird version of that: instead of super-high “J” shape with a chirp at the bottom it’s a shallow “U” with an adorable tail-waggle at the end. Birds are amazing.

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/646185984429522944.

amare-habeo:Jakub Schikaneder (Czech, 1855 – 1924) Silent Sea…

Friday, March 19th, 2021

amare-habeo:

Jakub Schikaneder (Czech, 1855 – 1924)

Silent Sea (Nocturne), 1922–24

Oil on canvas, 99.1 x 129.5 cm

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/646134669995343872.