#farmagedon
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my skin is clear, my crops are watered, i am hydrated, i am flourishing, i am thriving
(listened to the shaun the sheep: farmagedon soundtrack)
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かつて激ハマりしたひつじのショーンUFOフィーバー含む上映があると新ピカのエスカレーター途中の垂れ幕で見たんだが詳細がまだどこにも出てないな…
There will be screenings including Shaun the Sheep FARMAGEDON which I was once extremely addicted to.
これやな
This...
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Did anyone else notice this in Shaun the sheep Farmagedon movie?
While the dude was reporting to the gov what he saw about the alien, they literally wrote down. “Oooh yar yar, woooo yar yar eurghhhh” 🤣
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only way home - fraggle rock
on the outside - oingo boingo
puppet boy - devo
there is something in the forest - moominvalley
cicada days - will woods
the supermarket & the sugar rush - farmagedon
this hyper world - lemon demon
by the time you get this - they might be giants
taken for a ride - tally hall
rule #4 - fish in a birdcage
yahoo this was fun
uhh anyone who wants to can, go be free be wild
Rules: shuffle your ‘on repeat’ playlist and post the first ten tracks, then tag ten people 🎶
@mystic-blue HI !! starting a new chain cause the old one was getting long LETSGO
Plug Me In (All Dogs)
Why Do I (Set It Off with Hatsune Miku)
Worst Case Scenario (The Hoosiers)
selfdestruct (torr)
Sunflower (Post Malone with Swae Lee)
Foolishly Wrong (Autoheart)
Where Is Your Rider (The Oh Hellos)
Mutants Over Broadway (Tee Lopes with Anton Corazza)
No Culture (Mother Mother)
Brave as a Noun (AJJ)
now to pick my test subjects to torment... @boygirltitties @pixiecaps @battiegutz @slippnslide @rozugold @possuminnit @scitty @beannary @zyrafowe-sny @wiiwarechronicles
#it is so very late (early?)#this didn’t reveal just how much i listen to the fraggle rock soundtrack si that’s good#ok good night now
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dominion just feels like "kind/soft" indoctrination, considering it's quoted and yelled left and right. If a single documentary is enough to change your entire lifestyle that's ...really weird to put it mildly
#documentaries#same goes for all the other#earthlings#cowspiracy#farmagedon#and I had the displeasure of watching them all#both before and after beginning studying ag#and it's just#god it's so emotionally manipulative and just so so one sided#it's the entire dihydrogenmonoxide story all over again#funny thing bc i got a variety of college students to want a ban on water by using that method#just a rant btw#bc dominion was plastered all over the comments on a video about grasslands
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Just to let you know, you can be upset and critical of the Academy not nominating any Japanese Animation again this year, WITHOUT shitting on the other nominations.
Was Farmagedon Aardman's best film? No. I much preferred the first Shaun the Sheep Movie, Pirates, and Wererabbit.
Is the continuing lack of any foreign language media being nominated an example of how the academy is racist? Also Yes.
HOWEVER a stop motion Animation made by an Independent, EMPLOYEE OWNED studio is NOT the same as a mass produced, overly saturated Hollywood Blockbuster.
So don't you DARE put them on the same level as Boss Baby.
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Ho! Go now and listen to the fantastic interview @pumbaaguy and I did with @aardmananimations #directors Richard Phelan and @will_becher ! Their film, Shaun the Sheep: Farmagedon JUST DROPPED on Netflix here in the USA! Listen on iTunes, Spotify, and TaughtByAPro.com amount many others. #podcast #shuanthesheep #aardmananimations #netflix (at Nashville, Tennessee) https://www.instagram.com/p/B8l4VZll-tc/?igshid=19chrspzdn7h1
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i went to see farmagedon today and tbh 60% of the time i was fantasizing about how i’m going to see tros in that same theater in december and i was imagining how glorious that reylo kiss is going to look like on a big screen someone send help
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April 2022 Top Ten
1. Sci-Fi Fantasy School of Business Cap Royal Blue 2. Basquiat Uniqlo t-shirt 3. Hard To Be A God 4. Charli XCX : Alone Together 5. Lego Boba Fett’s Starship™ 6. Easter Trail @ Greenbank Garden 7. Culzean Castle 8. The Killing Floor - If You Want It Deck 9. Farmagedon 10. Pork Bahn Mi @ Big Bear Bakery
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Thank you for the tag i-penna.
