#ecosystem study
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Seeing Yellow: Celebrate the City Nature Challenge and Earth Month with a Splash of Sunshine

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#backyard nature#biodiversity#biodiversity monitoring#bumblebees#citizen nature challenge#citizen participation#Citizen Science#citizen scientists#City Nature Challenge#coltsfoot#Community Engagement#Community Science#dandelions#Earth day#Earth Month#Earth Month celebrations#eco-friendly nature activities#Eco-friendly Practices#eco-tourism#ecosystem documentation#ecosystem study#educational nature activities#environmental awareness#environmental challenges#environmental conservation#Environmental Education#environmental health#environmental stewardship#flower identification#Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas
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"The Scum Villain's Self-Saving System" is such a great title because it can either refer to the concept of the system (a magical electronically menu to help the player/protagonist in his transmigration journey) saving the villain, or to a system operated by an entire group of people that works to allow a villain to keep on doing villainous things.
#svsss#Mxtx#ren zha fanpai zijiu xitong#scum villian self saving system#scumbag system#Shen jiu#Shen qingqiu#I know it's probably not the same in chinese but I still think that's interesting#I think people undermine a lot how others help to nurture the ecosystem of a villain and how it ultimately ends up making others suffer#Like Yue Qingyuan is a prime example for this and thats' why LBG in PIDW killed him so horribly: he nurtured the corrupt system#By allowing SJ to perpetuate his villainous actions#Even other peak lords like Liu Qingge did so by turning a blind eye to the facts before them#Everyone can be a hero like everyone can be a villain you only need the right environment#I wish to study svsss under a microscope#Or simply have the guts I had when I made on the spot analysis for my fandom when I was 16
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pkmn oc i circle back to sometimes. and his butterfree tilly
#pokemon#butterfree#sketch#spent some time in galar studying the introduction of fossil pokemon in crown tundra which is where andi came from#currently working at bb academy monitoring the artificial ecosystems of the terarium#ori pkmn
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Everyone huddle around. Ok. Young justice ecology/environmental science/zoology/etc students au…
#young justice#tim is the aspiring ornithologist. of course#bart hm. I see insects so entomology#he’d love dragonflies#Cassie geologist#cissie environmental science with a focus on the legal side of things#Anita herpetologist#kon botanist and climate scientist#slobo as an ichtyologist bc he reminds me of deep sea fish sometimes#though we are then missing someone for mammals. and general ecology#that can be ray and snapper#and then of course red is their exhausted professor#and traya is his very enthusiastic paleo obsessed daughter that keeps asking if they found a dinosaur yet#(they’re here to study the effects of recent floods on the marsh ecosystem)#(none of them expect to find Dino fossils just. out in the open)#(traya finds one anyways)#WAUT I was thinking too hard abt Greta and somehow forget I hadn’t already written her bit. I think she’d probably be really into the#paleontology side too but ends up going for microbiology after doing an elective and finding she really enjoys it#yeah
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Gerard as Study for Lady Macbeth (ca. 1851) by Guatave Moreau (1826-1898)
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#gerard way#study for lady macbeth#gustave moreau#symbolism#oil painting#french artist#my chemical romance#mcr#mcr gerard#mcr ecosystem#artwork
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Baggage (M, cold, pt. 1/3)
So I decided I wanted to do something self indulgent, so here we are! rewinding back in time a bit--a decade, in fact!--to explore what brought him to the west coast, and his initial few days there, meeting coworkers and trying to decide who he wants to be with a fresh start
First chapter POV comes from his boss, second will come from him. Slight CW for the fact that the Captain definitely views him as like...basically a kid, and addresses him as such, including in narration, but he is 19 here and of age, so dw about it
[part 1, part 2, part 3]
⁂
The baggage claim of an airport is not the most exciting way he could be spending his Sunday morning--in the wee hours, no less--but the travel cup of coffee he'd hastily made in those bleary moments before making the drive is starting to seep into him enough to actually take effect. Bill's instructions for picking the whelp up had been exceedingly vague of who he was looking for--nothing more than that he was tall, long haired, and "impossible to miss." Scanning the crowd of people as they filter in and then back out, he's starting to doubt that this is necessarily the case. The flow of people has slowed enough that he doubts there can be that many left to make it here. Only a few lonely suitcases remain on the carousel, and they're rapidly being picked up.
He's rechecking the flight information when a figure awkwardly makes its way to grab the last suitcase, and--
Oh. Well, perhaps he owes Bill an apology. He is impossible to miss.
He's a gangling youth, easily six foot but probably a few inches above, with a braid that hangs down past his ass and the same awkward disposition he'd ascribe to a newborn fawn.
"You're Elliott?"
"Uh--yes! I mean--yes, that's me. You're Mr. Addington?" He extends a hand to shake, a bracelet of tattooed pansies encircling his wrist.
"You can call me 'Captain'."
"Oh! Right, I'll, uh--I'll do that." He doesn't really look at him, avoiding eye contact like the plague. It doesn't do anything to make the black eye less noticeable, but he supposes he can't fault him for trying. It looks like a nasty one, shades of deep blues and purples ringed by the greens and yellows of healing that's already on its way out.
