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Thunderhead Fred

@thunderheadfred / thunderheadfred.tumblr.com

a multi-fandom mess blog info

Give credit to the 30-year-old who worked on this for free and offers this service for free!

I have to use adobe for uni T^T

Hopefully I wonโ€™t get used to it snd continue using auto desk sketchbook but if I do get too comfy (I hope i dont) hereโ€™s a solution! Yippee!

Okay so I hyperfixated my way through the entire BNHA anime and manga in a few weeks. I will attempt to do my usual bulletpointy Thing, without spoilers, but still be wary cuz itโ€™s probably spoilery through Chp 301 anyway

  • I kinda miss Midoriya? as heโ€™s getting increasingly sidelined in his own story, but HOLY SHIT there are so many good characters that itโ€™s hard to stay mad
  • Like
  • Hawks? Hawks. Heโ€™s fictional and Iโ€™m married. but weโ€™re dating now.
  • When Tokoyami got his new power up I literally cheered
  • Class 1A/B!! Youโ€™re doing amazing sweeties
  • MIRKO!,!,.,,,..?? GIRL
  • I love how early on in the manga, Horikoshi was like, โ€œIโ€™m not gonna do last page profiles for the villains, cuz theyโ€™re supposed to be terrifying, not relatable.โ€
  • HOWโ€™S THAT WORKING OUT MR. โ€œI WROTE A WHOLE-ASS RELATABLE VILLAINS ARCโ€ HORIKOSHI

I have never been more stressed out than when I was reading chapters 250 onwards

  • Like, Christ my dude?!? I donโ€™t want the good guys to get hurt. I donโ€™t want the bad guys to get hurt. I donโ€™t want ANYBODY TO GET HURT can we all just please take a nap Iโ€™m going to cry
  • I never cry. Shigaraki made me cry. Like, genuinely. With snot and everything.
  • Because Shigarakiโ€™s hands were exactly what I thought they were, and Iโ€™ve never been more upset to have a Narrative Prescience quirk, no No NOO NO
  • God, can I just. Hug. I need to hug?? Lemme hug him. I NEED TO HUG HIM LET ME INNNNNN
  • Dabi was also exactly who Iโ€™ve been saying he was since the summer camp arc, but that reveal was a lot more AhHAAA GOTCHA! And a lot less โ€œoh GODโ€
  • Or at least slightly less oh GODdd
  • Dabi is basically that superpowered survival-fueled mega-rage you get when you do something stupid like grab a hot pan and burn your whole hand, but like, as a Person
  • My husband was a few chapters behind me and he said, โ€œAww! I hope Twice has a happy ending. Even Hawks likes him!โ€ And I. Looked At The Wall. And Screamed Internally
  • I wanted to hate Endeavor but Endeavor is making it very hard for me to hate Endeavor.

Every character is my favorite but a few are my Most Favorite, including

  • Bakugo Character Growth Katsuki, who is secretly made of 100% triple-milled diamond-grade husband material BUT DONT TELL ANYONE because he seems closer than ever to coming to grips with his lifelong repressed crush on a shitty little nerd UGhhhHHH
  • Skinny All Might Is Really Hot Actually, Especially In Teacher Mode With A Generator-Powered Cotton Candy Machine: An Essay By Me, A Person Who Is Definitely Not Married To Exactly That Sort Of Man, No Sir
  • Hawks, my aforementioned boyfriend and the ASMR RP communityโ€™s collective comfort character (which is how I even got into the show, thanks YT recommendations????)
  • Togata Mirio, whose real quirk is Dad Jokes
  • Aizawa Sensei. Holy ShiT???
  • Shigaraki Tomura, the inevitable end game for people who think a manโ€™s hands are his sexiest feature

once again I am here

reblog to give your headache to elon musk instead

Iโ€™d just like to point out the growth in this post has mostly coincided with elonโ€™s public spiral downward and Iโ€™d like to think weโ€™re all a small part of that

bro canโ€™t think because heโ€™s just got a rager of a migraine 24/7

yes I would like to give elon musk my menstrual pain. I think he deserves it

Reblog to also give Elon Musk your menstrual pain.

we have every reason to hate big tech companies for what they have conglomerated into, but I still appreciate the wonders of technology itself

this morning while my baby was napping, I strolled around street view in Higashi Ward, Fukuoka City. scouting locations for a fanfic, and just enjoying the sights and getting to know a place I'll probably never get to visit in my lifetime

in what other fucking century

Still writing the random Hawks/reader thing. Still surprised I have any writing momentum at all.

