#HomešŸ”
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amayoral1 Ā· 2 years ago
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Max and I. Chilling āœØšŸ«¶šŸ»šŸ¶#homešŸ” (at Seal Beach, California) https://www.instagram.com/p/CqPlLy8gHCDleYi_RgIiKz4VWZTO3-gve7my840/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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chick-it-out Ā· 2 months ago
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trips2saturn Ā· 7 months ago
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frame this and hang it in the louvre part three
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tommyssupercoolblog Ā· 6 months ago
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Getting silly on mainnnnn !!!!
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noaluvs Ā· 3 months ago
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dragonsorceress22 Ā· 6 months ago
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Nova needs a forever home!
Nova is a 9 month old classic tabby ā€“ male, neutered, and microchipped.
Nova has Feline Coronavirus which is contagious to other cats. Most cats can kick the virus, but Nova cannot. He needs a safe home where he no longer has to be isolated. Other pets and people totally okay! Only cats are at risk.
Nova has all of his claws but he has never tried to claw the couch or curtains ā€“ he likes his scratching post. He is playful and active, clumsy, doesnā€™t mind being picked up, and will happily sit in laps when heā€™s tired of playing. Heā€™s social and friendly and loves open windows.
Nova will come with a nice carrier, all of his toys, a couple cat beds, his scratching post, a few blankets and towels, and all of his medical history.
Nova has dietary restrictions. As a symptom of his virus Nova has digestive difficulties, so his dietary needs are sort of high maintenance but his current regimen is working well for managing his symptoms and letting him live a normal kitty life.
Please share this as much as possible so we can find Nova a safe and loving home!
Nova's Adopt A Pet profile
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cerealboxlore Ā· 1 year ago
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very small idea but for billy who thinks ebenezer killed mary what if as captain marvel he saw mary for a split second while doing something with the league and wasnā€™t able to check it out but he knows he saw her
i canā€™t really put together my thoughts in this properly right now but yeah i think that ought to be fun (not for billy)
Oh!
Oh we are going to haveso much FUN with this, my friend!
(TW: slight mind fuckery and mentions of corpses)
I absolutely go feral at Billy Batson angst, even more so when it involves him being Captain Marvel and letting his mortal emotions slip through is magical adult front. The aching and deep sadness that he tries desperately to hide is impossible to unsee, and it concerns his teammates if/when they see it appear on his face. The JL know Captain Marvel as a super happy, fun, immature and yet mysterious man, they're accustomed to seeing Captain Marvel smiling with a bright grin most of the time. That boy scout attitude of his is a trademark and one they never imagined seeing fade, an impossibility.
They should have known by now that impossibilities were more than possible nowadays. Especially when magic was involved.
What I'm thinking is, and maybe something I'll include in a longer post one day, is a team up between the Scarecrow and Mr. Mind. I did a poll before and y'all said this would mentally scar Billy the most, and I fully believe in the psychological horror potential of them. In the event that they team up, Mr. Mind would want Captain Marvel taken down first, as he's a risk and threat to Mr. Mind's plans the most. He knows who he is. He knows that Captain Marvel is secretly Billy Batson, homeless orphan who is desperately running away from his abusive past that haunts him.
I'm thinking that if Mr. Mind somehow finds a way to infect Billy with a magically enchanted fear toxin that slowly chips away at his sanity through a period of time, he could take advantage of his mind and therefore control the Champion of magic completely without any worry of losing control.
This could factor into your idea about Billy catching a glimpse of Mary while he's out as Captain Marvel with the league. The first time it'd just a passing glimpse. A blink. It's Mary's face in the reflection of a glass mirror he flies past by. He shakes it off, thinking it's just nothing. Then it happens again, but this time Mary's face in the mirror shows signs of rotting. The next time it happens it's not in a mirror, but on the street while he's helping citizens flee the scene of a fight, and he thinks he sees Mary running past him.