Top 3 ships, Erik and Christine, Meg and Baron Castalot de Barbazac, Raoul and any one but Christine, cause she's Erik's.
Last Song, 'Any dream will do' from Joesph and the Amazing Technicolor Dream Coat. Sometimes need to find a little hope during a rotten part of my life.
Last Movie, Shaun the Sheep, Farmagedon, Silly but cheerful. Laughed for the first time in ages.
Reading 99% fanfiction Phantom style. Rest is history books for research for my stories.
Food Craving: anything chocolate and sweet.
Tagging Anyone not already tagged who wants to take part.
AI was tagged by @useless-protagonist
Rules: Tag 9 people you’d like to get to know better.
Top 3 Ships: Not that big on romance tbh but through hyperfixation on the Franchises I’ve found myself taken in hard by Adrinette/Ladynoir from Miraculous Ladybug and Ben/Mal from Disney’s Descendants. If I had to pick a third one I guess Tai/Sora/Matt from digimon is pretty high up there.
Last song: Gomenasai by T.A.T.U it was..I was in a mood for it okay dont judge/j
Last Movie: Cheaper By The Dozen on Disney+
Reading: I have been reading The Amulet of Samarkand and Wicked Lovely for quite some time now. It’s uh..I’m kinda slow going.But it’s going.
What food are you craving right now?: Mochi tbh.
tagging: @shiisiln @iced-blood @ariasune @rscoil @imagitory @theimaginatrix27 @alexseanchai @kohakuhime and @gwen-skyes if they’re okay/inclined/up for it. (its totally okay if not.)
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Shaun The Sheep Movie 2 Farmagedon Official Trailer #2 2019 HD - https://youtu.be/KmBWqRBuydc
#width: 480px; height: 270px; overflow: hidden; position: relative;#YouTube <div style=><iframe fram
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shawn the sheep: farmagedon soundtrack my beloved
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何十回みてもUFOフィーバーは最高。オポとミモがルーラを迎えにくるところで必ず泣く
I've seen FARMAGEDON dozens of times and it's still the best.
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Isn't supporting bee keepers by buying honey kind of a good thing? Like its a double edged sword bc we shouldn't use animals as food and all but right now with the changing climate and GMO crops and colony collapse disorder it's killing off bees and we desperately need them, so isn't it a good thing that bee keepers are keeping bees alive?
Hi there pretty-love-ly!
We’ve been tricked into believing that honey is simply a byproduct of the essential pollination provided by farmed honeybees. Did you know though that the honeybee’s wild counterparts (such as bumblebees, carpenter and digger bees) are much better pollinators? They are also less likely than farmed honeybees to be affected by mites and Africanized bees. The issue is that these native bees can hibernate for up to 11 months out of the year and do not live in large colonies. Thus, they do not produce massive amounts of honey for a $157 million dollar a year industry.
Honey and the Different Types of Bees
Honey bees: Honey bees make a large quantity of honey (possible due to the size of colonies – that is, many worker bees collecting nectar). Honey consists of nectar combined with a ‘bee enzyme’ that goes through a process of concentration in the honeycomb before it is capped by the bees.
Bumblebees: Bumblebees, in one sense, make a form of honey, which they collect in nectar pots to be eaten by the colony, including the newly hatched worker females. However, the process of concentrating, capping, and the making of honey combs does not happen in bumblebee colonies, nor is nectar stored over winter, since only the queen survives and hibernates, whilst the rest of the colony do not.
Solitary bees: Solitary bees do not make honeycombs. They construct egg cells which they provision with a ball of nectar and pollen that will be consumed by the new larvae.
Honey bees will pollinate many plant species that are not native to their natural habitat but are often inefficient pollinators of such plants.
