@MelisaOngMiQin0@WayForward Shout out to my father as I took this at his home. He recently bought these purple flowers and that is where the idea came from.
Sonic Adventure 2 Redux is out! A remake of Sonic Adventure 2 in Demo 3 status (a ton of playable game) and wow is it impressive. What SEGA won't give us fans do (vid in reply) #gaming#gamingnews#sega#retrogames#SonicTheHedeghog
Actual Burning of Alexandria moment.
This will also lead to thousands of plugins and scripts being permanently lost.
This will directly lead to RPG Maker games becoming worse and less interesting, and the software harder to use and less feature-rich.
We are so back! 🍃 Who is excited about The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time remake that was announced on today’s Nintendo Direct? I know I am 🙂↕️
#zelda#ocarinaoftime
One milkweed plant, blazing star, or sunflower alone in your yard isn't all that attractive to a bee. Planting a bunch of them together is like a flashing billboard.
Bees don't wander flower to flower at random. They forage with what's called flower constancy, working one kind of bloom at a time, because it's more efficient to handle the same shape over and over than to relearn a new one every few seconds.
A single scattered plant barely registers. A solid block of the same flower is easy to spot from the air and fast to work once they arrive, so they stay, and they come back.
This is why pollinator gardeners often get better results by planting several individuals of the same species together rather than scattering them individually throughout the landscape. The Xerces Society puts the target at clumps of a single kind at least three to four feet across.
So at the nursery, resist the urge to buy one of everything. Buy three of fewer things, and plant them together.
We have started rolling out an update for Shantae Advance: Risky Revolution across all platforms! It adds Japanese, Chinese, and Korean language support and addresses several minor bugs. It also adds single Joy-Con support to the Switch version for Battle Mode!
A poisoned rat doesn't die fast. It goes slowly and painfully.
It clumsily wanders out in the open for a day or two, which makes it the easiest meal around for the owl, the hawk, the fox, or the snake that was already hunting your rodents for free.
They eat the dying rat and swallow the poison with it. Then it builds up in them.
The numbers are grim. At one Massachusetts wildlife clinic, 100% of the red-tailed hawks tested carried anticoagulant rat poison in their bodies.
In California, testing found it in 69% of endangered San Joaquin kit foxes. These second-generation poisons linger in tissue and pass from one animal to the next, killing by slow internal bleeding.
So you poison the rats, and you poison the exact predators that keep rats in check. The yard ends up with more rodents, not fewer.
Skip the bait. Seal the gaps where they get in, cut off their food, and use snap traps if you need them, indoors and away from kids and pets.
Then let the hawks and foxes handle the rest.