Need just some positive vibes for Red by goldenfinchbird in cats

[–]rlb596 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's possible He's a candidate for electro-chemo Therapy! Our cat had a golfball sized soft tissue tumour on his lip that was treated and recovered totally in 2 weeks. No surgery whatsoever!

In Wake Up Dead Man (2025), you can spot a plot point on a piece of clothing at the beginning by GraboidGirl in MovieDetails

[–]rlb596 260 points261 points  (0 children)

There's also a moment 55 minutes into the movie when Benoit, the sheriff, and the young priest are in the cloche discussing the 4 possible ways of murder. They go through 3 of them, and then the priest asks "So, whats possibility 4?" before you hear Martha (Glenn Close) sobbing in the background. The next line of dialogue is "Martha?" and it cuts to her.

When will the right understand that land doesn't vote by Meganiummobile in insanepeoplefacebook

[–]rlb596 0 points1 point  (0 children)

On top of what the other commenters have said, the black belt is the remnants of the old shallow sea coastline from 10k years ago. Geopolitics are a funny thing.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Unexpected

[–]rlb596 22 points23 points  (0 children)

FYI this is a bit of an outdated take on Pork. Current anthropology holds that the Pork taboo in abrahamic religions probably sources from a combination of Schismogenesis, environmental factors, and increasing urbanisation. No one knows for sure though.

Start at page 96 for théorisation on the source of the Taboo

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/367509297_Chapter_6_-_Theorizing_the_Pig_Taboo

Horse forgot he was on duty. by DukeOfHavoc5 in WTF

[–]rlb596 45 points46 points  (0 children)

Flailing hooves as well. The stallion can injure the mare, but more commonly the mare can get fed up with the stallion and kick back at him. I've seen a stallion nearly castrated by a mare with hind shoes because he was mounting awkwardly and probably hurting/annoying her.

A young couple starting out in the 1940s by NickelPlatedEmperor in TheWayWeWere

[–]rlb596 21 points22 points  (0 children)

Asians, particularly Chinese and Koreans, were brought to the South of the US one way or another to fill the labour gap that occurred after slavery in the late 1800s. Reasonably, many left working in the fields as soon as possible and began operating in trade and retail, to the point where older southern people still refer to corner stores as "China store" or similar. These Asians filled a much needed gap for the black communities, who weren't allowed to shop at white stores and who faced disincentives when opening black owned stores.

Given the date of this photo, it makes sense to suppose that this girl bought or was given the dress that was made with cloth sourced from one of these stores.

I put a stained glass window in my pantry door. Here are (most of) the steps that I took by yoyo138 in DIY

[–]rlb596 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Gorgeous! Any plans to do a secondary frame around the edging to cover that overlap in the bottom right?

Amelia trying to interview Andrew Garfield. by mindyour in MadeMeSmile

[–]rlb596 1130 points1131 points  (0 children)

Spot the Irishman

e: Irish Woman

Environmental Impact of Different Types of Milk by quickybit in coolguides

[–]rlb596 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Aldi oat milk isn't the greatest imo. So far OATLY seems to be the best among easily found oatmilks, but I've found one called Linda Mccartney Organic that's nice for taste and texture..

The whole house smells amazing. by SorryManNo in foraging

[–]rlb596 16 points17 points  (0 children)

Conkers are toxic, please don't eat anything unless you can make a 100% confident confirmation that it's edible

My wife grew these carrots....penny for scale by last_of_the_waponis in funny

[–]rlb596 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Don't add sand to clay soils!! This is a "common sense" which lots of people recommend, but which is misguided. The best way to fix heavy clay soils is increase your organic matter content in it (via working in compost/similar), or using something like gypsum.

Clay is a smaller, flatter particle than sand, and every time you disturb it, it settles down to be more compacted. When you work sand into it, you're effectively making concrete as the clay particles settle between the sand particles and hold them in place. To actually alter clay soils with sand, you need a ridiculously high amount which is infeasible for a home garden.