He opts to tactfully leave it alone for now. He's had a long flight, and a stranger grilling him about what on earth happened that's making him pick up stakes and move cross country with a couple day's notice likely isn't the way he's going to earn his trust. He gets the distinct sense that he's going to have to coax him out like luring one of the warehouse cats out of hiding to take it to the vet.
"Well!" He startles at the sudden transition. "Is that everything, or are we still waiting on any bags?"
"This is it."
He keeps his expression carefully neutral as he takes in the sight before him, this bedraggled kid who's got a black eye and nothing to him but two suitcases. It's sad. More than that, it's actually heartbreaking. "Alright. Did you eat anything on the plane? I'm thinking about stopping somewhere on the way back, getting a little breakfast, if you're not opposed to stopping."
"I wouldn't stop you if you wanted to get yourself something."
It doesn't escape his notice that he hasn't answered the question. That beanpole probably weighs a hundred thirty soaking wet. He's going to feed him, whether he asks for something or not. "Good! There's a diner close to home that should be just about open by the time we get there."
He takes one of the suitcases, despite the fact that he was very much not asked to, and drags it a few feet before hefting it up to avoid the broken wheel that doesn't seem to actually turn. "Come on, then, let's see if I remember where I parked."
"Oh, are you--"
"You can relax, that was a joke. I'm not so old yet that I'm going to lose my car at the airport." Hopefully. He hasn't done it in awhile. It helps that he wasn't flying this time, just picking someone up, well before dawn's bothered to crack.
By the time they actually make it out to where he's parked, he's beginning to half worry that he actually did lose track of it, but relief washes over him at the sight of the old pick-up. She's a beat up old thing, but she's beautiful to him.
"She ain't the prettiest, but she's reliable. More than I can say for my ex-wife!" Shockingly, the joke doesn't land. He just shrugs. Worth a shot to break the tension. "Hop in, we'll be out of here soon."
Elliott is, if nothing else, compliant. Not much of a talker, but he looks dead on his feet, and sinks against the door as soon as he's buckled.
"We've got about an hour and a half drive, so feel free to close your eyes. Not much to see at this time of day--a new coast is great in the daylight, but all we'll be passing for awhile are headlights and highway." And he could probably use the sleep.
"Oh, no, it's fine. If I, uhm, sleep now I don't think I'll get any sleep tonight. I wanna see what I can see." He scratches at the back of his neck, and straightens his posture somewhat, like he can't be caught being tired.
"Suit yourself." The radio is playing something soft in the background, static blurring the sound of Creedence with a commercial for something he can't make out. He gives it a few minutes before he leans over, offers him a cigarette. "You smoke?"
"Uh, no, sir."
"Good! Don't start." He strikes the lighter, then gestures with it towards the cigarette already in his mouth. "Mind if I do?"
"It's your truck, and you're already doing me a huge favor."
He throws it in the center console for later. "Speaking of!" Elliott winces. "Bill doesn't usually stick his neck out for anyone--he must be awfully fond of you."
"Oh! Well, that's nice of him. I don't think that I really, uh, have earned it, though."
"How old are you?"
"Nineteen, sir."
"Nineteen! I remember being nineteen. Long time ago, mind you--I was probably nineteen before your parents were even born."
"Maybe..."
He's striking out hard, here. Usually it's a bit easier to get someone talking. "Well, whether you think he's a good judge of character or not, Bill thinks pretty highly of you to call me up and tell me that he's cashing in a favor like this. Said he had a real good kid that needed out of Virginia in a hurry. Said that you're a good worker." When Elliott doesn't respond, he just continues the conversation anyway. "Now he uh, didn't tell me where you're gonna be staying. You've sorted that out, I trust?"
"I don't need any help with that."
"So where is it?" He stares out the window, doesn't even attempt to glance back towards him. "That's what I thought, yeah. Alright, well, you're gonna be with me at least tonight until we've got you sorted out."
"I can't ask you to do that."
"Then it's a good thing you're not asking. I'm telling you." If he's got anything to say to that, he keeps it to himself, but he's clearly not thrilled by the prospect. He takes to braiding one of the locks of hair that frames his face, clearly an old hand at this the way his fingers deftly run through the motions.
There's few enough cars on the interstate at this hour that he feels comfortable letting his gaze linger on him in his peripheral, paying more attention to the kid in his passenger seat than to the road ahead of him. It's not a good habit, sure, but it's a calculated risk, and despite how he looks, he's always been pretty sharp when it comes to figures. The training of being in business, he supposes. It certainly hasn't hurt him.
"You got family out here?"
"No, sir."
"All back in Virginia, then?"
"I...guess, yeah. At least for now."
"Are they planning on falling you out here after you're settled?"
"God, I hope not." He crosses himself instinctively.
"Not a great relationship, I take it?"
"No, sir."
"You don't have to call me 'sir'. But I can sympathize--I've got some family up in Alaska, but not much anymore. Two sisters and a brother, and a host of nieces and nephews, and a couple of great-'s by now, even. No kids of my own, though--not that I'm complaining. I don't think it would've served fatherhood well to be gone most of the time."
"Could we--could we talk about something else?"
