The plan for the 17th, when the adult content ban comes in, is to protest.
To do that, we are making as much noise either side of the 17th as possible, and using the site as normal.
On the 17th, dead silence.
People are saying log off but what they really mean is don’t open the site or the app.
But, on the 17th make as much noise as possible on every other platform. Tweet about it and post on facebook and instagram and everywhere else.
What this does is causes a massive dip in ad revenue for one single day. That does not make staff think ‘oh everyone’s gone let’s shut down.’ What it actually makes them think is ‘oh shit people aren’t happy and if people don’t keep using our site we’re out of money and out of jobs.’
A boycott reminds a company that the users (consumers) have the power to make their site (business) worthless with one single coordinated decision.
If you want to join in, here’s what to do:
Do:
Close all open instances of the app and site on all your devices before the 17th
Make posts before and after the 17th on tumblr and other platforms, talking about why this ban is bad
Make posts on other sites during the 17th. Flood the official tumblr staff twitter and facebook with your anger and your opinion
Come back on the 18th and check in
Don’t:
Delete the app from your phone (this doesn’t affect their revenue and since it’s off the store at the moment it’ll be hard to get back)
Delete your account. I mean you can if you want to, but if you keep your account and don’t use it you’re saying to staff that there’s still time to save it. If you delete it’s hard work to come back.
Open the app or website (including specific blogs)
Make any posts (turn down/off your queue and make sure nothing is scheduled)
Go quiet elsewhere. Make it clear that this is just about tumblr, not a mass move away from all social media.
Remember: the execs don’t care about anything but money. Shutting down the site means there’s $0 further income from it. That’s their last possible course of action. If we make it clear we’re not happy, they’ll have to do something or we can do more and more until it becomes too expensive.
Protests take commitment. They’re a defiant action against a business that is doing something wrong. They will try to scare you into not participating, because they’re scared. We hold all the power here, sometimes the execs just need to be reminded of that.
EVERY SINGLE PERSON WHO REBLOGS THIS WILL GET THE FOLLOWING IN THEIR INBOX.
A BRIEF ORIGIN STORY
A SUPERPOWER OR THREE, MAYBE FOUR DEPENDING
A SUPERHERO OR VILLAIN NAME
YOU MIGHT ALSO GET AN ARCHNEMESIS WHO HAS REBLOGGED THIS ALREADY
AND YES I MEAN EVERY SINGLE PERSON WHO REBLOGS THIS.
reblog if your blog is safe for trans witches, non binary witches, bisexual witches, gay witches, pansexual witches, closet witches, mental ill witches and all type of witches 🔮🌿
*Re-posting, with new information
A store-bought bag of topsoil, a roll of landscaping fabric, or a bag of cedar chips doesn’t go very far if you have a large garden or a very limited budget. Here are some ways to create the materials you need for a beautiful, organic, productive garden, by both re-directing household waste, and foraging in your local area. I use a lot of these tricks in my garden to make it almost completely free for me to continue growing new things, and expanding the workable area every year!
Save your food scraps to create a rich compost for growing veggies and amending your soil. There are numerous options for every size of dwelling and yard. Small space solutions such as Bokashi and vermicompost work indoors and don’t produce bad smells, so you can keep them underneath the sink.Worm towers, compost heaps, and outdoor compost bins are a great solution if you have more space. The more you add, the more rich, nutritious material you can make for your garden. I like composting because it means I don’t have gross smelly garbage bags to deal with, because food waste is diverted. It seems like a lot of work at first, but it actually saves time, money, and transportation.
Seaweed or kelp is one of the best things for your garden, with over 70 essential nutrients, and acting as a weed barrier and a moisture-retentive mulch. I collect seaweed nearby on the beach with my bike trailer, or, when I go for a walk I bring a little home with me each time. It’s an absolute miracle for your soil.
Worm tower
There are three things that are essential for plant growth. These are nitrogen for leaves and vegetation (N), phosphorus for roots and shoots (P), and potassium for water movement, flowering, and fruiting (K). Commercial fertilisers will give the relative concentrations of each of these compounds with and “NPK” rating. Plants like tomatoes also need calcium to produce healthy fruit. You can create amendments for your garden and soil at home so that you do not have to purchase fertiliser.
Grass clippings contain 4% nitrogen, 1% phosphorus, and 2% potassium (NPK = 4-1-2).
Human urine contains 12% nitrogen, and it’s sterile. Dilute before adding directly to plants.
Legumes such as beans, clover, peanuts, and alfalfa fix inorganic nitrogen into the soil with mycorrhizal organisms and nodules on their root systems. Plant these crops every few years in rotation with others to renew the soil organically.
Human urine is also a great source of phosphorous and trace amounts of potassium.
Ground up bones or shells add a slow-release phosphorous to the soil
Had a baby recently? Bury the placenta in the garden.
Hardwood ashes
Composted banana peels
Break down all of your eggshells, or seashells you have found, in a plastic bucket, using vinegar. This creates a soluble calcium solution you can add to a watering can.
