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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by anon6789@beehaw.org to c/animals@beehaw.org

This cutie of a hootie is Decatur, an animal ambassador at the Vermont Institute of Natural Sciences.

Every day I post cute owls like this guy at !superbowl@lemmy.world for you to enjoy. You can come for just the pics, or I've also started posting some in depth writing about owls, packed with tons of info and detailed photos so you can learn how owls get their stealth, night vision, extreme flexibility, super hearing, and many other amazing powers you may not have known about.

I've also been posting places in every US state where you can go to see owls in person, and for everyone else, I sprinkle in owls from around the world, aaaaand I even started a while back posting things in metric measurements also so you know what the heck I'm talking about!

If I haven't won you over yet, here's some baby pics of Decatur!

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Thumbnail photo by Alex Merritt

I provide most of the content for !superbowl@lemmy.world, which is sadly defederated, but I wanted to share this with Beehaw as well. It's usually all positive things I post, but as it seems Canada is willing to let animals go extinct without lifting a finger, I wanted to spread the word.

Guardian Article

Canadian cabinet ministers have rejected a plea by the country’s environment minister to save an endangered owl, casting doubt on the species’ survival in the coming years.

I try to keep things positive here, but I felt this was important to share. Since January, British Columbia had been required to take emergency action to protect the last wild spotted owl and it's habitat, but they have not only ignored that, they have continued destroying the forest in which it lives.

“How is the fact there is only one wild-born spotted owl left in Canada not the definition of an emergency?” said Wilderness Committee Protected Areas Campaigner Joe Foy. “Minister Guilbeault found in January there was an imminent threat to the owl’s recovery due to the B.C. government’s logging authorizations, and yet B.C. has continued unabated logging of the owl’s home throughout the spring and summer. How does the federal cabinet just say ‘no problem’ to that?”

Quote from Wilderness Committee announcement

Previous efforts to reintroduce the owl have failed, with most of the new owls dying. Spotted Owls are a less aggressive species and can be driven out or killed by Great Horned Owls or Barred Owls. Like most owls, they require old growth trees (about 200 years old) to provide nesting areas, as they cannot make their own nesting cavities. They are also non-migratory, so they don't have anywhere to go and are butt very adaptable to different environments like some other species.

There are still Spotted Owls asking the US West Coast, but they are in similar trouble with owl populations falling dramatically. In addition to the Spotted Owls being killed by habitat loss and other owls, programs have been established to kill the Barred Owls that have been taking over the habits, so 2 species are suffering as a result.

Here is a final article about Ethics and Environment explaining the role old growth forests play in the owl life cycle and the need to preserve all species of life.

What kind of society would trade the magnificence of these virgin forests and the splendor of the life that inhabits them -- owl, elk, bald eagles, and mountain goats -- for paper cups and two-by-fours? To allow such a tradeoff is equivalent to destroying a great work of art that has taken centuries to create, and that will be a source of rich experience for generations of hikers, backpackers, bird-watchers, and millions of others seeking a natural world away from our teeming concrete cities.

All three articles are worth a read. Please make sure you keep these things in mind when you have a chance to vote for change and to hold these people accountable.

[-] anon6789@beehaw.org 11 points 1 year ago

Being able to max my HSA contributions was one of my signs that I finally "made it" in my career. The advantages of HSAs are great for those that don't need to use them. Same with the required high deductible health plan itself.

Now my job is going away next month, and guess what does me no good then? No health plan, and I can't contribute that money to the HSA, not that I'll be getting any money. When I'll need protection most, it's not there. If the solution is to help everyone, universal healthcare is the only way to do it.

[-] anon6789@beehaw.org 18 points 1 year ago

This is the kind of service government should provide. Would you go to a restaurant where they make you calculate your own bill, and if you calculate sales tax wrong, you get penalized? It's up to the service provider to say how much you owe.

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submitted 1 year ago by anon6789@beehaw.org to c/anime@lemmy.ml

Was glad last weekend to see a few of us get talking last weekend in the One Piece thread. Lemmy is way too dead when it comes to anime and manga talk. So let's see what we need to be talking about.

What have you been watching, what is it, and why do you think it's worth watching?

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submitted 1 year ago by anon6789@beehaw.org to c/science@beehaw.org

In New Zealand, the return of wild takahē populations marks a cautiously celebrated conservation victory, and the return of one of the world’s rarest creatures. The birds had been formally declared extinct in 1898, their already-reduced population devastated by the arrival of European settlers’ animal companions: stoats, cats, ferrets and rats. After their rediscovery in 1948, their numbers are now at about 500, growing at about 8% a year.

[-] anon6789@beehaw.org 13 points 1 year ago

I feel this is one of those things that is the end of an era. The Price is Right with Bob Barker always reminds me of afternoons at my grandparents' house, and I'm sure it does for a lot of people in my age bracket. He also seemed to be a genuinely nice person. It was always good to hear her was still alive and doing things, and it helped keep that little slice of childhood alive.