Was it actually her this time? Or was it his mind playing tricks on him? Was he going crazy? No, no that's impossible. As Captain Marvel he couldn't go crazy, right? Then...Was something wrong with Billy? If his foundation/vessel had something wrong, then functioning as Captain Marvel was going to get a lot harder for him.
The thoughts about his (supposed) dead sister haunt him more frequently, to the point where he can't go a single day without mistaking someone as the beaten and decaying form of Mary. He feels himself losing his mind, losing control of his fears and self, enough to the point that Mr. Mind can easily swoop in and take control of the Champion of Magic. A really fun plot to have a mind controlled Captain Marvel fight the Justice League, even more so if he's not the only one experiencing this.
Maybe after this fight the JL has a talk with Captain Marvel and in his emotional exhaustion that he's recovering from, he speaks about Mary at last and how he's been hallucinating her all this time, but still unsure if she's actually dead. CM finally opening up about his personal life and the guilt he feels for not helping his sister back then as a little kid. Whether or not they find out Captain Marvel is really just a kid falls onto you, I'm still trying to figure out how the Scarecrow would have a bigger part in this. Maybe Mr. Mind is mind controlling him, too??
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clarabowmp3 Ā· 11 days ago
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Also girl at home tv they could never make me hate you
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canonfatbisexualenby Ā· 4 months ago
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Sketch of Catie talking to her bff Jo!
Kinda around the time she starts crushinā€™ on Danny but doesnā€™t Fully Realize lol
Pose ref from mellon_soup of Patreon:
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winged-cries Ā· 6 months ago
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She's coming home she's coming home I told ya Heathcliff's coming home
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amayoral1 Ā· 2 years ago
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Spend a nice Saturday with my queen šŸ‘‘šŸ‘øšŸ»#momšŸ’• #homešŸ” (at Seal Beach, California) https://www.instagram.com/p/CqPkZ41gjFw48raeiq5xVi45CWtdi_5mLG_xCs0/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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xtruss Ā· 6 months ago
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Sicily Sold Homes For One Euro. This Is What Happened Next.
For more than a decade, Sicily has been trying to revive its villages by selling Vacant Houses. Writer Lisa Abend heads to the largest Island in the Mediterranean to see how life has changed.
ā€” By Lisa Abend | April 30, 2024
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Mussomeli is roughly 60 miles from Palermo. Photo by Julia Nimke
Like any small town that isnā€™t yours, Sambuca di Sicilia, located about an hourā€™s drive south of the Sicilian capital, Palermo, feels a little intimidating at first. Stroll its perimeter on a late afternoon in winter, when the sun sets the buildings alight, and eyes follow you. Order the townā€™s signature minni di virginiā€”breast-shaped cakes filled with cream, chocolate chips, and squash jamā€”and a hush silences the chatter in the local bakery. Itā€™s not unfriendly, this exaggerated alertness, but it does make you, the visitor, feel a bit self-conscious.
By the time I walk into a small restaurant that first evening seeking dinner, my self-consciousness has reached an uncomfortable peak. The restaurantā€™s only other guests, a middle-aged couple, fall quiet as I make my way to a table. After the waiter and I stumble through my order, impeded by his poor English and my worse Italian, I pull out a book to hide my awkwardness while I wait for the food. But when the first course arrivesā€”a heap of ocher-tinted pasta topped with crimson shrimp and shards of pistachiosā€”I am so clearly delighted by the dish that the waiter then decides we are friends. He introduces himself by name, Giovanni, and when two women with their children enter the restaurant, he seats them next to me and introduces them as well. ā€œLa famiglia,ā€ he saysā€”his own, and that of the chef, who, stepping out from the kitchen to kiss his wife, also comes over to greet me.
Two hours later, I walk out into the night air, aloft on a wave of bonhomie and sturdy Sicilian wine. Oh yes, I think to myself. I could live here.
Iā€™m not the only person to arrive at that revelation. In fact, I had come to Sicily to investigate a program that has attracted thousands with the same notion. A program that allows people, although they may not have the financial wherewithal to go full-bore Tuscan-villa-with-frescoed-ceilings-and-private-vineyard, to nevertheless live a different version of the dream. A program that promises them a house for a single euro.
