Animals With Stuffed Animals Of Themselves
Here are some animals hanging out with stuffed animal versions of themselves, which is clearly a thing that animals should be doing a lot more often.
Aww the pig one was so unexpected!! ^_^ <3
AWWWW THE 4TH ONE!!!
Cuuuuuuute!
(Source: toxicity-of-our-city, via fit-girl-in-the-real-world)
(Source: thetruejoys, via no-giving-up-now)
(Source: samanthaaurelio, via fit-girl-in-the-real-world)
Boston-based artist Daniel Barreto has used his skilled hand to craftily transform images of trees into enchanting dwellings for miniature creatures. The 21-year-old’s Woodhouses series is comprised of five separate images, three of which are eerily eye-catching gifs, that transport the viewer’s mind to a magical land where fairies and elves have settled in our natural forests.
Tree Dwellings by http://dbarreto.com/
Coool
Registered Nurse Mary Barkei served with the Navy Nurse Corps during World War II. She was initially stationed in the United States, but in 1944 she received orders to go overseas with Naval Mobile Hospital No. 10. While sailing to her new post, she wrote to her mother, “Never as long as I live will I forget or regret this trip. Now after nearly a year and a half of so called Navy life, I may have a chance to do what I came in for.” Her mobile hospital was located on Banika, part of the Solomon Islands.
Despite its mobility, the hospital included eighteen surgical wards, twelve medical wards and a clinical laboratory. Naval Mobile Hospital No. 10 could treat 2,000 patients at a time, and only 15 of the 10,000 patients admitted between March 1944 and June 1945 died while at the hospital. Mary returned to the United States in October 1945.
Photos:
Navy Nurse Mary Barkei working in the hospital on Banika. Gift of Mary Barkei Marler, The National WWII Museum Inc., 2000.185.
Mary’s Navy Nursing Corps cap, with the same insignia as that worn by Navy men. Gift of Mary Barkei Marler, The National WWII Museum Inc., 2000.185.
An East German soldier helping a boy cross the newly formed ‘Berlin Wall,’ 1961.
From what is known, the photograph was taken the day the emerging Wall was put up in August 1961 and the boy was found on the opposite side of the wall from his family. Despite given orders by the East German government to let no one pass, the soldier helped the boy through the barbwire. Near the exact time this photo was taken, it was said that the soldier was seen by his superior officer who immediately detached the soldier from his unit.
Concerning the fate of the soldier, most descriptions that come with photograph say that “no one knows what became of him.”
(via strive-achieve-believe)
Newest tattoo!
It’s on my left forearm. It’s a note my mom left me the night she died. Here’s a side-by-side shot of the two.
And now I’m crying.
OUCH
(via zan-dying)