frawgs:

man listen…… i just want to decorate my house with th love of my life 


Australia
The Shins 5128

notamusicsnob:

You’ve been alone since you were twenty-one

You haven’t laughed since January

You try and make like this is so much fun

But we know you to be quite contrary


The world is gonna find me out someday
The devil’s gonna sell me out halfway
I got something to cry about always
They’re stealin’ souls from lost and found without pay
If I ask real nice, you’ll let me be on top


Complicated Creation
Cloud Cult 3376

shines-like-phosphorus:

You know you are as small as the things you let annoy you
And you know you are gigantic as the things that you adore
Some days you give thanks
Some days you give the finger
It’s a complicated creation


silverhawk:

ugh this picture of a snake peeking around a doorway is my fave this snake just looks so nice 

image


winslowdraws:

eye see you




aimmyarrowshigh:

Jade and striped icebergs. “When seawater at depths of more than 1,200 feet freezes to the underside of massive ice shelves like East Antarctica’s Amery Ice Shelf, it forms ‘marine ice.’ Enormous hunks of ice calve—or break off—from the ice shelf, creating icebergs. When one of these icebergs overturns, its jade underside is revealed. The wondrous color of this ‘marine ice’ results from organic matter dissolved in the seawater at those great depths,” explained Audubon Magazine. “Green icebergs are infrequently seen because their verdant bellies are underwater; it’s only when they flip over, a rare event, that their richly colored regions can be seen before they melt. Striped icebergs, perhaps even more scarce than jade bergs, are thought to form in one of two ways: either meltwater refreezes in crevasses formed atop glaciers before they calve icebergs (creating blue stripes), or seawater freezes inside cracks beneath ice shelves (creating green stripes).”

Photo #14 by Steve Nicol via Australian Antarctic Division



lauraholliis