The crops that can be only pollinated by honey bees are:
• Guar Bean• Quince• Lemon• Lime• Karite• Tamarind
The crops that are pollinated by bees, in general, are:
• Apples• Mangos• Rambutan• Kiwi Fruit• Plums• Peaches• Nectarines• Guava• Rose Hips• Pomegranites• Pears• Black and Red Currants• Alfalfa• Okra• Strawberries• Onions• Cashews• Cactus• Prickly Pear• Apricots• Allspice• Avocados• Passion Fruit• Lima Beans• Kidney Beans• Adzuki Beans• Green Beans• Orchid Plants• Custard Apples• Cherries• Celery• Coffee• Walnut• Cotton• Lychee• Flax• Acerola – used in Vitamin C supplements• Macadamia Nuts• Sunflower Oil• Goa beans• Lemons• Buckwheat• Figs• Fennel• Limes• Quince• Carrots• Persimmons• Palm Oil• Loquat• Durian• Cucumber• Hazelnut• Cantaloupe• Tangelos• Coriander• Caraway• Chestnut• Watermelon• Star Apples• Coconut• Tangerines• Boysenberries• Starfruit• Brazil Nuts• Beets• Mustard Seed• Rapeseed• Broccoli• Cauliflower• Cabbage• Brussels Sprouts• Bok Choy (Chinese Cabbage)• Turnips• Congo Beans• Sword beans• Chili peppers, red peppers, bell peppers, green peppers• Papaya• Safflower• Sesame• Eggplant• Raspberries• Elderberries• Blackberries• Clover• Tamarind• Cocoa• Black Eyed Peas• Vanilla• Cranberries• Tomatoes• Grapes
Check this chart to see which type of bees can pollinate those crops.
While you may spread a heaping tablespoon of honey on your morning toast without thinking, creating each drop is no small feat. To make one pound of honey, a colony must visit over two million flowers, flying over 55,000 miles, at up to 15 miles per hour to do so. During a bee’s lifetime, she will only make approximately one teaspoon of honey, which is essential to the hive for times when nectar is scarce, such as during winter. At times, there may be an excess in the hive, but this amount is difficult to determine and large-scale beekeepers often remove all or most of it and replace it with a sugar or corn syrup substitute. Can you imagine someone removing all the fruit juice from your house and replacing it with fruit-flavored soda? It may still give you energy, but eventually, it will probably make you sick.BEES DIE FOR YOUR HONEY
Another thing to think about while you sit by your beeswax candle and contemplate the lives of these little fellows is that bees must consume approximately eight pounds of honey to produce each pound of wax! And the more we take from them (bee pollen, royal jelly, propolis) the harder these creatures must work and the more bees are needed, which isn’t good news for a population that is dwindling.
When you see a jar of honey, you may think of the sweet cartoon hives depicted in childhood stories such as Winnie the Pooh. But most hives are now confined to large boxes (a completely foreign shape to bees) that are jostled and shipped around the country to pollinate crops and produce honey. This is stressful and confusing to the bees’ natural navigation systems. Along the way, bees are lost and killed, and may spread diseases from one infected hive to another. The practice of bee farming often limits the bees’ diet to monoculture crops, introduces large amounts of pesticides into their systems and causes the farmed bees to crowd out the native wild pollinators that may have been otherwise present. Beekeepers (even small-scale backyard beekeepers) will also kill the queens if they feel the hive is in danger of swarming (fleeing their file cabinet shaped homes) or drones* that they deem unnecessary to honey production. * The drones’ main function is to fertilize the queen when needed.
We have got to the point where we mass exploit honeybees as pollinators to fix a problem that should be fixed from the roots and not partially.
