
Day 4: #sunglare on the car. Taken before to #school. #Monday #photoadayjune #sun #class #early (Taken with instagram)
(Source: nosdrinker, via kuya-g-shock)

(Source: arizonaicedtee, via kuya-g-shock)

mrvh:
This is fucking amazing so I’m reblogging this, idgaf <3
I laughed pretty hard at this xD
That is fantastic, hahaha, I can see Doug putting this up at Youth Group.
DAAMNN LOOLL
PREACH
(Source: christina-choe, via kuya-g-shock)

Day 3: today’s #outfit for church. Taken after the #baptism. #dogtags #church #floral #sunday (Taken with instagram)

Our baby boy Peewee is sleepy. Aweee :3 (Taken with instagram)

(Source: steez-too-classy, via letmecountthewaysiloveyou)

(Source: s-a-t-a-n-i-s-t, via xnikulit)
Once again the awesome power of nature goes and produces something that looks like it couldn’t possibly be real. Last time it was the Jewel Caterpillar. Now we have the prettiest ear of corn we’ve ever seen.
This is the aptly named Glass Gem Corn. The photos are from Seeds Trust (“a 25 year-old family seed company dedicated to teaching you to save your own seeds, grow a delicious home garden and create stunning native landscapes”) who shared the following background story about this stunning vegetable:
“Seedsman Greg Schoen got the seed from Carl Barnes, a part-Cherokee man, now in his 80’s, in Oklahoma. He was Greg’s “corn-teacher”. Greg was in the process of moving last year and wanted someone else to store and protect some of his seeds. He left samples of several corn varieties, including glass gem. I grew out a small handful this past summer just to see.The rest, as they say is history. I got so excited, I posted a picture on Facebook. We have never seen anything like this. Unfortunately, we did not grow out enough to sell. Look for a small amount for sale starting in August 2011.”Of course now we can’t help but wonder if it tastes as good as it looks.
[via TYWKIWDBI and Farming and Agriculture]
(via xnikulit)
This awesome creature (yes, this really is a living thing, not a piece of candy or glass) is a Jewel Caterpillar (Acraga coa) spotted by naturalist and photographer Gerardo Aizpuru near Cancun, Mexico. No word if it tastes like a gummi worm, but we’ll let you take the first bite. Here’s Gerardo’s own description:
“Photo take in a mangrove area , found this Stoning translucent caterpillar lay on a Red Mangrove tree leaf this morning early. Just can believe there is some species like this around the world. looks like made of glass whit small red mushroom inside every pic. about 3 cm long.”The bottom image, as you might’ve surmised, shows the bright and impressively furry moth that this wicked little caterpillar eventually becomes. Transforming from one sort of awesome creature into another different, but still entirely awesome, creature? We’re seriously impressed.
(Bottom photo taken by David Brownell)
[via Geekologie]














