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#Corn
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source
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fatty-food · 3 days
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triple corn cake (via instagram)
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pikavani · 4 months
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Corn...
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sleepy-bebby · 1 year
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From the Chinese dating game show 非诚勿扰 (Fei Cheng Wu Rao), If You Are The One.
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yesterdaysprint · 8 months
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Binghamton Press, New York, September 8, 1948
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daily-deliciousness · 1 month
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Mexican street corn chicken tacos
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5kstxrz · 3 months
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★ jjk p links
☆ afab y/n this time
note: first time doing this. soooo if yall like it lmk so i can give yall a pt 2
MDNI (or do idc) !!! ☆ TW: rough sex p in v oral (y/n receiving) creampie riding fingering blowjob mutual masturbation degrading praising hair pulling choking uhhh that’s basically it
log into twitter to see it
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suguru geto
geto taking all his anger out on you after a aggravating day w gojo
he can’t get enough of you
morning taste
be a good boy
smoker!geto
riding geto
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satoru gojo
his fingers “slipped”
his punishment for you being a brat
mutual masturbation
licking you “clean”
teen!gojo in your college dorm
all over you
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kento nanami
playing with his toy
you after he’s done using you
long day of work
he couldn’t wait
this is what you wanted, right?
cuddling turns into this
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fushiguro toji
tight around his fingers
don’t move or it’s gonna be ugly.
you can take it.. right?
he lovessss filling you up
“best way to cuddle” he states..
playing with his best toy
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☆ like & comment for pt 2 w sukuna, choso, yuji, & megumi
white mode is suggested but yk i don’t care
༄⁂☼ ༄⁂☼ ༄⁂☼
pt 2 here
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reasonsforhope · 2 months
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"In response to last year’s record-breaking heat due to El Niño and impacts from climate change, Indigenous Zenù farmers in Colombia are trying to revive the cultivation of traditional climate-resilient seeds and agroecology systems.
One traditional farming system combines farming with fishing: locals fish during the rainy season when water levels are high, and farm during the dry season on the fertile soils left by the receding water.
Locals and ecologists say conflicts over land with surrounding plantation owners, cattle ranchers and mines are also worsening the impacts of the climate crisis.
To protect their land, the Zenù reserve, which is today surrounded by monoculture plantations, was in 2005 declared the first Colombian territory free from GMOs.
...
In the Zenù reserve, issues with the weather, climate or soil are spread by word of mouth between farmers, or on La Positiva 103.0, a community agroecology radio station. And what’s been on every farmer’s mind is last year’s record-breaking heat and droughts. Both of these were charged by the twin impacts of climate change and a newly developing El Niño, a naturally occurring warmer period that last occurred here in 2016, say climate scientists.
Experts from Colombia’s Institute of Hydrology, Meteorology and Environmental Studies say the impacts of El Niño will be felt in Colombia until April 2024, adding to farmers’ concerns. Other scientists forecast June to August may be even hotter than 2023, and the next five years could be the hottest on record. On Jan. 24, President Gustavo Petro said he will declare wildfires a natural disaster, following an increase in forest fires that scientists attribute to the effects of El Niño.
In the face of these changes, Zenù farmers are trying to revive traditional agricultural practices like ancestral seed conservation and a unique agroecology system.
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Pictured: Remberto Gil’s house is surrounded by an agroforestry system where turkeys and other animals graze under fruit trees such as maracuyá (Passiflora edulis), papaya (Carica papaya) and banana (Musa acuminata colla). Medicinal herbs like toronjil (Melissa officinalis) and tres bolas (Leonotis nepetifolia), and bushes like ají (Capsicum baccatum), yam and frijol diablito (beans) are part of the undergrowth. Image by Monica Pelliccia for Mongabay.
“Climate change is scary due to the possibility of food scarcity,” says Rodrigo Hernandez, a local authority with the Santa Isabel community. “Our ancestral seeds offer a solution as more resistant to climate change.”