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About the size of New Hampshire, Sicily has 4.8 million residents. Photos by Julia Nimke
Since the 19th century, large numbers of villagers in the poorer parts of Italy have migrated to more prosperous regions and countries. The migration continues; in some places, populations have shrunk so dramatically that there are no longer enough patients to keep the local doctor in business, or enough children to fill the school. Young people who moved away to study or work didnā€™t want to return, and when their parents died, the family homes stood empty, sometimes for decades. Around 2010, the village of Salemi in western Sicily was one of the first towns to come up with an idea: What if you could fill them again by offering the properties for sale at a ridiculously low price?
I wasnā€™t in the market for a house, one euro or otherwise. But I wanted to know if the program worked. Though the rumors Iā€™d heard about driving in Sicily gave me pauseā€”highways that suddenly turn into rutted cow paths; drivers whose chosen passing method involves achieving the closest possible proximity to the fender of the car in front of themā€”I decided to set out in a rental car through villages in various stages of implementing the initiative. Were once-sepulchral towns reinvigorated by newcomers eager to put down roots? Were the new residents integrating into small-town life, or was an influx of new blood bringing unintended side effects? And did a town that drew enough newcomers lose the qualities that had attracted said newcomers in the first place?
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From left: The population of Sambuca di Sicilia has declined because of a low birth rate, but the town gained media attention after The Sopranos actress Lorraine Bracco bought a home there; The Valley of the Temples has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1997. Photos by Julia Nimke
The morning after my dinner in Sambuca di Sicilia, I leave my home base to see my first one-euro house. Before that, I stop in the Valley of the Temples. Located in a national park, the valley preserves the remains of a Greek colony founded in the 6th century B.C.E. on land inhabited by the indigenous Sicani. A couple of millennia later, the original temples to Hercules and Hera survive, but so does evidence of Carthaginian rampage and Roman reconstruction. Those peoples would in time be followed by Vandals from northern Europe and Muslims from Africa, to say nothing of the French and Spanish. Standing there, looking at the gold-colored columns of once-grand temples set against the sparkling sea and flowering almond trees, time seemed to bend. Outsiders, I realize, have been making their homes here for a long time.
Theyā€™ve also been leaving. When I arrive in Cammarata, a steep jumble of a village whose mountains are dusted with snow, I can feel an absence. In the winter sunshine, itā€™s beautiful, but itā€™s also empty. In the 15 minutes I spend standing in front of a very sleepy-looking town hall, where Iā€™ve arranged to meet architect Martina Giracello, not one person passes by.
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The members of StreetTo want to rejuvenate Cammarata. Photo by Julia Nimke
Finally, Giracello arrives, her corkscrew curls bobbing, and explains the silence. ā€œPeople here wanted to live in larger, more modern apartments,ā€ she says. Many moved to neighboring San Giovanni Gemini, about half a mile away, where the gentler topography allows for larger buildings and better conveniences. Now, Giracello tells me, ā€œthe one real estate agency in the area doesnā€™t even handle houses in the historic center.ā€
Like other young people from the region, Giracello and her boyfriend, Gianluca, moved away for university and to start their professional careers. But as they approached the end of their 20s, they returned to Cammarata, yearning for a quieter life. They also wanted, however, some kind of cultural scene, and neighbors their own age. ā€œWe studied other towns with one-euro programs, saw that for a lot of buyers, once they are there, the house is just a vacation home, and they donā€™t have a relation to the people there,ā€ she tells me. ā€œWe wanted to do something different. We wanted to create a community.ā€
ā€œAs We Slowly Make Our Way Up Cammarataā€™s Steep Streets, The Silence Gives Way To The Sound Of Hammers And Saws. ā€˜Hear That?ā€™ Giracello Asks. ā€˜Itā€™s Working.ā€™ā€
They banded together with other professionals to form a volunteer association called StreetTo, which convinces the owners of abandoned properties to sell, then helps foreigners find their houses and navigate the inspections, paperwork, and renovations that follow. And, in the hopes of forging community, they also organize exhibitions, concerts, and gatherings for townspeople old and new. Driven by their desire to revive the Cammarata they love, StreetToā€™s members offer these services free of charge. (ā€œAt the moment, it is a project geared toward foreigners, but what we want is to also bring Cammarataā€™s citizens back, just as Gianluca and I have come back,ā€ Giracello says.)
