Goat's-beard
Woodland bokeh
Happy Birthday, Fiona
Enjoying the park
How do you like my best side?
Glowing warmth
You can always count on these little guys
Pretty mix of pink and purple
One of my favourite finds from a year ago
African Blue-bellied Roller / Coracias cyanogaster
Wavy-leaved Thistle bud / Cirsium undulatum
Beauty on the tip of a petal
Creeping
Snow-covered tresses
Beauty in miniature
The joy of RED
Beautiful clash of colours
Guardian of the electricity pole : )
Little pink trumpets
What a place to call home
Fire and ice
Happy Thanksgiving, everyone!
Townsend's Solitaire
Tropical orange
Least Weasel juvenile / Mustela nivalis
Sneezeweed / Helenium
Like a conical Asian hat
When fields blossomed
Coconut Lime
Red-winged Blackbird female
1 + 1 = 2
Crystals, but not ice
Dainty pastels
Hiding in a hollow tree stump
Stripes
Fall, last year
Columbine
.
Invasiveness
Striated Iron Pyrites cube
Memories of spring
The jaws of death
Frozen
At least someone likes Goat's-beard
Vibrant
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261 visits
Gray Cracker / Hamadryas februa


I think I have the correct ID for this beautiful butterfly, seen in the ENMAX Conservatory at the Calgary Zoo last year, on 26th April 2010.
Added much later: I received this video this evening, called Mushroom Death Suit. It's about seven and a half minutes in length and presents quite a fascinating idea by a young woman. This is about creating a new hybrid mushroom that could be trained to clean toxins from dead bodies and "eat" them, thus preventing the release of so many toxins that we have in our bodies. Cremation or burial both release these toxins into the air or into the earth. Might be interesting to a few of you : )
youtu.be/MSiCSPP0ng4
"Bioartist Jae Rhim Lee has invented a flesh-eating Mushroom Death Suit.
It's exactly what it sounds like. Since 2008, Lee has been culturing mushrooms to decompose her flesh, hair, nails, and other body parts.
According to the CDC, we have 219 toxic chemicals in our bodies that end up back in the eco-system when we die no matter what we do.
So we keep polluting even after we die. If we are embalmed and buried in a conventional casket, we are part of the 827,000 gallons of embalming fluid and 90,000 tons of steel going into graveyards every year in the United States. Cremation? It still puts toxins and carbon emissions into the air. Lee claims that 5,000 lbs of mercury from dental fillings alone are released every year this way.
Even a green burial does not address the toxins in our bodies leaking into the ground.
Lee's mushroom death suit is an alternate burial system that uses mushrooms to decompose and clean toxins in our bodies. See the crocheted netting on the garment? That is embedded with mushroom spores.
She's been developing a new strain of fungus, the Infinity Mushroom, that feeds on and remediates the industrial toxins we store in our bodies, converting them efficiently into nutrients.
Jae Rhim Lee has figured out how to convert toxic corpses into clean compost! Talk about really thinking ahead! Bravo!"
--Bibi Farber
This video was produced by Ted Talks. Info taken from YouTube.
Added much later: I received this video this evening, called Mushroom Death Suit. It's about seven and a half minutes in length and presents quite a fascinating idea by a young woman. This is about creating a new hybrid mushroom that could be trained to clean toxins from dead bodies and "eat" them, thus preventing the release of so many toxins that we have in our bodies. Cremation or burial both release these toxins into the air or into the earth. Might be interesting to a few of you : )
youtu.be/MSiCSPP0ng4
"Bioartist Jae Rhim Lee has invented a flesh-eating Mushroom Death Suit.
It's exactly what it sounds like. Since 2008, Lee has been culturing mushrooms to decompose her flesh, hair, nails, and other body parts.
According to the CDC, we have 219 toxic chemicals in our bodies that end up back in the eco-system when we die no matter what we do.
So we keep polluting even after we die. If we are embalmed and buried in a conventional casket, we are part of the 827,000 gallons of embalming fluid and 90,000 tons of steel going into graveyards every year in the United States. Cremation? It still puts toxins and carbon emissions into the air. Lee claims that 5,000 lbs of mercury from dental fillings alone are released every year this way.
Even a green burial does not address the toxins in our bodies leaking into the ground.
Lee's mushroom death suit is an alternate burial system that uses mushrooms to decompose and clean toxins in our bodies. See the crocheted netting on the garment? That is embedded with mushroom spores.
She's been developing a new strain of fungus, the Infinity Mushroom, that feeds on and remediates the industrial toxins we store in our bodies, converting them efficiently into nutrients.
Jae Rhim Lee has figured out how to convert toxic corpses into clean compost! Talk about really thinking ahead! Bravo!"
--Bibi Farber
This video was produced by Ted Talks. Info taken from YouTube.
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