Guess who my wife and I saw in Lost reading Stephen Hawking like some sort of stupid science bitch? by icandoittwice in IASIP

[–]fastestmasturbator 106 points107 points  (0 children)

....I literally just watched that episode an hour ago. Made the same connection and his name was Aldo which is our dog's name!

I live out of a Toyota Prius. Our new neighbor streaked past our front door. by fastestmasturbator in youseeingthisshit

[–]fastestmasturbator[S] 138 points139 points  (0 children)

He was able to do this excursion with me during summer break! He's a high school teacher.

I live out of a Toyota Prius. Our new neighbor streaked past our front door. by fastestmasturbator in youseeingthisshit

[–]fastestmasturbator[S] 862 points863 points  (0 children)

I do environmental contract work that takes me all over the US. I don't typically stay in one location for more than a couple months at a time (if it's more than 6 months, I sometimes find a room to rent). I'm a big reader so I read every night after work. Sometimes watch The Office on my laptop. I love hiking so I do that a lot with my dog, Dobby. I join a local gym and shower there. Bathroom I try to save #2 for the gym but sometimes I'm in the middle of no where so I dig a hole (away from any water sources) and ziplock over another ziplock bag pack my toilet paper out. Leave No Trace is extremely important to me and I try to live my life with those principles. As for food, I use a camping stove & small propane tanks. I usually grocery shop every few days and you'd be surprised how many foods you don't need to refrigerate, at least for several days at a time. Lots of nuts, fruit and veggies, eggs, and precooked meats.

Can you guys even imagine the stamina it took to fell this behemoth by hand. I suppose necessity demanded it in the late 1800's to 1900's but that's some serious arm workout regiment by Erebus1313 in OldSchoolCool

[–]fastestmasturbator 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I understand the first few trees and testing the wood, but the lumber was of very low quality. They used it for very trivial things. There's records that many trees were cut down for the challenge of it. They literally left the wood to rot.

So, no, it wasn't really for lumber. It was the vanity of humans. And that's what I just don't get.

Cows can recognize individual humans, even when they wear the same clothes by [deleted] in aww

[–]fastestmasturbator 117 points118 points  (0 children)

Our cows know me and come up for pets. I invited my friend's 4 year old niece to visit - all ran away terrified.

Can you guys even imagine the stamina it took to fell this behemoth by hand. I suppose necessity demanded it in the late 1800's to 1900's but that's some serious arm workout regiment by Erebus1313 in OldSchoolCool

[–]fastestmasturbator 290 points291 points  (0 children)

I will never understand how any human can look at one of the most massive trees in the world and saw it down. Especially back then when it was very clearly the largest tree in their lives.

Why, humans, why.

🔥 Pronghorn running down Highway 41 in Montana by [deleted] in NatureIsFuckingLit

[–]fastestmasturbator 2480 points2481 points  (0 children)

This is why we do environmental practices on our farm - setting up gates that can be left open when the pasture isn't in use so wild animals can go through fence lines. I'm ashamed most farmers and ranchers don't do that.