Itā€™s not pure altruism, though. Their town gets something in the way of revitalization. As we slowly make our way up Cammarataā€™s steep streets, the silence gives way to the sound of hammers and saws. ā€œHear that?ā€ Giracello asks. ā€œItā€™s working.ā€
Panting from the climb, we reach the first property, where Giracello introduces me to the reality of what one euro buys you: not much. The home, more vertically challenged shed than house, has what real estate ads might call ā€œsignificant structural issuesā€ and what I might call ā€œa massive hole in the roof.ā€
For an extravagance like a ceiling, Giracello says, youā€™ll need to spend a bit more. We press on to another house. Pushing open the heavy wooden door, she mentions its priceā€”just over $10,000. The tall, narrow home is built, like many older Sicilian dwellings, with a single room per floor, its stairwell is carpeted in debris, and the battered sink and laminate countertops make it look like the kitchen was outfitted sometime around World War II. But the floor is adorned with beautiful geometric tiles, and a view of the valley spills through the windows. ā€œWe try to find houses in not really good condition,ā€ Giracello says. ā€œBecause the purpose of the project is to help the town get better.ā€
StreetTo has helped negotiate the sale of 18 houses so far, but contract negotiations and renovations are still in progress, and none of the buyers have been able to move into their homes yet. But Giracello is confident it wonā€™t be long before her village swells with new life. She pulls out her phone to show me a video.
ā€œWhen a German nurse and her husband bought a place, a local couple were so happy to see new people that they held a dinner for them, and invited us,ā€ she says. ā€œEven though the Germans didnā€™t speak Italian and the Italians didnā€™t speak German, now they are all friends.ā€ She pauses. ā€œWe are all friends.ā€
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Today a church and monastery, Santa Caterina dā€™Alessandria was home to nuns from 1311 to 2014. Photo by Julia Nimke
My next stop is Mussomeli, located nearly in the center of the island. Unlike many Sicilian towns, which drape themselves seductively across a ridge, Mussomeli is all about the vertical. On the morning I approach, the craggy volcanic outcroppings that rise from the valley below have trapped pools of mist, making the town appear to be floating on clouds. It feels like entering Middle Earth.
The illusion doesnā€™t last: With a population of nearly 11,000 people, Mussomeli is large enough to support a Carrefour supermarket and even a mini traffic jam. But as I push on to the townā€™s core, the fantasy returns. Mussomeliā€™s heart holds ancient churches, tiny squares where kids play ball, and views from its tangled streets of that mystical valley and a hilltop with the ruins of a 14th-century castle.
Streets so tangled, in fact, that I get lost, and ask for directions in a dark, tiny bakery selling nothing but focaccia. I pay for an oily square, and ask the elderly man behind the counter what he thinks about the foreigners moving to town. ā€œThere arenā€™t so many here now,ā€ he says. ā€œBut in summer they buy a lot of focaccia.ā€
Seems a fair trade. Mussomeli doesnā€™t cater to tourism, but between its services and charm, more than 200 inexpensive homes have been bought by foreigners in the past few years. Australian Danny McCubbin owns one of them. Ready for a quieter life after 17 years of working in London for the chef Jamie Oliver, McCubbin was recruited by producers late in 2019 for a television show that planned to follow people on their one-euro adventures in Mussomeli. The pandemic intervened and the show was never finished, but McCubbin had found his purpose. By the end of 2020, he had decided to move permanently to Mussomeli and turn his home into a community kitchen to help people with inadequate access to food.
