mom... call me sometime, I’d really like that
— insp / source / colouring
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get quiet or get out
[The physician of the group is trying to repair a man's wounded leg during a storm at sea, but one of the other crew members is very distressed.]
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Dr. Lycoris: (distracted) I'm sorry, my dear. What was your name again?
Gabby the cook: (weeping) What does it matter?!
Dr. Lycoris: (forced calmly) Uh, because this is my operating room right now, and if you're just going to scream, I need you to go outside.
Gabby the cook: (regaining composure) Gabby. My name is Gabby.
Dr. Lycoris: Gabby, please… (sternly) Shut up.
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Candela Obscura — chapter 4, ep.1 'Seeking Serenity' (youtu.be/YxxQgGmDR-g)
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whats everyones first video game (criteria can be whatever you want but im going for the first game i remember playing as a kid) mine's harvest moon friends of mineral town
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losing my mind everytime i see someone use antagonist to mean villian. have you not paid attention in a single literature class you have ever taken.
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"When considering the great victories of America’s conservationists, we tend to think of the sights and landscapes emblematic of the West, but there’s also a rich history of acknowledging the value of the wetlands of America’s south.
These include such vibrant ecosystems as the Everglades, the Great Dismal Swamp, the floodplains of the Congaree River, and “America’s Amazon” also known as the “Land Between the Rivers”—recently preserved forever thanks to generous donors and work by the Nature Conservancy (TNC).
With what the TNC described as an “unprecedented gift,” 8,000 acres of pristine wetlands where the Alabama and Tombigbee Rivers join, known as the Mobile Delta, were purchased for the purpose of conservation for $15 million. The owners chose to sell to TNC rather than to the timber industry which planned to log in the location.
“This is one of the most important conservation victories that we’ve ever been a part of,” said Mitch Reid, state director for The Nature Conservancy in Alabama.
The area is filled with oxbow lakes, creeks, and swamps alongside the rivers, and they’re home to so many species that it ranks as one of the most biodiverse ecosystems on Earth, such that Reid often jokes that while it has rightfully earned the moniker “America’s Amazon” the Amazon should seriously consider using the moniker “South America’s Mobile.”
“This tract represents the largest remaining block of land that we can protect in the Mobile-Tensaw Delta. First and foremost, TNC is doing this work for our fellow Alabamians who rightly pride themselves on their relationship with the outdoors,” said Reid, who told Advance Local that it can connect with other protected lands to the north, in an area called the Red Hills.
“Conservation lands in the Delta positions it as an anchor in a corridor of protected lands stretching from the Gulf of Mexico to the Appalachian Mountains and has long been a priority in TNC’s ongoing efforts to establish resilient and connected landscapes across the region.”
At the moment, no management plan has been sketched out, but TNC believes it must allow the public to use it for recreation as much as possible.
The money for the purchase was provided by a government grant and a generous, anonymous donor, along with $5.2 million from the Holdfast Collective—the conservation funding body of Patagonia outfitters."
Video via Mobile Bay National Estuary Program, August 7, 2020
Article via Good News Network, February 14, 2024
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