"Anything your heart desires."
"I think I might actually try and sleep. You were right--there's not much to see, and I-I'm kind of tired..."
He's squirrely, clearly dodging this topic in particular, but he's got enough sense to let the poor beast alone--for now, at least. He's gonna have to ask him later, both because he wants the gossip, but also because if he has to worry about whatever he's mixed up in, he'd like to know before anything happens. " 'course. You just get yourself a little shut-eye, and I'll wake you when we get there?"
"Thank you..."
He must be exhausted, because it's only a couple of minutes later that he's snoring softly, weirdly curled in on himself in his sweatshirt, arms crossed protectively over his chest and head leaned against the cold window. He doesn't disturb him, just drives in relative silence aside from the radio to let him rest.
⁂
"Hey. Elliott. C'mon, up we get." He waits until he sees him stir to try again. "Wake up. We're here."
Elliott rouses, albeit slowly, and does his best approximation of a stretch in the cramped quarters for someone so tall. "Uhm..." He sniffs, digs a knuckle into the corner of his eyes to clear the vestiges of his nap from them. "Here?"
"Home."
"I thought we were--that you were stopping for breakfast?"
"I drove through somewhere. No point in stopping and getting caught in commuter traffic if we didn't have to." He shakes the paper baggie of McDonald's the same way he might shake a bag of dog treats for a wary pet. "It's just about breakfast time, I'd wager."
It's been breakfast time, the same way they've been here, but what he doesn't know won't hurt him. The two cigarette butts drowned in the remnants of a water bottle are evidence, but there's no saying that he didn't smoke while he was driving. He clearly needed the rest, and is equally clearly someone who would apologize for trying to get it, so he doesn't present him the opportunity to have a reason to.
"Oh." In the daylight, he looks positively ghastly, the shadows under both eyes nearly the same shade as the bruising surrounding the one. He looks like he wants to say something more, but he doesn't get much further than to sniff and awkwardly get out of the car, stretch for all he's worth in the driveway.
"You're hungry, I'm sure?"
"I don't really feel like it."
"But?"
"No buts, just that I don't feel like I'm hungry."
It's gonna be pulling teeth to do anything nice for this kid, he can already tell. Well, whatever. He's not known for being shy, nor for being one to back down from a challenge. "Alright. You'll take something for the road, then."
"I don't--"
"It wasn't a question." He just won't give him a choice if he's going to make a bad one.
"Yes, si--uh--Captain."
"Good man! Come on, then, let's get your bags into the house." When he opens the door, he's immediately struck by the reminder that he had not been expecting company, nor has he hosted it in awhile.
It isn't a dump, by any means, but it's definitely a space that one might say "lacks a woman's touch". A collection of pipes and tins of tobacco on one of the shelves. A collection of mugs that haven't made it to the sink just yet, concentrated on the coffee table. The mounted crabs hanging over the mantel.
Elliott stares at it in what he can only describe as a mixture of amusement and repulsion.
"Well, listen, it's not everyone's taste." He carries the suitcase he's taken custody of into the house, gestures broadly towards the house as a whole. "Living room. Kitchen back there, bedrooms to the left, bathroom and laundry room to the right."
"It's very--uh--rustic."
He snorts. "Very diplomatic of you." He seems like a sweetheart, carefully walking on eggshells to be as tactful as he can about his interior design decisions. "You'll be staying in the guest room--it's nothing glamorous, but it's got a queen bed and a closet and electricity, and that's just about all anyone really needs around here." It also has some decor that some might describe as "tacky" or "hideous", but that's neither nor here.
"I still don't--you don't have to do this. I can just find a hotel, you don't have to open your home to me--I mean, I'm a stranger--"
"Anything you find around here is a dump and priced like it's the Ritz. You haven't got a car, and you don't know the town. If you don't want to stay, I'm not going to force you, but I am strongly encouraging you to just stay here." Perhaps he's coming on a bit strong, but there's so little reason to go somewhere else that he finds it difficult to imagine anyone would think it's honestly a good idea. He feels confident that it's merely that he doesn't want to impose--he's already said as much.
"...right. You're--you're right. I'm sorry. Thank you for opening your home to me. I'll--I'll pay for the time I'm here, of course, and help with anything you need. I don't, uh, take up a lot of space--I'm pretty quiet, and I'll probably just keep to myself--"
"We'll talk about this after you've had a chance to actually settle in. For now, go put your stuff down, take a gander at the house. Breakfast will be on the table when you want it."
Elliott doesn't seem entirely relieved, but he does seem to accept the order, and goes to drop his stuff in the room. In the meantime, he starts trying to clean things up somewhat. Gathers the mugs to the kitchen sink, and throws the coats that piled on the couch into the closet, and scoots the pile of newspapers into a slightly more organized pile of newspapers to clear a seat at the table.
It dawns on him that he's been at this for almost half an hour and still hasn't seen him return yet. The house isn't minuscule, but it certainly isn't large enough that he could've gotten lost.
He peers around the corner into the open doorway to the guest room, and is greeted by the sight of Elliott sprawled on the bed, having succeeded in getting as far as taking off his short cowboy boots and laying down to fall asleep, fully clothed, on top of the covers. He's snoring, phone still loosely clutched in one hand where he'd clearly not been anticipating dozing off.