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From left: The Good Kitchen rescues surplus food from supermarkets to provide for people in need; Australian Danny McCubbin moved to Mussomeli in 2020. Photos by Julia Nimke
After I make several wrong turns, I find McCubbin, clearing dishes from a long, communal table. Heā€™d just served lunch to local residents and Ukrainian children welcomed by the town after fleeing the war. These days, the Good Kitchen also supplies weekly meals for the elderly and has taught some of Mussomeliā€™s youth to cook. A clutch of older men use the space as an afternoon hangout, and thereā€™s also a free Sunday afternoon lunch. (The only requirement for those with means is that they bring something to share.) Not long ago, Mussomeliā€™s mayor told McCubbin that he had planted a seed, and that more in Mussomeli were now thinking about social projects. ā€œMy whole way of living is so simple and joyful now,ā€ McCubbin says. ā€œI donā€™t know where else I could have done this.ā€
Rubia Andrade Daniels has also adjusted her expectations. One of the earliest buyers in Mussomeli, she fell in love with a vibe that reminds her of the Brazil where she was born and spent her childhood, but that also seems open to the kind of diversity sheā€™s found in California, where she has lived for the past 30 years. ā€œFor the first few days, I couldnā€™t figure out why people here were being so nice to me,ā€ she says with a laugh. ā€œThen I realized theyā€™re like that to everyone.ā€
Andrade Daniels, who works for a renewable energy company, loved the town so much she purchased three one-euro houses on her first visit in 2019. Four years later, her enthusiasm remains undimmed, but her timetable has shifted: The kitchen in the house where she plans on living part time once she retires wasnā€™t finished until August 2023, and progress on the other twoā€”an art gallery and a wellness centerā€”has been pushed to an undetermined future, in part due to the pandemic and the delays in its wake. ā€œYou canā€™t have American expectations,ā€ she says. ā€œHere, things take the time they take.ā€
I Think About That Pace each day when I return to my base in Sambuca di Sicilia. There, too, thereā€™s been such demand for the listed houses that one euro is no longer the final sale cost but rather the opening bid in an auction that could see prices rise into the thousands. Even then, the campaign was so popular that the municipality launched a second round in 2021, with an increase in the starting priceā€”to two euros.
Margherita Licata, who has been summering in Sambuca since childhood and eventually settled here full time about 20 years ago, says that ā€œ99 percentā€ of Sambucans welcome the newcomers. The other 1 percent? ā€œThey worry they have been invaded by Americans,ā€ says Licata, who works for a real estate agency in town. ā€œIf Sambuca one day has a thousand outsiders living here, of course it will change our lives. But it will maybe mean the young [people] can find a job and not go somewhere else. If we want that change, we must accept other changes too.ā€
Of course, itā€™s possible that Sambuca could become transfigured by take-out coffee joints and big-box stores and other supposed comforts that the townā€™s new residents like. Already, some Americans have complained about the local teenagers who cruise the streets on their motorbikes at night. And imported class divisions are also emerging: Among the more free-spirited DIYers who have purchased homes, rumors circulate that some of the wealthier buyers want to build an exclusive, members-only swimming pool.
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From left: Margherita Licata has lived in Sambuca for roughly 20 years; Pasticceria Enrico Pendola is one of few bakeries in the small town. Photos by Julia Nimke
But for now, thereā€™s little evidence of a non-Sicilian presence in Sambuca, and it remains difficult to find anyone who speaks English. What I did find was an archaeology museum where, after I inquired if it was open, a woman rushed out, turned on the lights, and marched me at breakneck speed through the antiquities on display while barking descriptions of them at me in Italian. I also found a market that popped up alongside the traffic circle where the fishmonger told me how to cook the sardines I bought from the back of his van, as well as a cafĆ© whose arancini made me finally understand why anyone would want to eat fried balls of rice, and where the elderly man who glared at me as I drank my breakfast cappuccino turned out not to be annoyed with the foreigner invading his morning sanctuary, but just waiting for the opportunity to ask me if I knew his cousins in New Jersey.
