Natasha Cousens
creates sculptures that can be considered a new form of taxidermy.
Instead of the real thing, her pieces are beautifully crafted wooden
sculptures of woodland creatures like foxes, deers, and rabbits. These
cute forest dwellers are often embellished with decorative elements such
as floral wreaths or guised in an unnatural color; making Cousen’s work
soft, whimsical and fun. Source:emptykingdom andkerli.buzznet
sculpting the land - strijdom van der merwe (2005)
illya-honeyillya-honey
first time seeing The Force Awakens: wow poor emo baby Kylo Ren… he just needs some Hot Topic coupons
second time seeing The Force Awakens: Kylo Ren is being torn apart. I cannot tolerate this. He’s in a state of emergency because he doesn’t think he can believe any of his own thoughts. The dark and the light are carving him out, trying to take him for their team. Kylo is not lost to the dark side, he just thinks that’s what is best for him. Did you see the way he was beating on the wound in his side? That’s him trying to inflict more pain, trying to remind himself that he is dark and powerful because he can tolerate it. He is clearly drawn to the light, and he was tired during the final fight. He was ready to give in. During the scene with Han, you could see that his face was illuminated with both blue and red light- symbolizing his division. The light became completely red and that was when he made his decision. Except, he didn’t really make that decision, that’s just what he thought was best. Maybe he’s trying to protect the rest of his family, the few people he has left, from the First Order. He knows the First Order would do anything to stop the Resistance, so maybe if he was still involved the advances would slow. Kylo is still torn. He doesn’t even know what to believe. He’s skeptical about everything, especially himself.
Actually pretty easy. Trees don’t reject tissue from other trees in the same family. You bend the tree to another tree when it is a sapling, scrape off the bark on both trees where they touch, add some damp sphagnum moss around them to keep everything slightly moist and bind them together. Then wait a few years- The trees will have grown together.
You can use a similar technique to graft a lemon branch or a lime branch or even both- onto an orange tree and have one tree that has all three fruits.
As a biologist I can clearly state that plants are fucking weird and you should probably be slightly afraid of them.
viforcontrol
On that note! At the university (UBC) located in town, the Agriculture students were told by their teacher that a tree flipped upside down would die. So they took an excavator and flipped the tree upside down. And it’s still growing. But the branches are now the roots, and the roots are now these super gnarly looking branches. Be afraid.
I love how trees are like “fuck it, I’ll deal” at literally everything. Forest fire? Cool, my seeds’ll finally grow. Upside down? Branches, suck, roots, leave. What’s this new branch? Eh, welcome to the tree buddy.
what kind of professor did these students have that they needed to prove him wrong so badly that they literally dug up a tree, flipped it and put it back in the ground?
Sounds like y’all’ve never heard about the Tree of 40 Fruits. Well, it’s exactly as it sounds. Sam Van Aken, an artist based in New York, decided to try his hand at grafting (e.g. the process by which you attach the branches of a different tree to a host tree).
As artists are inclined to do he decided to push some limits and over the course of a few years he grafted over 40 different fruit onto the host “
including almond, apricot, cherry, nectarine, peach and plum varieties.”
It has a fruiting period lasting from July to October and this is what it looks like when blossoming.
Shit’s tight yo.
Also we have a group called the Guerrilla Grafters. A group who started in San Fransisco with the goal of grafting fruiting branches onto non-fruiting trees of the same type.
Most cities have fruit trees that simply don’t produce fruit because having all these would be a mess and inadvertently providing unregulated food to people comes with a lot of legal risks I suppose. These grafters seem to think otherwise and have taken it upon themselves to try and bring fruit trees back to urban areas.
They’re only about 1.2 million away, and a couple of weeks ago they were 4 million away. There’s a good chance that with a bit of noise made about this, they could rally for that home stretch. This would be a good time to tell your family, friends, co-workers about the project, as there are many people interested in donating to charities at this time of the year. Once you choose a donation amount, you can also select that it is a gift for someone else, if you’re interested in gift ideas.
If nothing else, please help pass on the news here!
Bonsai
trees are awesome. Just ask Mr Miyagi. They look beautiful, they fit in
your house, they encourage patience and dedication, they relieve stress,
and they help to purify the air. What’s not to like?
People have been caring for Bonsai trees
for over a thousand years. The ancient horticultural practice
originated in China, where it was known as “penzai”, and was later
redeveloped under the influence of Japanese Zen Buddhism.
Source:..boredpanda
Instead of carving the jack-o-lantern myself this year, I poked a bunch of small holes in a pumpkin and stuffed the holes with peanut butter. I then let the squirrels go at it for two days. The result is something truly disturbing.
This is the first recording of a Haka I’ve seen that manages to capture even a fraction of the true energy of it. And it’s because there’s so many of them that those boys would have been shaking the ground.
Seeing these boys in their modern uniforms and jackets and backpacks that say NIKE, participating in this ancient ritual, really just drives home what people mean when they say “I am not a costume.” The clothes here are not important. The energy and participation are important.