He just leans against the doorway to watch him for a minute, arms crossed over his chest. What did he get himself into here, taking on a stray like this? What did Bill get him into, sending him the kid?
He grabs an old quilt from the armchair in the corner, and awkwardly drapes it over Elliott, covering as much of his frame as he can with it, before he leaves him to sleep if he needs it. A car nap wasn't good enough--it doesn't sound like he really slept at all yesterday, if he's understanding the timeline correctly. If he's sleeping now, it's because he sorely needs it.
He's got things he could be doing, anyway. He hasn't hosted in a long while, and it shows in the fact that his house is very much set up for his use and his alone. He shoves shit into drawers in the bathroom to sort through later when he cares, throws a clean towel and wash cloth on the counter next to the shower, somewhat haphazardly wipes down the bathroom mirror with a little Windex to get it looking a little less grimy.
With that squared away, he turns his attention to the kitchen. Christ, what a mess. He isn't entirely sure how old some of these coffee mugs are, the remnants solidified into a gross sludge in the bottom of the ceramic. Luckily, it's mostly just the mugs, and then a case of tidying things up enough that there's enough space at the table for two, and he can actually see the countertop again, instead of piling it underneath the debris of being a busy man. Newspapers, and mail he hasn't thrown out yet. Keys, and receipts, and coupons. Things he comes in and sets down, and then they never move again until an occasion like this forces his hand to do something about it.
He whistles while he works, some jaunty little tune he only sort of remembers the origins of, and even less of the words to it, but slows down and lapses into silence to strain his ears. When he catches the faint sound of snoring, he takes his cue to slip out onto the front porch.
"...Bill! You sorry sonuvabitch, how're you?"
"I'm assuming you got the kid without any issue?"
"That's what I'm calling about. Now, I've got a whelp that isn't even old enough to drink sleeping in my guest bed, and I don't know a damn thing about him. He hasn't told me anything yet, and neither have you, so I'd say one of you had better start acquainting me with him."
He can hear the long pause on the line, and a deep sigh from Bill. He can picture him ashing his cigarette, taking off his readers. "I don't think it's my story to tell."
"But it's your story to call on me to intervene in? I'm not asking for every dirty detail, but I am asking for the broad strokes of it. He's not involved in anything criminal, so why was it so important he move out of state in such a hurry?"
"Legal trouble, but not his. Suffice it to say, family matters are complicated and he really shouldn't be sticking around to see them get any more complicated than they already are. There was trouble at the courthouse a week ago, and he called me in a panic and asked what he should do. I said I knew someone who owed me a favor and could hire him on until he found something else, and he packed up everything he had and got on that plane yesterday night."
"So I have to worry about someone showing up to my house looking for him?"
"Not unless he breaks out or gets paroled."
"Oy vey." He sits down on the steps with a grunt, letting the cool afternoon wash over him. "I don't suppose that's the source of that shiner, then?"
"He was reluctant to talk about it, but it seems to be the case. Look, Hyatt, I know this is a big ask, but you can trust me: he's a good kid. He's shy, but he's got a good heart, and he'll open up in due time. If he's underperforming, just hold onto him long enough to let him get himself settled with a new job--but I really think you'll take a liking to him."
Something makes him feel like he's getting snookered, but he's already got the damn thing asleep in his bed. He's in it deeper than he'd normally allow himself to be, purely because it's Bill making the call. "You know that I'm only doing this because it's YOU asking?"
Bill laughs, something warm and raucous. "I know. Hey, I never steered you wrong as your business partner."
"What about as my friend?"
"Ehh, we'll call that more often than not that I gave you good advice. And look on the bright side! Now you don't owe me anymore."
"I hope you go out of business tomorrow morning."
"Then I'll just be joining him in the guest room."
He can't help it--he grins. "Alright, well, I'll be calling you if anything happens."
"I'm looking forward to it. Hey, Hy, take it easy. I've gotta run."
He just sits there for a long moment, mulling over the information he's pieced together about his newfound tenant. Whatever his family member--a father? brother? uncle?--is involved in, it got him arrested, and he was so spooked by it that he jumped ship and left the east coast entirely just to avoid the situation.
He doesn't seem the type to get involved in anything shady--and Bill certainly isn't the type to employ anyone that he thinks is involved in anything untoward. He's a shrewd businessman, and fiercely defensive of his business--he would never let anyone work for him if he had reason to believe they were going to be bringing anything into it like that. So whatever the unnamed family was up to, either he wasn't a part of it, or Bill found out too late and the kid was remorseful enough to overrule his instincts not to get involved, and shipped him off this way.
And whatever happened at the courthouse or jail or wherever it happened, ended up with a fistfight, or something of the like. He seems like the last creature on earth to willingly get into a fight. More than anything, he looks like someone who's probably spent more time getting fought than fighting--the homosexuality practically oozes off of him, and rural Virginia doesn't seem like the most...nurturing atmosphere for that sort of thing.
He heaves a sigh, and heads back into the house to make himself something for lunch.
