cannibalia 11mo ago • 28%
You kinda sound like the bad guy in monsters inc
cannibalia 11mo ago • 14%
I think I should be able to sue the direct connect pedophile site.
cannibalia 11mo ago • 84%
The love and respect we give horses vs. other farm animals kind of makes me sad.
cannibalia 11mo ago • 42%
While I agree, where do we draw the line in our personal lives? There is no ethical consumption under capitalism.
cannibalia 12mo ago • 100%
Thoughts on nuclear? Sounds good to me but I'm so somewhat ignorant.
cannibalia 12mo ago • 100%
If it is a tallow tree, it's likely highly invasive. I can tell you how to kill it.
cannibalia 12mo ago • 100%
Beautiful shot!... Those don't happen to be tallow trees do they?
cannibalia 12mo ago • 98%
Proud? I'm not proud. I spawned here.
cannibalia 12mo ago • 45%
"don't worry, he was republican" just doesn't give me warm and fuzzies. It's just sad that this is the world we've made. What do we have to do to break this down?
cannibalia 12mo ago • 100%
Made with mf love.
cannibalia 12mo ago • 100%
I think you're missing the forest for the trees here mam
cannibalia 12mo ago • 100%
My husband had the same talk with me.
cannibalia 12mo ago • 100%
Thank you! I'm attempting a cross post now :)
These chickens are kept to give blood samples each week to monitor for mosquito born illnesses in the community. They have a very important job to do! The department has taken the "lowest common denominator" approach to standard of care. Most of the chickens are pecked nearly featherless with visible signs of poor health. "They're just chickens", "the coop is gross" "I just go in to feed them", ect. I'm no expert, but this isn't right. I've lost a lot of respect for my coworkers, they aren't reliable sources of information on care. Coop has a dirt floor, with 2-3 inches of straw bedding. Soil was hard packed before intense raking. Roughly 200sqft. They are fed Nutrena Country Feeds 16% pellets in the feeder pictured below. When I visit, I give them a cup of the wet pellets mixed with one of their eggs (I was told this is great for them?). I am allowed to visit my girls for 30 minutes, every Monday, Wednesday and Friday. I let coop #1 forage in a fenced area while I clean their coop, but coop #2 cannot. They are located deep in the woods, with no clear area I could watch them. What can I do to give my girls the best possible life while they work for science? My department only provides feed and straw, everything else is my personal funds. So far I've added bedding, supplement their diet with foraged invasive plant species (from a safe source) and meal worm treats, hang cabbage heads to entertain, and brought in novel objects for them to perch around on. The coop not featured has a "merry go round" I've made out of a bike wheel. How often (and how) should I clean the coop? Right now, I dig a hole in the floor and bury all the roost poop, then rake all the bedding into a pile to redistribute. I use a hose to wash out their water bowl and poop from any hard surfaces. Is leash training a genuine option for life enrichment? The harness fits, but it makes them SPRINT. Any and all advice is GREATLY appreciated, thank you all so much :)
cannibalia 1y ago • 66%
TROLL, TROLL IN THE COMMENTS
cannibalia 1y ago • 100%
Now this is the one that freaks me out. I was a spraytech in Florida this summer and reached a wet bulb temp of 87. It's getting closer y'all.
cannibalia 1y ago • 95%
You can't humiliate someone into changing their mind, especially something so critical to their identity. Minds are changed slowly, with love. With conversations and questions that make them think about it later. If you dunk on someone, they'll just remember how mad you made them what an asshole you are. If you tactfully ask them questions that expose their own hypocrisy, you might just trigger a shower thought epiphany.
cannibalia 1y ago • 100%
As an atheist who grew up in the buckle of the biblebelt, Christians often took this exact attitude to our ilk and it fucking sucked to live with.