It’s unfortunate that there are negative stereotypes of vultures as creepy just because they eat carrion, as they’re the janitors who take care of the messes that others don’t want to deal with.
A person interested in nature, science, sustainability, music, and videogames. I’m also on Mastodon: @glennmagusharvey@scicomm.xyz and @glennmagusharvey@sakurajima.moe
My avatar is a snapping turtle swimming in the water.
It’s unfortunate that there are negative stereotypes of vultures as creepy just because they eat carrion, as they’re the janitors who take care of the messes that others don’t want to deal with.
Maybe this is why they named a Super Mario RPG boss after this genus
It’s the lack of lignin (bamboo uses silica as a strengthener)
Oh I see
The funny thing is that both “July twenty-third” and “the twenty-third of July” are common in the US.
as if my Florida Man posting didn’t already give it away :P
that said I have learned to prefer YYYY-MM-DD for all my cataloguing needs on computer because it sorts far more easily
The way Mario seems to teleport when turning around in the water seems to say something about the way hitboxes worked in the original DKC1.
Super Kong World
concat: “11”
cat: ignores your inquiry
Um
The second wrong.
Or…only one
Dimension
> Goddamnit.
> This is
> like getting
> rick[rolling something involves flattening it]
I don’t mind having an excuse to get ourselves a new calendar system :P
then write the year before the month before the day 😈
looks at today’s date
…darn, I did forget Tau Day. :(
well yeah, there’s no 14th month
https://i.postimg.cc/wBYcTxn8/delayed-agreement.png
you win 10 internet(s)
A local park ranger I know likes to remark that our state tree is a grass. (I’m in Florida.)
But I’d say that’s also inaccurate. IMO, grasses are in the family Poaceae, and palms are in the family Arecaceae. I guess one could remark that our state tree is a commelinid…but I don’t think tourists would get as much of a kick out of that.
The only things I know that look like this are in genus Heptapleurum (formerly Schefflera), specifically H. actinophyllum and H. arboricola. That genus is in the family you mentioned so that’d be my first guess.