Text
a long, long walk vol. 0 issue 1

issue 2
issue 3
issue 4
issue 5
issue 6
issue 7
#zine#anarchist#anarchism#diy#society#counterculture#punk#resistance#antifascist#feminist#feminism#lgbt#lgbtqia#lgbtq#trans#transgender
73 notes
·
View notes
Photo





Plant of the Day
Tuesday 2 January 2018
At the RHS Hyde Hall Garden the winter stem display of Salix daphnoides ‘Aglaia’ (violet willow) have been used to create some abstract ephemeral art for the winter garden. In the spring, prior to bud burst, the stems can be pruned and composted. The new growth has the strongest colouring for the next winter display.
Jill Raggett
78 notes
·
View notes
Text

how much space do fungi need to grow? mush room.
original art: @studio-thomas-walsh
18K notes
·
View notes
Photo
this looks like a sativa bud still on the plant
cryogenic weed, grows in the snow
how to make dry ice hashish
on the topic of bubble bags

雪とネギ Snow and Green Onions
©Juri
316 notes
·
View notes
Photo






The crops of corn, beans, and squash are known as the Three Sisters. For centuries these three crops have been the center of Native American agriculture and culinary traditions. It is for good reason as these three crops complement each other in the garden as well as nutritionally.
Corn provides tall stalks for the beans to climb so that they are not out-competed by sprawling squash vines. Beans provide nitrogen to fertilize the soil while also stabilizing the tall corn during heavy winds. Beans are nitrogen-fixers meaning they host rhizobia on their roots that can take nitrogen, a much needed plant nutrient, from the air and convert it into forms that can be absorbed by plant roots. The large leaves of squash plants shade the ground which helps retain soil moisture and prevent weeds.
southern exposure seeds
how to grow a three sisters garden
1 note
·
View note
Photo

from blue shield campaign against violence against asians and asian elders
1 note
·
View note
Photo
Attention. Pussy Meow: the autobiography of a cat. 1901. Internet Archive
12K notes
·
View notes
Photo

Clark County, Indiana
holy crap lots of kudzu recipes (link)
even more kudzu recipes (link)
1 note
·
View note