“At certain times of the year, three or four trucks carrying beehives rumble along Highway 20 every week. Their destination: California, where the bees are required for pollination services. During my time in California researching dairy farms, I learned about an extraordinary consequence of intensive farming taken to extremes: industrialized pollination - a business that is rapidly expanding as the natural bee population collapses. In certain parts of the world, as a result of industrial farming, there are no longer enough bees to pollinate the crops. Farmers are forced to hire or rent them in”— Farmagedon. The True Cost of Cheap Meat
The Case of the Disappearing Bees
The question of what will happen if bees disappear may not be far from being answered. Over the past couple of years, stories about bees disappearing and Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD) have been popping up in the The New York Times, Star Tribune, Huffington Post, PBS, Discovery News and more. If nothing else wakes us up, perhaps the fact that the disappearance of bees has become front page news will. Scientists are rushing to discover what’s causing this problem before it’s too late and before we lose the important environmental link created by bees.
Thus far, there are three main theories/contributing factors:
Pesticides
Pennsylvania State University published a study in 2010 that found “unprecedented levels” of pesticides in honeybees and hives in the United States. (If it’s in the bees and hives, what do you think is in your honey?) Some of these chemicals are killing bees, and guess what? The EPA knows about it.
“The EPA identifies two specific neonicotinoids, imidacloprid and clothianidin, as highly toxic to bees. Both chemicals cause symptoms in bees such as memory loss, navigation disruption, paralysis, and death.
Both chemicals have been linked to dramatic honeybee deaths and subsequent suspensions of their use in France and Germany. Several European countries have already suspended them. Last year Slovenia and Italy also suspended their use for what they consider a significant risk to honeybee populations.”
– Mother Earth News
This is old news; this story came out in 2009. But has anything changed here? Not as far as I can tell.
Mites and Viruses
With weakened immune systems (stress, inferior food sources, pesticides etc.) bees have become more susceptible to viruses, fungal infections, and mites. Many of these invasive bugs are spread as hives are moved around the country or transferred from country to country.
While there are a number of treatments on the market for the mites, viruses, fungus and other pests that are attacking our colonies, none have solved the problem completely. These treatments can also introduce antibiotics, pesticides and other chemicals into the hives in an attempt to prevent or heal the infection. If these chemicals (often on strips) are not removed from the hive after they lose potency, they can, in fact, help the viruses or mites become resistant to treatment in the future.
Cell phones
This is one of the newest theories on CCD and may need further testing.
“According to a Swiss researcher who recently published a paper on the subject, the electromagnetic waves from mobile phones have a significant impact on the behavior of honeybees and could potentially be harming honeybees around the world.”
“To test the relationship between honeybees and buzzing cell phones, he placed phones inside bee hives and then monitored the bees’ reaction. He found that in the presence of actively communicating cellphones (those not in standby mode), bees produced the sounds known as “worker piping,” which tends to indicate disturbance in a bee colony.”
– ABC News
Cell phones, pesticides and viruses aside, commercial bee farming – whether organic (where bee deaths are fewer, but still occur) or conventional – does not provide bees with the opportunity to live out their normal life cycle. No matter how small the animal, farming is farming. Whether you choose to buy backyard honey or a large brand, eating honey and using other bee products encourages using bees for profit.
If you truly want to save bees as a whole and not only honey bees because is much more convenient.. then support bee sanctuaries, boycott the agribusiness and its use of chemicals everywhere. Here I leave some ideas and ways to help bees.
Sanctuaries
Spikenard Farm Honeybee Sanctuary | • Virginia, USA •
New York Bee Sanctuary | • New York, USA •
Native Bee Sanctuary | • Australia •
Artemis Smiles - Honey Bee Sanctuary | • Hawaii, USA •
Urban Evergreen Bee Sanctuary | • Washington, USA •
The Honeybee Helpers | • North West, Ireland •
Bee Sanctuary - The Bee School | • North Carolina, USA •
Bellingen Bee Sanctuary | • Australia •
Morgan Freeman Converted His 124 Acre Ranch Into A Bee Sanctuary To Help Save The Bees
Plant your garden with bee-friendly plants
In areas of the country where there are few agricultural crops, honeybees rely upon garden flowers to ensure they have a diverse diet and to provide nectar and pollen. Encourage honeybees to visit your garden by planting single flowering plants and vegetables. Go for all the allium family, all the mints, all beans except French beans and flowering herbs. Bees like daisy-shaped flowers - asters and sunflowers, also tall plants like hollyhocks, larkspur and foxgloves. Bees need a lot of pollen and trees are a good source of food. Willows and lime trees are exceptionally good.