⁂
By the time he sees Elliott again, it's dinnertime. He's just about to go wake him when he sees the disheveled figure shuffle out of the bedroom, hair mussed from sleep and staring at him blearily, the quilt still clutched around his shoulders.
"Weeelllll, good morning there, Sleeping Beauty. You look like you slept well?"
He looks around silently, and he can practically see the gears turning in his mind. He can hear the dial up tones, the blanket lines on his cheek still visible. He slept hard. He brings a hand up from under the blankets to mash the heel of his palm against his eyes to grind the sleep from them. "Uhmb." There's a congested edge to his voice, and he coughs. "I didn't mean to."
"I didn't think you intended to, on top of the covers, in all your clothes."
He gently knuckles at his nose, still bleary-eyed as he shuffles a little further into the room. " 'm sorry. I didn't think that--that--? Hh-! H-hh'dDZzhhyue!"
"Bless y--"
"EedZZhhue!"
"Bless--"
"Heh-! heEHZzhhyue!"
"I'll just wait till you're done."
He teeters on the brink of it, brows pinched together in sneezy limbo for a couple wavering breaths until he ducks down into the quilt again. "heEDDZzhyue! 'DZZHhieww! ...guh! Excuse me."
He snuffles, the sound thick and wet, and he brings a delicate knuckle up to swipe at his nose. It seems a bit pink, now that's getting a good look at him, and the shadows under his eyes from exhaustion haven't really lessened any, despite the fact that he just slept like nine hours. "Bless you. You're feeling alright?"
"I feel fine."
He isn't sure how "fide" he could really be feeling, given the congestion rounding out his consonants into a soft, blunted sound, but he doesn't push it any. "If you're sure." He inclines his head towards the kitchen. "I made stew for dinner--I hope you eat lamb."
"Uh--sometimes. I'm not, uh, strictly vegetarian."
"Well that's a good thing, because this is not a vegetarian household." He softens slightly. "But it's never too late to learn. I could probably do to fit a few more vegetables into my diet."
"You don't have to change anything just for me. I'll eat anything."
"Anything?"
He looks sheepish, fussing with the edge of the quilt. "Uh, almost anything."
"Except?"
He looks like he expects to be shot dead. "Seafood."
Ah. Well. Yes, that would explain why. He glances sideways towards the fridge and freezer, stocked with more seafood than anything else. "I can work with that. I needed to get groceries anyway. As long as you can tolerate that my cooking is not Michelin star worthy."
"Oh, I can--I can cook for myself. You don't have to worry about me, I'm not--uh--you don't really need to do anything for me. Letting me sleep here is already more than enough--and I still need to pay you. How much do you, uh--"
He holds a hand up to stop him. "I was meaning to talk to you about that. I won't charge you rent, but you're going to have to work. Bill said you're a hard worker and that I wouldn't regret hiring you, so I'm going to trust him and give you a chance--but it's not a free ride. You're going to have to earn your job, and your stay here until you've found somewhere else to live."
"Of course! You won't regret it, I swear--I work to work, and I-I do a decent job, I think--"
His eagerness is equal parts endearing and pathetic. "Alright, alright. You don't have to pledge me a life debt, just don't make me have to fire you." He pushes a bowl across the table to the empty seat and gestures to it. "I didn't cook for nothing, so eat up--you must be half starved by now."
"I...don't feel hungry, but I'm sure I am. I'm sure it smells delicious." He looks around the kitchen, and awkwardly tears a paper towel off the roll to gently dab at pink nostrils. The color seems to be creeping in more every time he touches his nose, the pink soft but noticeable against the pallor of his skin. Was he that pale when he saw him earlier?
"Are you sick?"
Elliott seems genuinely taken aback by the question, almost defiant in his immediate rigidity. "I am definitely not."
He quirks a brow. "Is that so?"
"I can't just be a little sniffly, in a dusty guest room?"
"Dusty might be putting it strongly. I clean in there, even if there's no one staying." Well. Definitely not as often as he should. But he doesn't think it's that dusty in there--not enough that he thinks it should really be effecting anything like this, at least.
"I think it's understandable if I'm a little congested when I wake up, especially in a room that's dusty, after traveling all day!"
He can't fight the amused smile at how adamant and offended he seems by the notion that he's sick. "Alright, fine. I'm sure by the end of dinner you'll be feeling right as rain, then?"
It's the first real show of emotion he's gotten out of him that wasn't fawning or exhausted, a strange streak of obstinance. "I'm sure I will!"
Jee-zus. He really is a teen, even if he's an adult. "Good. Eat up, then."
He narrows his eyes at the challenge they've both locked themselves into now, and sits down with more of a dramatic huff than is necessary by a long shot. Once he actually starts eating, it seems like his body realizes how hungry he really is, because he starts shoveling stew like a ravenous beast who hasn't eaten in months.
"You're not a snake. This isn't your one meal for the next two weeks, you can take your time."
