Photo
Artist Hank Schmidt travels to scenic locations only to paint the pattern on his own shirt.
422K notes
·
View notes
Text
The lifespan of a corgi
So I love corgis! And I think many other people also love corgis, so here’s a small life span of your average corgi!!!
Ofcourse, every little corgi puppy starts off small. They cant walk or see, but they’re born with a fully functional sense of smell! All healthy puppies grow quickly after birth. A puppy’s coat color may change as the puppy grows older.
Puppies develop very quickly during their first three months, particularly after their eyes and ears open and they are no longer completely dependent on their mother!! Their coordination and strength improve, they spar with their littermates, and begin to explore the world outside the nest!!
They grow up fast, and soon enough, you’ll have a big, grown corgi. However, contrary to popular belief, they aren’t done growing just yet.
Every corgi has the ability to keep growing, as long as you raise them right. My personal recommendation is to feed them past midnight.
After a while, they most likely won’t fit in your home anymore. You’ll have to buy some land to house your corgi, as they can be a little clumsy in this size. They’ll still be equally as loveable, and make for great transportation!
Their final stage, they’ll be about the size of your average skyscraper. Make sure to keep them out of the city! They aren’t malicious, but they’re very playful even in this stage!
I repeat:
Do not keep them in a city/populated area
42K notes
·
View notes
Text
Late tonight a bunch of staff are playing a game called role call and if you thought fugitive was wild just w a i t until i tell you how this goes cause role call is absolutely terrifying
We aren’t letting the campers play it so that lets us up the scare factor by 147%
148K notes
·
View notes
Text
To anyone who is willing to help:
My hometown has been without running water since March 14th. The floodwaters destroyed our water lines. We have hundreds of people who are without running water and have to used bottled water for cooking, drinking, and washing dishes. We have some water from wells being used for laundry and showers but that is being restricted since it is a limited supply. Until a few weeks ago, people were having to drive 100+ miles to get to/from work (one way) which was a normal 20 minute car ride. Nearby towns have been cut off from society until recently where they had previously been taking 3 hour detours to go 10 miles to town. The are has been suffering but is making it through. Temporary bridges are being built but we all still need help!
The water lines will cost $2.2 million+ to fix. The original fix date was 4 weeks, it’s been 5 months. We currently have $1,152,783.99 raised and we are still looking for donations! Any would mean the world to the people to get any sense of normalcy back in their lives! I’ll post the link to the GoFundMe that has other avenues of donating to different accounts for the fundraiser. Thank you for listening and I hope you’ll consider helping.
0 notes
Video
White supremacist trying to form a straight-pride parade accidentally lets truth slip at city council meeting
This is like something straight out of Parks and Rec
310K notes
·
View notes
Photo
Stranger Things’ David Harbour Originally Wanted the Role of Eleven
15K notes
·
View notes
Text
If you would report an undocumented immigrant to ICE you would have reported me to the Nazis and I don’t fucking trust you
355K notes
·
View notes
Photo
sometimes you’re Amy, sometimes you’re Rosa… sometimes you’re both
19K notes
·
View notes
Photo
545K notes
·
View notes
Text
This is my hometown! I grew up fishing here. I grew up playing on the sandbars and swimming in the river. A huge part of my childhood, gone.
Here’s a look at what remains of the Spencer Dam along the Niobrara River after the floodwaters receded. Unbelievable (Photo courtesy of Birkel Dirtwork & Excavation LLC)
46 notes
·
View notes
Text
a cool fun fact about nebraska that you non-nebraskans probably learned from oregon trail and promptly forgot: the whole fucking place is a floodplain. the word nebraska comes from a native american language meaning “flat water.” the platte river (which runs east-west through the whole state) used to be so wide that you could stand on one bank and not see the other. past the horizon.
nebraska makes a lot of money for the rest of the country (beef, feed corn, ethanol), but we dont see a lot of it. and for the last four years we’ve had a governor that is literally, explicitly draining our funds. what used to be a surplus is now an empty pocket.
our infrastructure has not been maintained and our land lends itself to flooding because the natural state of MOST of it is underwater. this is a fucking huge disaster and it’s not going to get better for a long time. the circumstances have been lined up like dominoes.
we’ve always been at a disadvantage but we’re about to be FUCKED for at least the next year. especially the rural poor, of which we have…a lot. people living in mobile homes in towns with a population of 600, an hour’s drive away from the nearest walmart. lots and lots of those. the effects of the flooding, to our infrastructure and to our environment and to our economy, are going to kill a lot of the nation’s most precarious people- the rural poor. it will be worse for the non white, the women, the lgbt, the non-christian. people are going to fucking die and the rest of the country doesn’t give a shit
bridges have been destroyed, where without them, a two or three hour trip from point a to point b turns into a six hour detour. how are people further than an hour away from the interstate going to get fucking food deliveries when companies decide it’s too expensive to send their drivers that far out of the way? how are people going to get to the county hospitals? how are people going to stay warm?
1K notes
·
View notes
Photo
Yes! That first picture is the Mormon canal bridge FLOATING DOWN THE RIVER. The second is of a dam that was hit by ice chunks repeatedly until now it is nothing. That 4th picture? The blue is where the river used to flow. The yellow is that same bridge in picture 2. The red? Is where the flooding is after the break. A business, a home, livestock: gone. The man who lived there? Missing.
These are our homes, our families, and friends. This flood may have taken everything from us but we’ll be damned if we don’t fight back.
ENTIRE
TOWNS
ARE
UNDER
WATER
AND
ITS
STILL
RISING
YET
NO ONE
IS COVERING IT
WHY THE HELL ISNT ANYONE TALKING ABOUT THIS NEBRASKA IS DROWNING.
4K notes
·
View notes
Text
Nebraska is closed. Please try again later.
325 notes
·
View notes