Encourage local authorities to use bee-friendly plants in public spaces
Some of the country’s best gardens and open spaces are managed by local authorities. Recently these authorities have recognised the value of planning gardens, roundabouts and other areas with flowers that attract bees. Encourage your authority to improve the area you live in by adventurous planting schemes. These can often be maintained by local residents if the authority feels they do not have sufficient resources.
Weeds can be a good thing
Contrary to popular belief, a lawn full of clover and dandelions is not just a good thing—it’s a great thing! A haven for honeybees (and other native pollinators too). Don’t be so nervous about letting your lawn live a little. Wildflowers, many of which we might classify as weeds, are some of the most important food sources for native North American bees. If some of these are “weeds” you chose to get rid of (say you want to pull out that blackberry bush that’s taking over), let it bloom first for the bees and then before it goes to seed, pull it out or trim it back!
Don’t use chemicals or pesticides to treat your lawn or garden
Yes, they make your lawn look pristine and pretty, but they’re actually doing the opposite to the life in your biosphere. The chemicals and pest treatments you put on your lawn and garden can cause damage to the honeybees systems. These treatments are especially damaging if applied while the flowers are in bloom as they will get into the pollen and nectar and be taken back to the bee hive where they also get into the honey—which in turn means they can get into us. Pesticides, specifically neo-nicotinoid varieties have been one of the major culprits in Colony Collapse Disorder.
Bees are thirsty. Put a small basin of fresh water outside your home
You may not have known this one—but it’s easy and it’s true! If you have a lot of bees starting to come to your new garden of native plants, wildflowers, and flowering herbs, put a little water basin out (a bird bath with some stones in it for them to crawl on does a nice trick). They will appreciate it!
Let dandelions and clover grow in your yard.
Dandelions and clover are two of the bees’ favorite foods – they provide tons of nourishment and pollen for our pollinators to make honey and to feed their young (look at this bee frolicking in a dandelion below – like a pig in shit!) And these flowers could not be any easier to grow – all you have to do is not do anything.
I highly recommend also taking a look at this article too as honey is tested on animals, yes, as it says and the article explains honey is tested on dogs, cats, goats, rabbits, mice, rats…
As you can see, there is much more than saying “let’s help the bees by eating honey, vegans are dumb, they need to eat honey because what they eat relies on it”... We can save the bees without taking away the honey they produce, that’s a fact.
Honey is meant as a health food; a healthy food for bees. The more we interfere with their natural processes, both by relying on farmed bees as pollinators (rather than other native wild bees, insects or animals) and to feed our desires for “sweets,” the close we’re coming to agricultural disaster.
Sources
1. Danforth BN, Sipes S, Fang J, Brady SG (October 2006). “The history of early bee diversification based on five genes plus morphology”. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 103 (41): 15118–23.2. Pollinators’ impact on crop production Research study in Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences of 25 October 2006.3. Pollination and Bee Plants, Excerpted from Beekeeper’s Handbook, Sammataro/Avitabile ©1998.4. Bryony, Bonning (11 November 2009). “Honey Bee Disease Overview” (PDF). Journal of Invertebrate Pathology 103: s2-s4. doi:10.1016/j.jip.2009.07.015. Retrieved 21 October 2014.5. “Bumblebee Specialist Group: 2011 Update” (PDF). IUCN. Retrieved7 October 2012.6. Yang, Sarah (25 October 2006). “Pollinators help one-third of world’s crop production, says new study”. UC Berkeley. Retrieved 29 June 2015.
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Grant Rodiek from Hyperbole! Games wrote an excellent article about the struggles of being an indie board game publisher. Grant has been a long time member of The Game Crafter community and he’s designed fun games like Farmagedon, Hocus, and Cry Havoc. He’s got a lot of experience and shares a lot of helpful information in this article. Definitely give this a read if you’re considering being an indie board game publisher.
Click here to read the full article
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Heading home.
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