He pauses, the spoon halfway between the bowl and his mouth, and stares like a deer in headlights. Color floods his cheeks, matching the shade of pink his nose has deepened to. "Oh." He sniffles, swipes at his nose with the paper towel in his other hand. "Yeah, I just--"
He trails off, eyes narrowing slightly as his brow furrows and damp, pink nostrils flare. He sniffles again, the sound equally unproductive but more urgent than before. His lashes, thick and dark like he's wearing mascara--and, now that he thinks about it, he might actually be--flutter shut as he takes a wavering breath.
"huH-! uuUDDZzhhyue! huUHZzhhyue!" He sneezes twice into the bedraggled paper towel, now pretty well spent and ineffective--but he definitely doesn't seem done. The freckled bridge of his nose is wrinkled in irritation, breath scissoring as he takes uneven gasps towards the next one. "heEDDZHhue! eEZZhhyue! Huh-! huH-!? huUDDJZzhhuuee!"
He actually whimpers a little after that last one, cupped hands having taken the brunt of it, the sodden paper towel that's sitting limply in his palms of no use at all now. He sighs, sniffles, and immediately regrets it, because--
"heEZZHhieww! h-heH-! heEDDZZHHhue! ...guh! Oh my God--excuse me..."
He puts his spoon down, folds his hands on the tabletop. "Elliott."
He snuffles, a little bleary in the aftermath of the fit. "Captain."
"Is it still the dusty guest room?"
He nudges the sink on with his elbow to wash his hands--ugh, Christ, he can see the sheen of moisture on his palms from here--before tearing off a couple of paper towels to blow his nose into at such a soft volume he doesn't realize he's doing it at first.
"It might be."
"Elliott."
"It could still be! I'm sure I'll be fine by morning!"
Why this is the hill he's chosen to die on, he cannot possibly fathom, but it is. Fine. Whatever. "Have it your way."
⁂
He's just laying in his bed, listening to Elliott snore from across the hall. He could get up and close the door. In fact, he should go do that, and close Elliott's, too, while he's at it. But something about that feels too risky.
For who, he doesn't know. He highly doubts he's going to wake to discover that he's been robbed, nor that he isn't going to wake at all because he's been stabbed to death in bed. Nor does he think that Elliott is going to weep and gnash his teeth if he doesn't have the doors open as reassurance and comfort. But he went to bed with the door open, and it's some bizarre comfort to him as well to be able to keep tabs on what his new house guest is doing.
Snoring, mostly.
He's listened to him wake a couple of times, but he hasn't really done anything else, except to roll over and make the bedframe creak ominously, and to cough. Nothing horrid, and certainly nothing annoying, but something that since he's been paying attention, he finds impossible to miss.
He leans over, looks at the clock on the nightstand again, and lays back down with a sigh. At least one of them is getting some sleep tonight.
Eventually, he gets up and moves to the armchair in the living room, puts on some stupid "documentary" about something he's sure is bullshit, and lets the sound of someone whose accreditation includes "foremost psychic folklorist" lull him into sleep.
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The light streaming in through the blinds is what rouses him--and as soon as it does, he is aware of two things. The first: the pain in his back and hip from sleeping in a recliner all night instead of laying in bed. The second: the sound of muffled coughing from the bedroom, chesty and congested.
His hip is barking at him, and he awkwardly gets himself up from the chair to go hobble into his bedroom to grab the bottle of aspirin out of the nightstand drawer. There's nothing to really do for it at this point, but he takes a couple of them to hope that it'll take the edge off of the pain.
He stares at it in his closet, and frowns before relenting and grabbing his cane. He hears the sound of Elliott walking behind him towards the living room, and throws a sweater and some socks onto his bed to get to later when he gets around to getting dressed, and follows him out.
"So about that cold that you definitely don't have..."
Elliott is standing before him, clad in pajama pants and thick socks and a heavy sweatshirt, and garishly cold-ridden. His nose is startlingly red and damp, the shadows beneath his eyes dark as a raccoon's mask. He's breathing through parted lips, chapped from the way he's been having to move around the congestion settled deeply into him. Just looking at him feels like he's going to contract whatever plague he's harboring within him.
"I might--" he interrupts himself to snuffle thickly and wetly, coughs into his elbow, "no, okay, I am sick."
"That much is obvious, but thank you for admitting it." He scratches his beard thoughtfully, mulling over his options here. He could try and spare him having to be out and about like this--and, in so doing, spare everyone else from his cold--but he's already made a commitment to going into work today, and dragging Elliott along with him before he puts him to work tomorrow. "Get dressed after you've eaten--we're going into work--not for a full shift, mind you. Consider it a tour more than anything else. I have to fax a couple documents over to a client, and you could use the familiarity."
"Yes, Captain."
He doesn't look happy, but it's difficult to tell if that's over the prospect of going to work, or if it's because he's being forced out while he's sick, or a combination thereof. It doesn't matter, really--he's sick, but it's a cold. He can't let him shirk any responsibility just because he's caught cold, even if it does look like a nasty one.
"Good man. Eat up and get dressed--we've got business to attend to." He claps him on the shoulder, and leaves him to get himself ready for the upcoming day.
#Elliott fic#snzfic#sickfic#snz#yay and also yippee and things of this nature. I love it when this guy is sad and miserable#sprinkling some deeply introspective character studies into the snzblr ecosystem
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Are you a night elf lore nerd or RPer? Do you like scouring books and game worlds for tiny lore details?
