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I made these! They are tiny dye solar cell paintings! And they produce electricity! I finally got to do some lab work, and it's been really exciting. I enjoyed crafting these, but was much more difficult than I thought â the glass is so slippery and the gloves and tweesers so clumsy. These were basically practice cells, and I messed up a few. Next I'll try my own dyes made from plants! This yellow is from lupinus polyphyllus leaves;


Coincidentally, I have taken on natural dyeing as a hobby! Below is a solar dyeing jar that's currently sitting on my windowsill. It uses the same plant, lupinus polyphyllus, but flowers instead of leaves. It should give a nice blue colour!

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This is the best thing I've ever seen
Do primates other than us like spicy food? What about sour?
Do any of them do as humans and eat toxic substances for fun?
Other primates do indeed like spicy and sour food! In captivity, many have lemons and peppers as part of their diet, and like humans, different individuals will prefer certain flavours. Primates do consume toxic substances for fun, and I am so glad you brought that up as it means that I get to post my favourite video of exactly that happening! Behold: lemurs getting zoinked off toxic millipedes
youtube
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I really dislike how saving the planet has become something political.
I straight up don't understand? The only reason nothing has been done about the climate emergency is because our two political parties hate each other so much they would rather burn to death then actually agree on something.
I don't want to be political on here, but for the love of all things holy can our government PLEASE just put all their weird hate for the "other side" up their ass and actually save humanity?
What is the problem here besides corporate greed?
Excerpt from this story from E&E News:
A growing number of Democrats are concerned they have little to offer voters on climate in Novemberâs midterm elections. So they want President Joe Biden to meet the worldâs rising temperatures with a little fire of his own â by declaring a national climate emergency.
âThis is a clear shot to get something done, I donât see a better way to harness the energy and the focus on climate than this,â said Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-Ore.), who has been leading the effort in Congress to get the White House to act.
Democrats have been eager to score a major climate policy win, especially since many of them will have to explain to voters in the coming months why they havenât delivered on Bidenâs major climate pledges. Many of the partyâs most ambitious climate policy ideas are stuck at a standstill in the Senate, where they have been blocked by Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) and all of the Republicans.
While some climate hawks still hope to pass something through Congress, they recognize there are only a few months left to deliver.
There was briefly talk of trying to pass by Memorial Day weekend a reconciliation package that would offer hundreds of millions of dollars in clean energy tax credits, but that deadline is likely to come and go without action. Democrats still will have time to pass climate legislation this summer, but the odds of doing anything significant likely will plummet after Labor Day â as lawmakers will be in full campaign mode by then.
The declaration of a national climate emergency wouldnât just be for show; it would give the Biden administration some executive authorities and funding to build out clean energy resources.
That includes powers under the National Emergencies Act, the Defense Production Act, and the Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act. Those can help protect vulnerable Americans from climate change and fund a clean energy revolution in response. The U.S. government already has determined that climate change poses a national security threat.
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This aesthetic is everything. I want nothing else.





#ecofriendly#nature conservancy#sustainability#environmentalism#upcycling#zerowaste#cottage garden#cottagecore
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ohhhhohohoho this is beautiful news
Old plastic from scrapped cars can be converted into graphene by grinding it to dust and zapping it with high-voltage electricity, a process that could save large amounts of plastic from landfill.
Graphene is a form of atom-thick carbon with a number of useful electrical and material properties. James Tour at Rice University in Texas and his colleagues have previously found that plastic could be converted into graphene via a process called flash joule heating, where material is heated to temperatures generally in excess of 2700°C by passing high voltages through it.
They have now worked with car manufacturer Ford to show that this graphene can be used to manufacture new parts for cars, and that those new parts can again be recycled into fresh graphene.
âYou donât have to bury this stuff anymore,â says Tour. âYou just turn it into graphene, put it in your new composite, then, when youâre done with those composites after 50 years, flash it again, turn them into graphene and put it into composites again.â
Continue Reading.
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me_irl
#ecofriendly#nature conservancy#sustainability#conservation#environmentalism#upcycling#zerowaste#pollution#recycle#science
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saving what you have: visible mending
Visible mending is a way to fix clothes with holes in a decorative way. Instead of trying to make the mend invisible as possible, it can be fun and creative to hi light the tears and holes with stitching that adds to the garment. I think this method is super cool to repair clothes you may really want to keep but also make more beautiful.
There are many techniques to mending clothes and here are some popular techniques that will help you save your clothes and also reduce your consumption of fast-fashon!
darning
The embroidery technique used to repair holes in fabric by using running stitches and thread woven in-between those stitches to repair a hole. If youâre interested in employing this stitch, check out this awesome darning tutorial by Evelyn Wood!


