@Intofurler@Sia Quarter of a century 👏🏻 Wow! So indicative of her roots as an artist ughhh has a special spot in my heart aye. It has aged well for a vintage of that time, if I do say so myself 😍👌🏻
@Intofurler@Lebosweave The other one has perspective tho, like they’re lording over him, like it’s always right there over his shoulder 😂😭 it’s just so deep man. Really 😘👌
Sia sharing fries with the photographer, circa 2008
“She could order anything she wanted off of the hollywood roosevelt room service but she just wanted to share some old fries with me.”
“When I brought her over the fancy rack of couture clothing from runway she asked "do I have to wear it or can I wear what I came in with, or how about I wear the flannel ur wearing?"
I took my flannel off with out hesitation The next year she started wearing wigs it helped her to gain the confidence to give us the confidence without hesitation, for two reasons # 1 they were advertisers so i still get them in the shot and # 2 it was so cool and it felt like a test by an angel. So cheers to swinging like a chandelier.”
@Intofurler They probably need confirmation first just incase the person can’t accept or something and they have to draw again XD anyone heard anything??
We protect 100-year-old buildings as historic treasures, then cut down 500-year-old trees for furniture. That's insane.
An old-growth tree isn't just some big tree. It is a living carbon bank, seed source, cooling system, water filter, fungal network, bird nursery, insect factory, and archive of centuries of weather, fire, drought, and survival.
The older it gets, the more jobs it does. Big old trees store enormous amounts of carbon, and research has found they can keep adding carbon faster as they grow larger. Some ancient trees add more carbon in a single year than an entire mid-sized tree contains.
They also make habitat younger trees can't cough up. Cavities for owls and bats. Broken limbs for nesting birds. Dead wood for beetles and fungi. Mossy bark for lichens and invertebrates. Cool, damp microclimates for salamanders and seedlings. Fallen logs that feed the soil for decades.
A thousand-year-old tree is not 'renewable' in any meaningful human timeframe. Cut it down for furniture, flooring, paper, or profit, and the ecosystem it carried does not come back when someone plants a replacement seedling.
We already protect old churches, courthouses, barns, bridges, and battlefields because they connect us to the past. Old-growth trees do that too.
Ever noticed your windscreen is spotless after a long motorway journey? It’s not better aerodynamics—it’s the "windscreen effect". Since 1996, flying insect populations have plummeted by 75%+. A terrifyingly quiet indicator of biodiversity loss and ecosystem collapse. 🐛📉