Then I encourage you to consider joining the 2025 Night Elf Roleplay Guide Project!
The Night Elf Roleplay Guide by the Silver Circle guild, while a fantastic resource in introducing players new and old to night elf lore, is in sore need of updating. All expansions from Legion and onwards, as well as all the novels published since then, will need to be closely examined for any and all lore details to bring the guide up to date.
This is a huge endeavor, and the more help the better! Please read through the forum post above if you're at all interested.
(And reblog for visibility if you're so inclined!)
#night elf#kaldorei#warcraft#world of warcraft#warcraft rp#I may have my gripes with canon but this project is still right up my alley#I want to study this game like a naturalist studying an ecosystem
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Imagine you’re a filth and you go home to your filth wife
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#ultrakill#filth ultrakill#all of us have such interesting brains we should be studied like bugs in an ecosystem
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One of the coolest and scariest things about the werewolves in the quarry is that they can climb. It’s cool and scary because it shows their precision in movement, their determination and focus on tasks, their high ability to be able to do something very difficult and physically taxing, and their incredible intelligence to understand how to chase their prey on non flat ground. Some animals don’t have the ability to physically climb, some animals lose interest if it’s a difficult kill. But not the werewolves. There’s something truly terrifying in a creature putting it’s all into getting you, and not at all being phased by the challenge.
#og#werewolves#werewolfism#werewolf#the quarry#the quarry spoilers#cuz I do think it’s a surprise they are werewolves at first#I love to study fictional werewolves like they’re regular animals in the ecosystem it’s fun#werewolf biology yall!!#anytime a hunter can climb it’s terrifying
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🦖
#if this looks particularly wonky in the anatomy anywhere its bc the only ref i was looking at was tyrantrums official art LOL#could not be bovvered to bring up a t rex image#pokemon#tyrantrum#dinosaur#sketch#anyways thinkin abt tyrantrum bc im giving one to a human poke oc i play with sometimes (ori)#he rescued an injured one while studying the effects of released fossil pokemon on the ecosystems of the crown tundra#it liked him enough to stay w him after it was rehabbed. her name is andi :)#hes got like a team full of bugs. and also a dinosaur
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found my way onto professional women's gymnastics tumblr and it should not be surprising that the way a whole ton of people feel about Simone and the 🇺🇸 team is verrrrry similar to how a whole lot of hockeyblr felt about the Pens after the 2017 SCF lol
#the gymnastic girlies in here beef and they beef hard#also they call those of us who only turn up to watch during the olympics “four years” lol#love getting a peek into another fandom ecosystem it's always like a mini anthropological study
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All my relatives: Exploring Lakota ontology, belief, and ritual. Posthumus DC (2022)
This is a book all about Lakota traditional beliefs and therefore has a lot of information connected to Mitakuye Oyasin. “At the heart of both Lakota religious continuity and innovation is an underlying animist ontological orientation, a basic way of seeing, understanding, and being in the world that extends personhood— in the form of a soul or spirit— to nonhuman life- forms.” This is expressed with ‘Mitakuye Oyasin’ –meaning ‘all my relatives’ or ‘we are all related’, which refers not only to human kinship but also to the relationship shared by all life-forms, both human and nonhuman, and the reciprocal obligations, responsibilities, and mutual respect that naturally extend from it” (14).

This repeats much of the ideas from similar definitions: belief in the connection between all life, relationships, the power the phrase has. It also gives a lot of words to help define these beliefs in academic language. Another important thing to point out is the way mitakuye oyasin is recognized as being part of Lakota innovation; my goal here is to use mitakuye oyasin to an innovation of queer ecology–hopefully add to the conversation.
“The normative cultural values encompassed by mitákuye oyásʾį are the very foundation of kinship, relational ontology, and the overarching interspecies collective, of which humans are only one hoop, one oyáte ‘people, nation, tribe’, in the company of many others. The key constituents of this animist ontology and worldview, of mitákuye oyásʾį, are persons, a category that extends beyond human beings to nonhuman or other- than- human persons. [...] Importantly, the Lakota worldview sees humans as the least knowledgeable and powerful beings, requiring the most aid and pity, upending the common Western biblical assumption that humans have dominion to rule over all other life- forms and subdue the earth (see V. Deloria 1999, 50; 2009, 99– 100). For the Lakotas, the seed of all life is wakʿą ‘sacrality, mystery, divinity’; ́ hence all life- forms share a generalized interiority, whether human or nonhuman.”