Iā€™d arrived in Sicily wondering if the one-euro initiative would ruin the towns that adopted it, replacing their traditional culture with more consumerist ones and destroying their lifestyle and easy sociability. And when that turned out not to be the case, I also wondered if it wasnā€™t simply a matter of time: Perhaps the pandemic had slowed an already slower way of doing business, and the reckoning would still surely come.
But as I sat again in that same restaurant from the first night, it seemed to me that Sicily would be just fine. Maybe the slower pace was not a flaw that would eventually be overcome, but instead a feature that would ensure Sicily remains alluringly and unequivocally itself. After all, I thought, as I remembered the
Valley of the Temples, different peoples have been arriving on these shores for millennia. They may leave an imprint; they may shape the culture. But itā€™s clear that a distinctively Sicilian spirit still dominates.
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From left: Mussomeli is one of the most popular towns in Sicily for one-euro home programs; Sambuca di Sicilia was a prominent trading hub centuries ago. Photos by Julia Nimke
And so, just before my departure from the island, I went to visit Margherita Licata again, but this time for reasons slightly more personal. Because I had seen enough one-euro homes to know that my powers of imagination were no match for their state of decrepitude, we skipped right to a ā€œpremiumā€ home. As soon as she pushed open the doors to the arched courtyard, I was entranced. The rooms were rundown and furnished with old-fashioned chandeliers and faded wallpaper. But they were also large and bright, with intact walls and floors covered with gorgeous patterned tiles. Downstairs, there was an attached space that would make a perfect rental apartment. Upstairs, two rooftop terraces offered views of the town center in one direction, and a lake in the other.
ā€œFifty thousand euros,ā€ Licata told me with a wink. ā€œBut thatā€™s just what the ownerā€™s asking.ā€
The money in my bank account had not magically grown during my time in Sicily. But my imagination must have. Because in that moment, it all seemed possible.
ā€” Lisa Abend is a Journalist based in Madrid and the Author of The Sorcererā€™s Apprentices: A Season in the Kitchen at Ferran AdriĆ 's elBulli. She is also a Contributing Writer at AFAR and Correspondent for Time magazine.
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itty-bitty-sunshine Ā· 8 months ago
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sunny hiiii :3 waves
hope tumblr stops bothering you, or else i might step in.... *eyes turn red* tell me if hes bothering you...... /j
in other news, i have been thinking dnd thoughts all day
MKBWHWUWJ hi void tumblr is being mean and stinky šŸ˜”šŸ˜”šŸ˜”
Penny for your dnd thoughts I love dnd
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dragonsorceress22 Ā· 6 months ago
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Nova needs a home!
This is adorable little squeaker is Nova!
Nova is a 9 month old classic tabby ā€“ male, neutered, and microchipped.
His current home situation is not good for him or anyone here - he needs a new home ASAP.
Nova is playful and active, clumsy, doesnā€™t mind being picked up, and will happily sit in laps when heā€™s tired of playing. Heā€™s social and friendly and loves open windows.
Nova will come with a nice carrier, all of his toys, a couple cat beds, his scratching post, a few blankets and towels, and all of his medical history.
Nova has digestive difficulties, so his dietary needs are sort of high maintenance but his current regimen is working well for managing his symptoms and letting him live a normal kitty life.
No adoption fees - love and care is all you need to take this little guy home!
Please share this as much as possible so we can find Nova a safe and loving home!
Nova's Adopt A Pet profile
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noneur-business Ā· 1 year ago
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shelikesrainydays Ā· 2 months ago
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September 25th, 2024
Todayā€™s the day: we are owners! šŸ”šŸ‘©ā€ā¤ļøā€šŸ‘Ø
In a country like this one, becoming the owner of your own home at this age is practically a freaking miracle. It happens, but it certainly is not common. But yay! After so many weeks loaded with stress, anxiety and uncertainty, we can finally live like we want, do what we want and of course, decorate and remodel all we please without worrying about asking some landlord for permission.
Iā€™m so, so happy, and eternally grateful! šŸŒ¼šŸŒæšŸ’–
Here is to many years filled with adventures and happy memories šŸ„‚
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