Many plants are particular about what the soil pH should be.
To make soil more acidic: add oak leaves, pine needles, leaf mulch, urine, coffee grounds or sphagnum.
To make soil more alkaline: add wood ash, shell, or bone.
Mulch is decomposing organic matter that adds nutrition to the soil, while simultaneously keeping out weed growth and retaining moisture. It also attracts worms, fungi and other beneficial creatures to your soil. Free sources of mulch include:
Leaves
Garden waste
Grass clippings
Straw (often straw bales are given away after being used for decoration in the fall. You can also plant vegetables directly in straw bales using a technique called straw bale gardening).
Wood chips (if you can borrow a wood chipper after you’ve collected some wood you can have attractive wood mulch for free)
Straw bale garden
When mulch isn’t enough to keep the weeds down, many people opt for landscaping fabric. It can be quite expensive and inorganic-looking. Free solutions that both attract worms and can be replaced in small segments as they break down include:
Newspaper*
Cardboard*
Egg cartons*
Printer paper, looseleaf, etc. in thick layers*
*try to make sure you are using paper that has vegetable-based dyes, so you aren’t leeching toxins into the soil.
If your soil is compacted and you have plants that require low levels of water, or excellent drainage, add sand. I don’t recommend stealing it from the beach, but ask around and you’d be surprised at how easy it is to get for free. Sawdust also improves drainage. Adding organic matter and mulch encourages worms, who also till and aerate compacted soil.
If the area still needs drainage, dig a hole and fill it with bricks or rocks to create a “dry well”
For drainage in pots, add crushed bricks, terra cotta pot fragments, packing peanuts, small stones, marbles, orsand to the bottom under the soil layer. I find these in construction sites, on craigslist, or at flea markets.
If you have space, raised beds are a great no-dig way to establish growing space. If you are pressed for space (like working on a balcony) there are many cheap or free options for container gardens.
Creating raised beds allows you to build up the soil without digging. Free ways to do this include using rocks or lumber (like my DIY “lasagna garden” made with the sheet composting technique), using the “wattle“ method with sticks and posts you have found, using discarded straw bales, old bricks,paving stones, cinder blocks or really anything else you have lying around.
Hugelkutur raised beds, which fix carbon and provide drainage, can be made by stacking sticks and untreated wood, and then piling soil or compost over it. (Thanks milos-garden)
Rubber tire gardens retain heat in the night and allow for great drainage. They can also be painted in fun ways.
Herb spirals (here is mine: 1, 2, 3) can be built with stones, bricks, and other found materials.
I often use old cooking pots, barbecues, teapots, or other found objects as planters.
Making wooden planters is easy, and scrap or salvaged wood is also easy to come by. I’m not a fan of using wooden pallets for DIY projects, but they are also a free source of lumber for things like planters.
If you can track down peat moss, cement, and vermiculite, you can make an easy Hypertufa planter in whatever shape you would like, provided you have a form in which it can dry.
I’ve made hanging gardens out of soda cans.
You can build a self-watering container with a 2L pop bottle.
Start seeds in eggshells
Make biodegradable pots out of newspapers.
Wattle raised beds
Rubber tire gardens
Hugelkultur
An herb spiral
Hanging gardens in cans (2)
Many plants need external support, such as stakes of trellises, to thrive.
Rebar can almost always be salvaged cheaply or free and makes a great trellis, arch, or purgola
Build trellises and supports out of the pliable young stems of plants like willow
Rebar trellis/arch
Living willow arch/trellis
Paving often requires a foundation of sand or another stable and well-drained substrate, and a covering of stones, bricks, or other weatherproof elements. Slowly collect stones over time, or free paving stone fragments to create a mosaic-type walkway. Often people give these things away on craigslist. I made a patio and fireplace out of free salvaged bricks, for example.
Salvaged garden walkway
Here is a gallery of greenhouses made out of salvaged windows and doors
A cold frame is easy to make with salvaged lumber, and plastic sheeting.
Window greenhouse
Palet cold-frame
Swap seeds with other gardeners
If you see a plant you like at someone’s house, ask for seeds or cuttings
Save seeds every year and build a library of options. Here is a great guide to seed saving.
Save seeds from foods you like from the grocery store: consider growing peanuts, ginger, garlic, peppers, or a walnut tree: all of these and more can be planted from store-bought produce.
Learn to take cuttings. There is a tonne of info on the web about basic cutting propagation, layering, (like I do with rhododendrons) air layering, and numerous other techniques to take clones of plants you like. This saves going to a nursery and shelling out big bucks for all the variety you want.
For cuttings, willow tea and honey are great rooting hormones/antiseptics/anti-fungal agents, which can save you $40 if you were thinking of buying commercial rooting hormone.
You can root cuttings in a potato! (See my methods for rooting “borrowed” plants here)
Air layering
Rooting cuttings in potatoes
—-
I hope this helps you build your garden outside of the usual capitalist channels! It can be a cheap or free hobby if you are willing to think outside the box, and maybe put up with things that don’t look as clean or crisp as a hardware store catalogue. If you have any further ideas, please add them! The more information the better.
