Show newer

Unsure of Mastodon etiquette for plugging jobs on Mastodon...
but my company has a couple of neat projects coming up, and is hiring a contract web developer. Mostly React and Headless Wordpress stuff, along with some fun map and visualization aspects. Message me if you're interested or know someone.

on.vibemap.com/front-end-dev

Walking through the damp woods, we spotted this unique shaped very large #mushroom on a wet dead tree. I had no idea what kind it was and after days of searching for what it could be I finally had to ask a friend who is an Interpretive Naturalist. After a couple days of searching he had finally narrowed it down to a #BlushingRosette as they come in many shapes.
Blushing Rosette Mushroom here
debbie-oppermann.pixels.com/fe
#FungusFriday #FungiFriday #BuyIntoArt #nature #fungus #artwork #NatureLover

Sometimes on my travels around Glasgow, I come across truly random things, like a cassette of Dionne Warwick's Heartbreaker from 1982 hanging on a twig beside a path in the Botanic Gardens!

#glasgow #cassettetapes #dionnewarwick #glasgowbotanicgardens #randomthings #peoplemakeglasgow

Hello there.
Mother and baby's first moments.
A while ago I drove a friend home from hospital after having a baby. The baby needed a fresh babygrow and I managed to get this eye to eye connection shot in the middle of the clothes change.
Sometimes just being there is enough 🙂

#Baby #Mother #Nature #Wildlife #Highland #Scotland #Photography #Welcome #Hello #Child #Daughter

So here’s a thing about #maplesugaring in #vermont (not to mention that three days after a blizzard it’s 46 degrees and raining):
You have to pay attention.
You have to keep moving. Like Lucille Ball at the conveyor (sorry young’uns).
If you don’t pay attention you burn the syrup. Or you lose the boil.
You keep moving by: getting more sap out of the holding containers; pouring it into the warming pans; getting wood; splitting wood; feeding fire; getting sap… Repeat. Repeat. Repeat….#photography

This weeks #Lego #FossilFriday is #Chasmosaurus

Discovered in Canada in 1898 by Lawrence Morris Lambe of the Geological Society of Canada. He named Monoclonius belli.

In 1913, Charles Hazelius Sternberg and his sons found several complete skulls. They tried to reclassify it as Protorosaurus, but that name was used by a Permian reptile.
Forced to rename it again, they settled on Chasmosaurus, meaning "Opening" "Lizard".

So here’s a thing about #maplesugaring The sap has curious properties. As you boil it down, it produces a mineral type material called niter; it tastes like an old sock, which is why we filter the syrup three times.
It also spoils; think milk. So cold temperature storage works.
Water in the sap freezes first, so if the sap freezes in storage, outside in, you take the ice out, and you have sap already concentrated. Boiling is shorter.
Cool, no?

If you are planning to visit India for the first time, or as a repeat traveler, I hope my expanded travel blog helps you explore -- from the local culture to its diverse flora and fauna to its holy places and pilgrimage sites

cascoly-images.com/experience-

#theArtDistrict #BuyIntoArt #AYearForArt #Art #ArtMatters #MastoArt
#SpringIntoArt
#travel #travelart #travelphotography #asia #india

Ingenious, Indigenous cartography: The Tunumiit (Eastern Greenlandic Inuit) practice of carving portable maps out of driftwood to be used while navigating coastal waters. These pieces, which are small enough to be carried in a mitten, represent coastlines in a continuous line, up one side of the wood and down the other. The maps are compact, buoyant, and can be read in the dark.

A herd of wild goats are pictured crossing natural sea arch against an evening sky on an island in Roaringwater Bay, County Cork. Beth Cradick is the photographer

Show older
Qoto Mastodon

QOTO: Question Others to Teach Ourselves
An inclusive, Academic Freedom, instance
All cultures welcome.
Hate speech and harassment strictly forbidden.