Based on their experience, farmers say their ancestral seed varieties are more resistant to high temperatures compared to the imported varieties and cultivars they currently use. These ancestral varieties have adapted to the region’s ecosystem and require less water, they tell Mongabay. According to a report by local organization Grupo Semillas and development foundation SWISSAID, indigenous corn varieties like blaquito are more resistant to the heat, cariaco tolerates drought easily, and negrito is very resistant to high temperatures.
The Zenù diet still incorporates the traditional diversity of seeds, plant varieties and animals they consume, though they too are threatened by climate change: from fish recipes made from bocachico (Prochilodus magdalenae), and reptiles like the babilla or spectacled caiman (Caiman crocodilus), to different corn varieties to prepare arepas (cornmeal cakes), liquor, cheeses and soups.
“The most important challenge we have now is to save ancient species and involve new generations in ancestral practice,” says Sonia Rocha Marquez, a professor of social sciences at Sinù University in the city of Montería.
...[Despite] land scarcity, Negrete says communities are developing important projects to protect their traditional food systems. Farmers and seed custodians, like Gil, are working with the Association of Organic Agriculture and Livestock Producers (ASPROAL) and their Communitarian Seed House (Casa Comunitaria de Semillas Criollas y Nativas)...
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Pictured: Remberto Gil is a seed guardian and farmer who works at the Communitarian Seed House, where the ASPROL association stores 32 seeds of rare or almost extinct species. Image by Monica Pelliccia for Mongabay.
Located near Gil’s house, the seed bank hosts a rainbow of 12 corn varieties, from glistening black to blue to light pink to purple and even white. There are also jars of seeds for local varieties of beans, eggplants, pumpkins and aromatic herbs, some stored in refrigerators. All are ancient varieties shared between local families.
Outside the seed bank is a terrace where chickens and turkeys graze under an agroforestry system for farmers to emulate: local varieties of passion fruit, papaya and banana trees grow above bushes of ají peppers and beans. Traditional medicinal herbs like toronjil or lemon balm (Melissa officinalis) form part of the undergrowth.
Today, 25 families are involved in sharing, storing and commercializing the seeds of 32 rare or almost-extinct varieties.
“When I was a kid, my father brought me to the farm to participate in recovering the land,” says Nilvadys Arrieta, 56, a farmer member of ASPROAL. “Now, I still act with the same collective thinking that moves what we are doing.”
“Working together helps us to save, share more seeds, and sell at fair price [while] avoiding intermediaries and increasing families’ incomes,” Gil says. “Last year, we sold 8 million seeds to organic restaurants in Bogotà and Medellín.”
So far, the 80% of the farmers families living in the Zenù reserve participate in both the agroecology and seed revival projects, he adds."
-via Mongabay, February 6, 2024
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artdunk · 3 months
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best friends
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cravefoodie · 2 months
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Steak elote tacos.
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shiftythrifting · 2 months
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I don't even have to search for weird stuff on facebook marketplace anymore, it just gives me these things on my front page free of charge
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eat-love-eat · 3 months
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Creamy Chicken and Corn Pasta with Bacon
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tinypmsmatch · 8 months
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Glass Gem Corn seeds color wheel
(the set from my Pantone color matches)
When I found out about this fascinating corn variety a couple of years ago, I’ve been wanting to take color match photos of the stunning multicolor kernels.
Its origin traces back to Carl Barnes, a part-Cherokee farmer living in Oklahoma. Barnes had an uncanny knack for corn breeding. More specifically, he excelled at selecting and saving seed from those cobs that exhibited vivid, translucent colors. After many years, his painstaking efforts created this wondrous corn cultivar called Glass Gem Corn.
So glad I’m finally able to match their colors! See my page to see the Pantone color matches 😊
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rosesoma · 3 months
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Everyone, please look at this picture I found of a raccoon eating corn.
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Thank you for you attention, you may go back to scrolling.
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sleepy-bebby · 2 years
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Rico the Porcupine eating corn at the Cincinnati Zoo.
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yesterdaysprint · 1 month
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The Macon News, Georgia, July 10, 1915
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