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Rough week, cheered myself up with doodles of my sunshine shark
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now that the big sick, love simon, set it up, crazy rich asians and to all the boys i’ve loved before did all the heavy lifting and resurrected the romcom we better be seeing more @ you hollywood cowards. you hacks. you FRAUDS
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The Batkids
calling each others
an acting as
“Brother”
is so beautiful
and means everything to me
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It’s Halloween 1st, time to start checking sixpenceee’s blog everyday 🍂🍁🎃👻
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Logging into Tumblr on October 1st and seeing everyone like:
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What’s Up October 2017
What’s Up For October?
Planet Pairs, Stellar Superstars, Observe The Moon Night!!
This month, catch planet pairs, our moon near red stars, an asteroid, meteors and International Observe the Moon Night!
You can’t miss bright Venus in the predawn sky. Look for fainter Mars below Venus on the 1st, really close on the 5th, and above Venus after that.
Midmonth, the moon is visible near Regulus, the white starry heart of the constellation Leo.
In the October 8-11 predawn sky watch the moon glide near the Pleiades star cluster and pass near the red stars Aldebaran in the constellation Taurus and Betelgeuse in Orion.
After dusk in the early part of the month look for Saturn in the southwest sky above another red star: Antares in Scorpius. Later in the month, find the moon above Antares October 22 and 23.
Saturn will be above the moon on the 23rd and below it on the 24th.
Uranus reach opposition on October 19th. It’s visible all night long and its blue-green color is unmistakeable. It may be bright enough to see with your naked eye–and for sure in binoculars.
The Orionids peak on October 20–a dark, moonless night. Look near Orion’s club in the hours before dawn and you may see up to 10 to 15 meteors per hour.
Use binoculars to look for bright asteroid 7 Iris in the constellation Aries. Newbies to astronomy should be able to spot this magnitude 6.9 asteroid - even from the city.
Look later in the month and sketch its positions a day or two apart–to see it move.
Finally, celebrate International Observe the Moon Night on October 28 with your local astronomy club, Solar System Ambassador, museum, or planetarium. The first quarter moon that night will display some great features!
Watch the full What’s Up for October Video:
youtube
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com.
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((“You can’t take pain if you don’t care.”))
“Does it hurt now?”
“No.”
“Good.”
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Nobody here wants to get hurt. Put your gun down, deputy. You’re not gonna shoot me.
(for @thegeminisage thank you bb!)
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Coach beating up that guy was the highlight of the series
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