[-] anon6789@beehaw.org 20 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I'm glad to see research into this. Sand for concrete is a specific type of sand (nice and bumpy so it likes to lock together like a jigsaw puzzle) and people get killed by what are basically sand cartels. This was the "legitimate" mob business in the last season of Barry.

Portland cement is about 2/5 sand, so we'll need to start drinking more coffee! I was glad to see they're testing other organic matter since coffee is very susceptible to climate change, ironically caused in a large part by cement production. Unless you believe the reader comment on the article begging people to realize climate change is a hoax...

[-] anon6789@beehaw.org 16 points 1 year ago

I wasn't familiar with Ramaswamy before, and part of me wishes that I still wasn't. That guy is a whacko even in that stage and most of them told him so, which was about the only highlight. Audience cheered waaaay too much for comfort at some if the things coming out of his mouth including being the only one to explicitly claim climate change is a hoax. The others never said if they believe in it or not, they let Ramaswamy take the attention off that.

Christie did his Trump bashing, but doesn't seem to have improved on any of his it beliefs. Mostly blamed libs for NJ problems. Did have a bit of fun when they asked him about aliens though.

Haley was, well, not a pleasant surprise, but it's amazing how a few years can really affect who is "moderate." She went for the throat regarding Putin, had a moderate, respectable for a Republican view about abortion rights, and called out China, and also a few fellow candidates for making up stuff.

Pence was about how you would expect. Got everyone to admit he did the right thing ignoring Trump on Jan 6. Otherwise nothing new from him. Still says he would support Trump as president.

Desantis did his anti woke crap and took credit for the federal aid Florida got after emergencies. Pretty much promised to make the US into Florida. Repeated a few times how he's going to serve Biden "back to his basement." He didn't get much more attention than anyone else, so no new momentum for him.

Others were pretty much a snooze other than talking about using the military on the southern border. Won't be dedicating any extra of my time to those guys. That's about all I remember. Only half paid attention through most of it, I don't swing that way, but I'll hear them out.

[-] anon6789@beehaw.org 77 points 1 year ago

Don't bury the lede! One outright called it a hoax.

“I’m the only candidate on stage who isn’t bought and paid for, so I can say this,” Ramaswamy said, though he caught some shade. “Climate change is a hoax … The reality is more people are dying of bad climate change policies than they are of actual climate change.”

[-] anon6789@beehaw.org 18 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Not that I liked him, or really thought he was too much safer in Belarus, but why did the guy think he'd just be able to chill in Russia after making his murder crazy boss look stupid?

[-] anon6789@beehaw.org 84 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

To get right to the meat of the article:

New School Foods’ process starts by creating a biopolymer gel. This homogeneous hydrogel is placed in contact with a freezing surface and the gel is directionally frozen, resulting in the formation of thousands of directionally aligned, microscopic ice crystals traveling away from the freezing source.

Once the gel is fully frozen, the ice is removed, leaving behind empty channels. These channels act as a scaffold; the channels are filled with proteins and other ingredients (color, flavors, fats) to form the muscle fibers.

This was pretty close to my guess from looking at the pic of the the raw product. It looked like if you'd flatten out a swirled soft serve ice cream cone. The lattice structure should create a nice flakey texture.

Flavor is always the hard part, but I'm not looking for 1:1 replacement there. Actual recipes can always help shape the flavor to your palette. Salmon is pretty distinct, so maybe a generic white fish may work better.

There are always negative comments about it being processed food, but I still think the ecological benefits will outweigh that. Adapting our cooking can offset the near term nutritional issues. Use less meat, real or synthetic. We might not be able to keep our current habits if we want things to improve. We can start compromising now, or sacrifice later. That's my feeling about it at least.

[-] anon6789@beehaw.org 17 points 1 year ago

Sadly not shocked by the part of the story that's in the headline. The actual surprises in the article:

1 - He's a state senator now.

2 - The person he slurred was a 13 yr old in front of their mother.

3 -

Tomczyk is quoted as saying, “I have a brother who is a gay guy, and I’ve certainly out of joking and out of spite called him a [slur] more than once.”

What a heck of a guy...

[-] anon6789@beehaw.org 14 points 1 year ago

The frustration at Hilary was that it was Saudi money, not that it was money going to the Clinton Foundation, was it not?

I'm not totally up on campaign finance law, but don't most politicians have or be long to these political lobbying organizations?

A quick search basically says the Sanders Institute works to get progressives elected, so that seems a legit use of campaign money, or am I clueless on this?

[-] anon6789@beehaw.org 15 points 1 year ago

We've been happy with the VIOFO A129 Pro. Not very expensive and good quality video on both cameras day and night. There are lots of day/night comparison videos and the VIOFO beat a lot of cameras that were much more expensive.

[-] anon6789@beehaw.org 13 points 1 year ago

I've been trying my best at getting !superbowl@lemmy.world going. It needs more activity, I can only photograph so many owls!

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anon6789

joined 1 year ago