Adenoidal: adj: if someone’s voice is adenoidal, some of the sound seems to come through the nose
Appealing: adj: an appealing look, voice etc. shows that you want to help, approval or agreement
Breathy: adj: with loud breathing noises
Brittle: adj: if you speak in a brittle voice, you would sound as if you’re about to cry
Croaky: adj: if someone’s voice sounds croaky, they speak in a low rough voice that sounds as if they have sore throat
Dead: adj: if someone’s eyes are dead, or if their voice is dead, they feel or show no emotions
Disembodied: adj: a disembodied voice comes from someone who you cannot see
Flat: adj: spoken in a voice that does not go up or down
Fruity: adj: a fruity voice or laugh is deep and strong in a pleasant way
Grating: adj: a grating voice, laugh, or sound is unpleasant and annoying
Gruff: adj: a gruff voice has a rough low sound
Guttural: adj: a guttural sound is deep and made at the back of your throat
High-pitched: adj: a high pitched voice or sound is very high
Honeyed: adj: honeyed words sound nice, but you cannot trust the person who is speaking
Hoarse: adj: someone who is hoarse or has a hoarse voice speaks in a low rough voice
Husky: adj: a husky voice is deep and sounds hoarse often in an attractive way
Low: adj: a low voice or sound is quiet and difficult to hear or deep sounding
Matter-of-fact: adj: used about someone’s behavior or voice
Monotonous: adj: a monotonous sound or voice is boring and unpleasant because it does not change in loudness or become higher or lower
Nasal: adj: someone with a nasal voice sounds as if they are speaking through the nose
Orotund: adj: an orotund voice is loud and clear
Penetrating: adj: a penetrating voice or sound is so high or loud that it makes you slightly uncomfortable
Plummy: adj: this word shows that you dislike people who speak like this
Quietly: adv: in a quiet voice
Ringing: adj: a ringing sound or voice is very loud and clear
Rough: adj: a rough voice is not soft and is unpleasant to listen to
Shrill: adj: a shrill noise or voice is very loud, high and unpleasant
Smoky: adj: a smoky voice is sexually attractive in a slightly mysterious way
Silvery: adj: a silvery voice or sound is clear, light, and pleasant
Singsong: adj: if you speak in a singsong voice, you voice rises and falls in a musical way
Small: adj: a small voice or a sound is quiet
Strangled: adj: a strangled sound is one that someone stops before they finish making it
Strident: adj: a strident voice or sound is loud and unpleasant.
Taut: adj: used about something such as a voice or expressions that shows someone is nervous or angry
Thick: adj: if your voice is thick with an emotion, it sounds less clear than usual because of the emotion
Tight: adj: a tight voice or expression shows that you’re annoyed or nervous
Thin: adj: a thin voice or sound is high end unpleasant to listen to
Tremulous: adj: is it not steady for explained, cause you’re afraid or excited
Throaty: adj: a throaty sound is low and seems to come from deep in your throat
Wheezy: adj: a wheezy noise sounds as if it’s made by someone who has difficulty breathing
Wobbly: adj: if your voice is wobbly, it goes up and down, usually cause you’re frightened, not confident or you’re going to cry
Is everyone stiff as a board and smiling demonically? It’s archaic
Is everyone beautiful and smooth as a dolphin? It’s classical
Is everyone screaming and on steroids? It’s Hellenistic
Please, please read to this:
If you have a blog, or are a writer and someone comes to you with suicidal thoughts, HELP THEM. I've seen and experienced people coming to popular blogs or accounts and asking for advice on depression and or suicidal thoughts and people just turn them away thinking they're asking for attention. They're in a very dangerous mindset and they see you as someone they can go to for help. You may not know them or read what they published but they see you as a friend, someone that could help them through this, and if you just turn them away, because "they may have wanted attention", and were "leeching off your success" they need help. Even if you have 5 followers, someone could be in danger and just wants you to help them through it.
Please reblog, it could help someone out.
Can we like, not support circuses like that anymore?
I’m making bread
my dash is starting to get messy so i want to follow some new people and become mutuals! u can reblog this to find new people too!
rb this post if ur blog has the following
marvel obv (preferably at least 90% of ur blog)
posts about anyone from the mcu cast & characters
no starker or thorki shippers
no anti tony blogs
ᵐᵘᵗᵘᵃˡˢ ⁱᶠ ʸᵒᵘ ᵈᵒⁿ’ᵗ ᵐⁱⁿᵈ ˢᵖʳᵉᵃᵈⁱⁿᵍ ᵗʰᵉ ʷᵒʳᵈ ᵒᵘᵗ ˢᵒ ᵗʰⁱˢ ᵈᵒᵉˢⁿ’ᵗ ᶠˡᵒᵖ ♡
23/she/they On this page you can find lots of weird stuff, hope you enjoy
135 posts