Radio Blue Heart is on the air!

vintagewoc:

Meiko Kaji in Lady Snowblood (1973)

nadia-xing:

somecutething:

I love this so much

earthstory:

bertiegregory

A huge male jaguar pulling a caiman out of the water up a slippery, muddy river bank in the northern Pantanal, Brazil. This jaguar demonstrated the meaning of the term power dragging this 8ft long, armour plated, 74 toothed, chunk of contracting muscle out of the water and into the bushes

kylo-renne:

🎃 Horror Movie Asks 🎃

🔪 Favorite Slasher film

😱 Scene that always terrifies you

🙌 Favorite Horror film director?

🗣 Favorite Cult Classic horror?

👀 2 sequels that were better than the original

😕 Movie that scares everyone else that you’re not afraid of

😰 First ‘scary’ movie you saw as a kid

📺 That one really bad horror movie that you love to watch

💉 Most fucked up horror film you’ve seen

👻 What scary movie you’ll be watching this Halloween?

📖 Best book to movie horror

😒 Most annoying character in a scary movie

👌 Your most underrated horror film

😂 Unintentionally funniest horror film

⚰️ Best death scene

🤢 Grossest horror movie

💀 Favorite Zombie film

👽 Favorite Sci-Fi Horror

😡 The sequel/prequel that pisses you off

🎵 Scariest Soundtrack

10 Organic Ways to Control Pests in the Garden

butchcommunist:

The video starts off with the guy trying some silly tests put forth by YouTubers to find the “best” kibble, then performing his own tests. His test of dragging bags to see which is most durable is pretty dumb imo, BUT he does provide a really valuable metric for judging how MUCH of what is in your dog’s food, called the salt test, which he starts explaining around 6:38. I also think he exaggerates the likelihood of getting excessively high amounts of vitamins in dog foods from accidents in plants, since the same could be said of literally any ingredient involved in the process of making the kibble.


Dog foods, by law, cannot contain more than 1% salt, and ingredients lists are listed from most prominent ingredient to least prominent ingredient. This means that, if an ingredient comes after salt on the list, no matter how prominently it is featured on the label or in marketing material, we know that the kibble is made up of less than 1% that ingredient. The salt test thing helped me evaluate the CLAIMS of different brands of dog foods that they contain cranberries or blueberries in meaningful measure. I did not decide to go with a brand in this video but the salt test helped me pick out a brand of kibble that ACTUALLY contained substantial amounts of real meat, potatoes, sweet potatoes, cranberries, salmon, etc.


Personally my research has led me to the conclusions 1) that raw food diets are perfectly fine except for the risk of food poisoning from E. Coli, salmonella, etc, and 2) that many kibbles have a lot of vitamins added because the cooking process can remove so much nutrient content from the kibble ingredients. I have reasoned based on these two factors that I’d like to go with a diet of quality kibble supplemented with fresh veggies, fruits, cooked meats, etc, since I would just prefer not to have to constantly cook meat for my dog and do not want to risk food poisoning my dog either.