Being a parent has necessitated a change to my writing process (if I ever had one) and it's interesting to see how that's helping rather than hindering. I can't hyper-focus; there's a nine-month-old banging on a plastic piano. I have to do writing in little blips and burps. Jot down ideas really quick on my phone, before they get eaten by real life distractions. Bigger brainstorming and writing sessions when I actually have time to sit alone. No project tunnel vision. No all-night writing sessions. It has to be paced out.

Forced... responsibility?????? In MY BRAIN??

I'm still a long way from totally functional about it, because I have decades of programming to undo. And I've felt like shiiiiiiiiit lately, physically. Chronic Fatigue is really mad about that basement project I just did, though I'm slowly but surely climbing out of the PEM trench again. In any case, progress is progress.

It's looking more and more likely that this thing will get totally finished, and then I'll have to decide whether I want to publish it or not (probably I will, because I think it's turning out to be Good, Actually). Which is so utterly opposite from my typical "reward first, work later" ADHD trigger finger approach that it's like. What planet is this?

May he plow the Lordโ€™s fields in heaven

Dave Brandt was probably the longest running no-till farmer in the state; he'd been running his land no-till since 1971. He experimented with fertilizers, cover crops, and different irrigation techniques and he'd been doing all of that for a very long time.

The guy was an institution all on his own; look at this.

  • The โ€œAโ€ profile in his soil is now 47 inches deep compared to less than 6 inches in 1971 and acts like a giant sponge for water infiltration and retention.
  • From 1971 through 1989 David used an average of 150-250 pounds of nitrogen fertilizer per acre to grow his corn crops. After adding peas and radishes as a cover crop mix, he cut his nitrogen needs in half and was able to get it down to 125 pounds per acre.
  • When he added multiple species and became more aggressive with his cover crop mixes, he was able to achieve an additional drop in applied fertility. His starter fertilizer is now just 2 lbs of N, 4 lbs of P, and 5 lbs of K. His corn crop now only requires 20-30 lbs of N throughout the entire growing season. He requires no fertility for his soybeans, relying on fertility gained solely through his cover crops. He uses only 40 lbs of 10 N โ€“ 10 P โ€“ 10 K for his small grains.
  • Ten years ago (source study published 2019) David stopped using any fungicides and insecticides. This occurred at a time when fungicide and insecticide use has increased significantly with the average commodity farmer.
  • Four years ago he stopped using any seed treatment, including neonicotinoids.
  • His cash crop yields have been increasing by an average of 5% annually for the past 5-6 years, with far less fertilizer and no fungicides, insecticides or seed treatment.
  • What started as a basic heavy clay soils when David purchased the farm in 1971 have been officially re-classified by Ohio State University soil scientists as a highly fertile silty loam soil.

I know I've said it before, but--that first point, there, about the "A" profile of his soil? Every time I think of it, I am taken aback with genuine awe.

So this is a picture of the soil horizons. The O profile/O horizon is stuff like fallen leaves, sticks, and so on, which are biodegrading into the A profile. A fair amount of soils might have no O profile at all.

If you are a gardener, the A profile is what you're concerned with most of the time; it's what we also call "topsoil." Your seeds germinate into it, and shallower plants might root into it alone without ever reaching the B profile. Worms and other small delvers live in it. It's what you're amending, what you're testing, what you're tilling, what you're trying to fill up with good microorganisms to work with your plants and provide you with food or flowers or cover.

I see this quote around sometimes, attributed to radioman Paul Harvey: Man โ€” despite his artistic pretensions, his sophistication, and his many accomplishments โ€” owes his existence to a six inch layer of topsoil and the fact that it rains.

Without the topsoil, bluntly, we starve. And there are other problems, in places with a lack of it; without the topsoil, when the rains come, the water strikes hard soil. Hard soil doesn't accept water easily, so instead it pools and runs downhill. That action makes flooding, makes flash floods, makes standing water that carries disease, it contaminates the water table. Cholera is a huge problem in places with a low A profile that receive too much water at once.

We are seeing topsoil depletion across the US. I can't speak for other countries, but the heavy-tilling agricultural habits we've adopted here have obliterated inch after inch of our topsoil; in the 1800s the average depth was fourteen inches! Today it is six. Many suburban lawns have even less. This has knock-on effects we don't even consider on the day-to-day (for instance, there's some suggestion that the lower amounts of various minerals in vegetables and fruits today in comparison with earlier decades might be because of the lower amount of minerals in the soil for the plants to take up into themselves).

And this gentleman took soil that had been that abused and not only returned it to what it had been before the aggressive, destructive European agricultural policy had its way, but trebled that earlier depth.

His land protects the land around it from flooding. His land grows plants less susceptible to disease, because of all the various stressors and pressures those plants aren't confronted with. His land almost certainly has a considerably higher concentration of microorganisms and it would follow that we'd also see greater diversity of macroorganisms thereby.

Honestly, it just takes my breath away.

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