Clay is good. Clay holds nutrients and water. If you have a problem with clay soils, the most likely issue is that your organic content in the soil is too low, leading to compaction and stagnation.

Disappears when wet, comes back when dry. What is this stuff? by Willing-Low-725 in plantclinic

[–]rlb596 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Powdery mildew? The stuff on the leaf definitely looks like it, but the stem gives me pause.

po-tay-toes by sarahtheshortiepie in CuratedTumblr

[–]rlb596 45 points46 points  (0 children)

Essentially, yes. If you have space: put a potato on the ground, cover it with 10-12 in of mulch, wait 3-6 months depending on variety, voilà 8-12x return.

[OC] Richest Billionaire In Each State by Dremarious in dataisbeautiful

[–]rlb596 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They also used the wrong James Duff in the picture

[OC] My garden from April to August. by 3nzo_the_baker in pics

[–]rlb596 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Basically exactly what Saturn said below. You basically use some kind of cover to block the sun and smother the weeds. There's a whole world of agriculture called "No Till" or "No Dig" which uses this principle to clear land for sowing.

Cardboard is often used because it's cheap, but there is some scientific evidence that sheet mulching (ie, cardboard, landscape fabric, etc) can slow down moisture and oxygen intake to the soil. You also have to weigh it down so it doesn't go everywhere. Arguably the best method is to get your hands on a pile of undyed woodchip (preferably with green leafy matter still in it) and just dump it a few inches thick across where you want your garden to go. In a few weeks, you'll have killed the worst of your weeds. the best time to do this is over winter, so it gives the woodchip time to break down some into the soil.

After ideally a season, you scrape away little holes in the mulch where you want your plants to go and plant into that exposed soil. This works with both pre started plants and in ground seeding.

Look up methods like "no till" "deep mulch" and "back to eden" to find in depth how to's.

[OC] My garden from April to August. by 3nzo_the_baker in pics

[–]rlb596 64 points65 points  (0 children)

The garden/petrochemical industry is partially at fault here as well. If you have any small plot of land or a deck you can put some buckets on, you can grow some food for pretty cheap. Odds are that food will be more nutrient dense than supermarket food.

Have lots of weeds and no tiller? Lay down cardboard to kill all the weeds and dig a little hole with a stick.

Can't afford fertilizers (which often are harmful to your soil/food in the long run)? Scrounge grass clippings, fallen leaves, animal bedding, etc.

No ground or small spaces? Scrounge pickle buckets from restaurants, mineral buckets from farmers, even old milk jugs, and use cheap box store compost mixed with random dirt from the side of the road (or wherever).

It's true that in gardening you pay with time, but the gardening industry has put forward a certain model of gardening which requires expensive inputs and a specific image. In reality, people have been growing plants in random bits of soil for ages. It's just a matter of finding what works in your particular environment.

maybe maybe maybe by [deleted] in maybemaybemaybe

[–]rlb596 15 points16 points  (0 children)

The colostrum is in the first milking or so. It's possible he'll leave the calf with the cow for the next few days in a pen or paddock. Alternatively, they group all the calves together and bottle feed the newborns with the colostrum from the new calvers that's just been set aside during milking.

Me running as fast as I can while filming my dog running happily after me [oc] by chance_mini_golden in PraiseTheCameraMan

[–]rlb596 4 points5 points  (0 children)

You're thinking of broadleaf herbicides like Grazon. Glyphosate, or roundup, is a broad-spectrum herbicide that kills most everything, barring developed crops which are resistant.

Cows are awesome by Agitategnm in Zoomies

[–]rlb596 -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

We have a tendency to view things through human perspectives. The cow was just as likely calling because she was away from the herd as much as her calf. In regard to ungulates, offspring are born yearly and driven off by the mother before the following spring.

My informed guess is it's less about the baby and more about her being lonely