Lyndara

934 posts

Lyndara

Lyndara

@Lyndara5

Living the dream

Katılım Ekim 2019
812 Takip Edilen96 Takipçiler
Lyndara retweetledi
Science girl
Science girl@sciencegirl·
Horns of the Watusi cattle
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Sally Urwin
Sally Urwin@PintSizedFarmer·
Sock the lamb has Big Opinions and his ideal day involves: Midnight yelling because he wants to get on our bed. Harassing the cat. Trying to head butt the cat. Getting zoomies around the cat who by this point is shouting "what the actual fuck?!" Why are we now living with a deranged woolly muppet?" from the top of the bedroom curtains. Playing with his bottle teat so it explodes and soaks his face, the duvet and me with tepid milk Being thoroughly licked clean by foster mum Sizzle the dog Intent focus on munching through some important paperwork he's found on the coffee table. Constant peeing. Everywhere. Normal nappies don't work as he has boy sheep anatomy. Unhinged screaming during an important Teams meeting as he wants to be picked up and cuddled. Suddenly falling asleep (with his eyes open) so it looks like he's died and I have a heart attack... More to follow...
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Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
How do painkillers know where the pain is? [🎞️ thebrainmaze]
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Sally Urwin
Sally Urwin@PintSizedFarmer·
When Neep isn't planning his escape plans, he's practising his #heatedrivalry pole dancing in front of boyfriend Broccoli. (Check out how unimpressed Thrusty Clappernut's is in the background)
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Sama Hoole
Sama Hoole@SamaHoole·
Six AM on a small mixed farm in Cumbria. Lights on in the kitchen. Kettle on. The radio is on the agricultural forecast, which is the only weather forecast that bothers with the difference between the upper fells and the valleys, because the difference matters to the people listening. Six fifteen. Out the door. The dog is already outside, has been outside since five, has been outside in worse than this and will be outside in worse again, because she is a working collie and that is what working collies do. Six twenty-two. The first ewe is found. She is in the wrong place. She is moved to the right place. The right place is forty metres away. This takes ten minutes because she has opinions. Six thirty-eight. The water is iced over in the lower trough. The trough is broken open with the heel of a boot. The boot is not waterproof in the way it once was. Six fifty. Hay is taken to the in-bye. The in-bye is the field nearest the house, where the older ewes spend the worst weather. The hay was made in July, on the same farm, in a window of three days that nobody wrote down at the time but that turned out to be the only window that month. Seven o seven. The lambs in the shed are checked. Two have been pulled overnight. Both alive. Both with mothers. Both fed. The notes are written on a chalkboard above the pen because the notebook got wet on Tuesday and has not yet recovered. Seven thirty-one. Back in the kitchen. Tea, toast, butter from the dairy down the lane. The toast takes two minutes. The morning has taken an hour and a half. This is one farmer. This is one morning. This morning has happened, in some version, on every working farm in Britain, every day, for the entirety of agricultural history. It does not show up in the documentary. It does not show up in the supermarket marketing. It does not show up in the dietary guideline. It does not show up in the parliamentary report. It shows up in the lamb on the plate, the milk in the bottle, the cheese on the board, the wool in the carpet, the leather on the chair, the field that is still a field rather than a housing estate. Seven thirty-one is when most of the country wakes up. The farmer has been working for an hour and a half by then. The radio is still on.
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Lyndara
Lyndara@Lyndara5·
@Nickisbackbaby Esther. She put her life on the line to save her people. There was no guarantee that she would survive the approach to the king yet she went in faith
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🎯Joke Prophet🎯
🎯Joke Prophet🎯@Nickisbackbaby·
What person in the Bible other than Jesus do you connect with the most? Maybe you have been through similar trials or experiences. Maybe you are just drawn to that person.
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Everett Occhipinti
Everett Occhipinti@WxEverett·
One week ago - Enid, OK EF4. Marks the strongest daytime tornado I've ever witnessed.
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Sama Hoole
Sama Hoole@SamaHoole·
On the second Sunday of April, a couple from Birmingham walked the footpath that crosses Brian's fell. Their dog, a young border collie named Otis, was off the lead. There were sheep in the field. Otis went after the sheep. The owners called Otis. Otis did not return. Otis was, in dog terms, six months into a lifelong relationship with sheep that had, until that moment, consisted entirely of seeing them on television. Otis chased a small group of younger ewes for approximately eighty metres, which is, in Otis's own assessment, a successful afternoon. Doris, who was on the section above the wall, observed this. Doris did not run. Doris walked, deliberately, at a measured pace, to a position approximately fifteen metres from where Otis was, by then, pursuing the younger ewes in a circle. Doris stopped. Doris looked at Otis. Otis stopped. There is, in the literature on livestock guarding behaviour, a phenomenon known as the calm interdiction. It does not require aggression. It does not require display. It requires only a confident, settled animal placing itself in the path of the disturbance and refusing, with absolute mildness, to be impressed. Otis, who had, until that moment, been having the best afternoon of his short life, was suddenly looking at a Texel ewe who was not running. The category had broken. Otis sat down. The owners reached Otis approximately two minutes later. Otis was on the lead by then. The owners apologised, profusely, to Brian, who had walked up from the gate at a measured pace and was holding his stick in the way that people who have not been to agricultural college nevertheless know how to hold sticks. Brian: "You'll need to keep him on the lead from now on." Owner: "Yes. Of course. We're so sorry. We didn't think." Brian: "Most don't." He could have said more. The law gives him the right to shoot a dog worrying livestock. The literature on stress-induced lambing failure is extensive. The young ewes, by the time Brian reached them, were panting hard enough that Brian made a mental note to check them again in the morning, and to tell the apprentice to do the same. He didn't say any of this. He said: "Have a nice walk." He went back down to the gate. Doris, by then, was already grazing again. The young ewes recovered. The lambing in autumn was unaffected. British footpaths cross approximately 140,000 miles of farmland. They have done so since some of them were carved by mediaeval cattle. The system depends on dogs being on leads near livestock, on walkers closing gates, on the basic countryside code that takes about four minutes to read and is, somehow, still not being read. Doris has not read it either. Doris does not need to. Doris simply stops, and looks, and the dog stops with her, and the system holds for one more afternoon. It would be nicer if it didn't have to.