sashiko
This type of traditional Japanese mending practice is used to reinforce the strength of fabric as well as decorate. It is a great solution for mending holes with patches and well to reinforce thinning fabric! For learning the basics of Sashiko there is a wonderful beginners tutorial by Benzie Design.


patches
Patches are very versatile when used for repairing clothes. You can sew it over a hole in your fabric or you can also so the patch in the inside to have it peek out. There is a great tutorial for custom DIY patches by wastelesscrafts and Creating with misp has a tutorial on mending with a peek-through patch.Â


happy mending!
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Going Green
Is a lifestyle choice. Itâs not necessarily the easiest, and people wonât always follow your lead. But know that your decisions to be different now will make a difference for ourselves and future generations. Letâs make a cleaner earth. Any effort is appreciated, and people often learn by example.
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Via Born Free Primate Sanctuary:
URGENT HELP NEEDED! Over the weekend of May 21, a speeding vehicle drove onto our primate sanctuary property and into our largest monkey enclosure, home to 63 animals. Thankfully, no one was hurt, but there was extensive damage to the enclosure's fencing.
We must act quickly to protect the precious monkeys who call the enclosure home. We need to immediately raise at least $10,000 to protect the animals and make repairs.
Please rush an urgent donation to enable us to take immediate action to
â Reinforce and maintain the provisional barriers we have constructed to keep the monkeys in the enclosure and predators out.
â Move the monkeys to other enclosures on the property.
â Assess the full extent of the damage and develop plans for permanent repairs or to replace the fencing..
We do not have a moment to lose! Please donate to our fundraiser today to help us take emergency steps to address damages to the sanctuary's Main enclosure, home to 63 precious monkeys!

You can donate here:
Facebook
Website- this link is to donate to Born Free USA as a whole and funds do not automatically directly go to the sanctuary but you can add a note that the donation is for the emergency repairs.
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Today marks the beginning of finals week, and my favorite teacher (my AP Environmental science teacher) won't be here to give us our final because he is positive for COVID.
Now I'm not going to go on some tirade about how COVID is still at large and very dangerous, I would hope most people know that at some level.
Instead, I am going to gush about how amazing this teacher is and how much he has completely changed my life and how thankful I am for him.
I've never had a good time in school, I have multiple learning disabilities and to say my interactions with teachers has been traumatic is an understatement. However, he made me love learning. I took the class because I loved my earth science class and my teacher then recommended APES. It has been on of the best classes I've ever taken and the reason I am who I am.
He recognized when people used the wrong pronouns for me, corrected them, and then came to me to check if I was okay. He answered my weird and super specific questions, and if he didn't know the answer he would Google it and share it with the class. He was funny and smart and it was so clear that he loved this subject. Every single class was fun and I always looked forward to our labs. He was so patient and sweet, he really made me feel comfortable and confident enough to actually participate in class.
I am not the most academic person. Doing paperwork is really hard for me and most times I don't even try. But he made me want to try, and I did. I learned things from him that no other teacher or human being had ever been able to teach me.
If it weren't for him, I wouldn't be planing for college or dreaming of my future. He is the reason I even have a chance for success, he is the reason I started this blog, he is the reason I'm actually looking forward to my senior year.
So, from the bottom of my heart, thank you Mr. V. Thank you so much for inspiring me and supporting me. Thank you for giving me something to look forward to each day, and thank you for standing up for me when I couldn't.
Thank you Mr. V. Thank you for being my teacher.
#nature conservancy#sustainability#ecofriendly#conservation#environmentalism#science#teacher appreciation#ap environmental science#thank you#teacher of the year#science class
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God this is so gorgeous

Twilight at the spot. Bumble Bee, Az. What I love is being able to see stars all the way down to the horizon, even with a near full moon.
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Black bears can slam salmon with the best of them
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You wouldn't download 16 basil plants