This is important information to support my argument. Queer ecology is very critical of Western beliefs and dichotomies that separate humans from nature and thereby present mankind as the ultimate lifeform (anthropocentrism). There are many essays and articles that examine the influence Christianity has had on the colonialist project (Gaard is the first that comes to mind). The Lakota worldview of being the ‘younger siblings’ of creation are supported by science in that ‘humans’ as a 'species' haven’t existed all that long in comparison to other 'species' and like many indigenous cultures, Lakota people knew the key to knowing nature was to learn from the world around us, as the author later confirms:
“Deloria explains that “the oldest traditions say that humans learned politeness and courtesy from the animals. . . . Generations of elders had already observed the behavior of birds . . . and decided that emulating them was the proper way for humans to act” (V. Deloria 2009, 123). Standing Bear (2006a, 56) substantiates this, writing, “The Lakota enjoyed his association with the animal world. For centuries he derived nothing but good from animal creatures. From them were learned lessons in industry, fidelity, and many virtues and much knowledge.” (50-51)
In the author’s footnotes is Vine Deloria’s examination of mitakuye oyasin that is, I feel, a great support of my claim:
“Vine Deloria refers to mitákuye oyásʾį as the ‘Indian principle of interpretation/observation,’ calling it “a practical methodological tool for investigating the natural world and drawing conclusions about it that can serve as guides for understanding nature and living comfortably within it. . . . We observe the natural world by looking for relationships between various things in it. . . . This concept is simply the relativity concept as applied to a universe that people experience as alive and not as dead or inert” (1999, 34). (Posthumus 2022 p219 f)

Queer ecology’s goal in many ways is to critique the ways the Western scientific paradigm has created inequity. Many are seemingly searching for solutions and answers to the problems that have been perpetuated by the colonial empire, supported as it is by western science.
While we must always, always be careful of appropriation and misappropriation–I contend that the solutions are not ones that need to be ‘discovered’ or solved in the way that Western science is so often searching for–advancement, the future…but rather, the answers are in what has always been there…and it’s simply a matter of observation.

#queer ecology#mitakuye oyasin#queer theory#ecofeminism#critical ecology#colonialism#all my relatives#lakota#indigenous studies#postcolonial theory#ecology#science#traditional ecological knowledge#queering ecology#ecosystems#environment#social ecology#long post
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Let me have some time and some land away from it all and I'll study botany and protect and care for the environment because I love it and it's so beautiful and fascinating and I'm in constant awe of the amazing world we live in.
I want to care for and tend to nature.
I want to marvel at the intricate complexities and beautiful systems that weave ecosystems together in chaotic harmony.
#personal#journal#botany#I've studied and worked as a horticulturalist for a few years#but accidentally failed upwards into an office role that has nothing to do with plants#i want to care for and tend to nature#I want to marvel at the intricate complexities and beautiful systems that weave ecosystems together in chaotic harmony#i can do this : )#5 year plan#I want to meet other beautiful people who feel the same way#and share in our dreaming#amplify that and manifest a more harmonious future for all of us#a community centered around love and nature and science and wonder#but not like a cult just friends#that last line is the funnest tag I've ever written tbh
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Yak Poop, Happy Soil
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When we think about food webs, we usually imagine predators and prey in a never-ending cycle. But there’s another, less visible chain, made up of soil organisms that decompose leaf litter (dead leaves, twigs, plant fragments). A network of worms, insects, springtails that break down, mix, and transform organic matter, releasing vital nutrients back into the soil. These nutrients feed plants, which feed herbivores, which feed carnivores, and so on.
To speed up decomposition, adding manure is a well-known practice, especially in agriculture. But not all poop is created equal. That’s why a team of researchers set out to discover how yak dung affects litter decomposition. The study was conducted on a Tibetan plateau in China, at 3500 meters above sea level. Scientists observed yaks for six days, recording the amount and distribution of dung and urine. They collected fresh dung and urine (stored separately in freezers to preserve nutrients) and also gathered plant litter, which was sterilized, dried, and cut into 2 cm pieces.
They used this material to create 15x15 cm decomposition bags (litterbags), each containing 10 g of litter. Some had coarse mesh (allowing soil invertebrates to enter – “with fauna”), others had fine mesh (excluding fauna – “without fauna”). Each bag received one of four treatments: no addition (control), dung only, urine only, or dung + urine. The bags were placed in a yak-free plot and left to decompose. The study lasted a total of 660 days.
Results? In the absence of soil fauna, there were no major differences between treatments. But in their presence, bags with dung (alone or with urine) decomposed much faster – decomposition rates increased by up to 116%!
Animal feces provide sugars, proteins, and amino acids – nutrients for microbes and decomposers. Soil fauna mix, break down, and stimulate microbial biomass. In short: yak poop works, but only if the soil is alive.
See You Soon, and Good Science!
Source Pic by Dylanleagh
#decomposition#soil#soil fauna#yak#dung#ecology#soil science#environmental science#ecological research#terrestrial ecosystems#soil fertility#litter decomposition#soil animals#hidden biodiversity#scientific study#natural cycles#organic decomposition#drops of science#news#breaking news#natural science#science breaking news
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no more traumatised eldest children projecting onto dean meta. i need more traumatised immigrant children projecting onto sam meta
#the ecosystem of analysis on here is out of whack. i need balance!!!#where are you all i know you're there. many of you in fact may be beloved followers n mutuals#look! i'll even start a tag on it#sam outsider studies#j.txt
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Me, trying to explain the life cycle of a cell to someone after having to study about it for the last two days straight(going for third) for my biology lesson:

#biology#things#mitosis#I. hate. this. kind. of. biology.#why cant they just#let me study about ecosystems or the evolution of species#microcosm is not my thing
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