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🎯Joke Prophet🎯
🎯Joke Prophet🎯@Nickisbackbaby·
I'm guessing if you follow me you're: 35+ Christian or spiritual Conservative Unvaccinated (or regret taking them) Reject climate hysteria Patriotic Against illegal immigration Sick of pop culture Think every pre-born has a right to life! How did I do?
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Sama Hoole
Sama Hoole@SamaHoole·
The most committed carnivores I know are all ex-vegans. They did the experiment. Five years, ten years, fifteen years on the diet, watching the symptoms accumulate: the brittle nails, the thinning hair, the periods that stopped, the libido that vanished, the fatigue that no amount of B12 supplementation would fix, the anxiety that crept in like fog and never quite left. They ate the steak in desperation, expecting nothing. They felt different inside an hour. They felt like themselves inside a week. They were back inside a month. They spent the next six months processing what had happened to them, what they had been told, who had told them, and what those people had to gain. By the time they emerge from the recovery, they are unshakeable. They have done both sides of the experiment in their own body and the data is undeniable. You cannot persuade them with a study. They have something better than a study. They have the contrast. Every vegan who has ever eaten a piece of meat after years off it is a future carnivore. They just do not know it yet.
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Weapon 𝕏
Weapon 𝕏@HellRaz0r1776·
Well, I’ll be darned…
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Buitengebieden
Buitengebieden@buitengebieden·
The way he’s walking.. 😅
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GodlyAction
GodlyAction@GodlyAction·
Pope: “All religions are paths to God.” Jesus: “I am the only path to God.”
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TRASH PANDA
TRASH PANDA@timbosaucer·
BREAKING NEWS!! It has been announced that we have 26,112 signatures for Alberta referendum that have been counted for the areas of Innisfail, Sylvan Lake, Rocky Mountain House, Rimbey and Sundre. Let’s break this down shall we? 😁👌 Around 40,000 populations altogether between those five areas (give or take). Using the most recent Alberta dashboard figures for 2025. And out of 40,000 about 28,000 are eligible voters across those five towns according to Grok. Broken down: Sylvan Lake has around 12,400, Innisfail about 6,400, and the other three together roughly 9,000. That’s from the most recent municipal election numbers That’s roughly 26,112 out of a voting population of roughly 28,000.. That’s about 92.9% eligible voters signed the petition on those five towns alone which is an extremely high number for any referendum. This further verifies that we are NOT the “fringe” we are in fact the super majority, I understand these are rough estimates, give or take 10% but now that we know how much support was gathered in a few small rural towns, I cannot wait to see how many were gathered for the rest of Alberta!! Exciting times ahead. ALBERTA STRONG AND FREE!! 👍
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Sama Hoole
Sama Hoole@SamaHoole·
Let's talk about how long it takes the medical establishment to admit it was catastrophically wrong. 1950s: Doctors recommend smoking to pregnant women. "Calms the nerves." Magazine adverts featured obstetricians lighting up patients in waiting rooms. Time until reversed: 25 years. 1960s: Thalidomide prescribed for morning sickness. Ten thousand children born with malformed limbs across forty-six countries. The drug was on the market for five years. The United States narrowly avoided approval thanks to one FDA reviewer, Frances Kelsey, who was harassed by the manufacturer for refusing to rubber-stamp it. She received a Presidential Medal afterwards. The men who pressured her did not lose their jobs. Time until reversed: 5 years. 10,000 affected children. 1970s: DES prescribed to prevent miscarriage. Causes a rare vaginal cancer in the daughters of women who took it, sometimes appearing twenty years later. Time until reversed: 30 years. 1980s: Margarine officially recommended over butter. Trans fats turn out to cause the exact heart disease they were marketed as preventing. Harvard researchers later estimated up to 250,000 excess American deaths from industrial trans fats before the FDA finally moved against them in 2018. Time until banned: 30 years after the harm was published. 2000s: Vioxx approved for arthritis. The internal Merck documents showing cardiac risk existed before approval. They hid them. Time until withdrawn: 5 years. 60,000 dead. 2010s: Opioids prescribed like sweets. "Less than 1% addictive when properly prescribed," cited endlessly from a 1980 letter to the editor of the New England Journal of Medicine. The letter was 101 words long, observed hospitalised patients on short-term doses, and was not a study. It was cited over six hundred times to justify giving OxyContin to people with back pain for the rest of their lives. Time until reversed: 20 years and counting. Half a million dead. The pattern is mechanical. The establishment recommends something. The evidence of harm emerges. The establishment ignores it. Years pass. The harm becomes undeniable. The guidance is quietly updated "based on emerging data." Nobody is held responsible. Nobody apologises. The next mistake is already in development in an adjacent department. So when modern doctors tell you, with the full confidence of the institution behind them: "Seed oils are heart healthy." "Statins for everyone over fifty." "Saturated fat causes heart disease." "Cholesterol is the enemy." Remember that they have been catastrophically, generationally, lethally wrong before. While charging consultation fees the entire way through. The question worth asking isn't whether they're right this time. The question is what their track record predicts. History gives you a fairly clear answer.
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