So, you know those spindly basil plants you can get in the supermarket that are all leggy and pale, and you put them on the window-ledge and pick a few leaves from them and then they die?
Here is the hack for
turning it into a healthy plant and
making an army of clones from it so that all your friends can have one too
You will need
one parent plant
scissors for cutting the stalks
enough pots for however many seedlings you want to make
compost
one or two empty bottles
Method
Have a look at your parent plant. You'll see that each bundle of leaves comes out from a knobbly bit in the stem. That knobbly bit is called a leaf node.
Gently take hold of the very top set of leaves and count the leaf nodes on that particular stalk, counting down from the top.
If there are more than three nodes, cut the stalk just below the second leaf node.
The bit that you have just cut off is called a cutting, and it will become a new plant. To do this, we have to get it to grow roots.
Take your cutting and remove all the leaves except the four at the very top.
Fill your bottle with water and insert the cutting into the top of the bottle, with the stem completely submerged in water, and the leaves outside in the air.
Now repeat until you've taken about six cuttings, or you've taken all the cuttings available. Put them all in water-filled bottles. (I use milk bottles which hold about four stems at once with enough space for their leaves to get the sunlight, but if you're using wine bottles it might be fewer.)
Put the cuttings/bottles onto a sunny window-ledge and wait. Within about a week you should see roots beginning to grow. Keep the water topped up to the top, and let the roots grow until they are two or three inches long.
When the roots are 2-3 inches long, fill your pots with compost and water them well. Shove your fingers in the wet compost to make a space for the cutting's new roots and gently insert the cutting into the hole. Put a little bit more compost on top and firm it down, move on to plant the next one.
Providing all your cuttings get over the shock of transfer (and they probably will) you will then have 8 little basil plants like the smallest ones in my picture.
Put them back on the sunny window-ledge to let them get established and begin to grow. Congrats, you now have 8 basil plants plus the parent plant.
The parent plant
When you're taking the cuttings, you must leave at least one leaf node on every stalk. The plant can't create leaves without the nodes, and if it has no leaves it's basically going to die.
You want the plant to create new leaves and thicken up. If a stalk doesn't have more than two nodes, don't make cuttings from that stalk at all. Leave that stalk to grow.
Taking your cuttings will stimulate the plant to grow, and lower nodes which may not have had leaves on them when you got the plant, will now begin to produce them. This will make the plant bushier and stronger, but it will need a bit of extra food to help it put the extra effort in. So give it a new layer of compost on the top, water it, and put it back on the sunny window-ledge as well.
First batch cuttings
Let your first generation of cuttings grow undisturbed for a few weeks. (Water only when the soil feels dry.)
When they start looking long and thin, you want to encourage them to create side-shoots and begin bushing out. You don't want a long thin plant. It will fall over in the wind.
Look at the very top of the plant where you will see two tiny baby leaves developing. If you let them develop, the plant will continue to grow long and thin, but if you take them out it will encourage the side shoots to grow. Pinch out the tiny baby leaves right at the top of the cuttings, and very soon you'll see they start to grow outwards instead of upwards.
Second batch cuttings
After a few weeks your cuttings will look like the larger plants in my picture, and your parent plant will have grown enough to have added extra nodes. Which means that you can now take another batch of cuttings and start the process all over again.
You can pretty much keep this going all summer if you want.
Give plants away, eat fresh basil all summer and fill your freezer with bags of basil leaves for the winter :) Happy cloning!
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This thought process can literally solve anything. Sometimes the best solution is the simplest one
Some beautiful solarpunk designs mentioned in here.
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YOOOO THIS IS SO DOPE!!!
Hey, buds! Today on Earth Day I present to you my little blog project Solex: A Solarpunk Webzine! đ»
The nature of the webzine is pretty similar to this tumblr. The diff is that on the webzine I will be highlighting cool stuff that may have escaped your reblog radar. I'm also sharing videos that I find worth learning from (like essays and poignant commentary.)
And on the next one I'll make sure the Nonprofit Spot is ready to go! Now to work on the next one for... Shark Week! đŠđ«
But between now and then, I'll likely publish another blog post but with a different format. Can't wait to share the other stuff I have planned with y'all!
Iâm pushing out this blog post out the door like a kid whoâs late for school. Itâs missing a couple of things but whatâs important is that itâs out there and it did its homework.
I am starting to wonder if Wordpress is able to run the format I make for my media-heavy blog posts. So, please pardon me if the design is a bit all over the place. Iâm still learning how to Wordpress. I honestly try to color code things a lot because it helps my ADHD brain stay organized and interested information. Let me know if you have any feedback or corrections.
Later Iâll try figuring out how to hook it up so that it sends e-mail notifications when I post here! :) Thank you all! Keep growing, keep learning!
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