Dijk

42.1K posts

Dijk

Dijk

@JiscaDijk

Natuurlijk tuinieren met oog voor het kleine spul - wordt blij van wantsen en paddenstoelen :-)

Twente Katılım Aralık 2016
194 Takip Edilen593 Takipçiler
Dijk
Dijk@JiscaDijk·
@rebZeb01 read about it: it's a sad story ....
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den opprørske sebraen (🦓)
@JiscaDijk Majestic animals combined with great music. 🎶 I’m afraid there’s no hope for the little humpback whale in the Baltic Sea. 😔
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Dijk
Dijk@JiscaDijk·
@RKS1231740 🖤 that surely lights my fire 🖤
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just a crow
just a crow@RandomHFXGuyAlt·
@RKS1231740 raven! i'm back! ad I brought poutine from Canada. I'm addicted to this
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Raven
Raven@RKS1231740·
Bought my bones ?
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Raven
Raven@RKS1231740·
You know who is whom..
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Steve Parsons 💙
Steve Parsons 💙@StevePa46290725·
Death awaits the unwary pollinator ! A Green Crab Spider (Diaea dorsata) lurking among the Blackthorn flowers. #spider
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den opprørske sebraen (🦓)
Wordle 1.746 4/6 🟩⬛🟩⬛⬛ 🟩⬛🟩⬛🟩 🟩⬛🟩🟩🟩 🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩 Good morning.
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Wouter van Bernebeek
Wouter van Bernebeek@StormchaserNL·
⛈️ Afgelopen dagen konden we mooie buienluchten zien boven ons hoofd! De zon wordt krachtiger, de temperatuur loopt overdag sneller op en buien krijgen daardoor langzaam meer power. Het 'warme' seizoen komt dichterbij...
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Manx Loaghtan
Manx Loaghtan@MLProduce·
Not sure what a psychiatrist would make of a hen that sleeps with the sheep! This is Hettie who has joined me for lambing for the third year running, adore this hen, she is brilliant company on night shifts #specialhen #lambing #isleofman
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Raven
Raven@RKS1231740·
🥸
Mr PitBull@MrPitbull07

When a crow finds another crow lying lifeless, it often does not just fly away. It calls out. Other crows gather. They become alert. They watch the area carefully. Scientists have studied this behavior, sometimes called a “crow funeral,” and what they’ve found is striking. The crows do not appear to gather out of sentimentality in the human sense. They gather to learn. They look for danger. They try to understand what happened. And if they identify a threat, they remember it. Crows are highly intelligent. They can recognize faces, remember risks, and warn others. So when they gather around a fallen crow, they may be doing something deeply adaptive: turning loss into awareness, and awareness into protection. There is something important in that. Many humans are taught to look away from what is painful. To avoid it. To numb themselves. But crows do something else. They pay attention. They investigate. They learn together. That is a form of intelligence. Not just mental intelligence, but social intelligence. The kind that understands survival is not only about individual strength, but about shared awareness. About noticing danger. About communicating it. About helping the group become wiser because one life was lost. Maybe that is part of what emotional intelligence really is too. Not collapsing in the face of pain. Not ignoring it. But staying present enough to learn from it, and caring enough to make that knowledge useful to others. A fallen crow does not go unnoticed. The others gather. They pay attention. And they carry the lesson forward.

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Dijk
Dijk@JiscaDijk·
@DWesthawk Yes! Caught: you're on camera
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