Kaleidoscope Eyes

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World of Color! 😍 #fuckyes #beautiful #disneyland  (at Disney California Adventure Park)
100leaguesunderthesea:

The Great Escape by Jim Ward

asailingsailor:

novamist:

visionarywateringhole:

highlyscandalised:

follow-them00n:

I love this !

My baby is all grown up now!!! UNF! ;-) 😉😜

It’s going down tonight!!!

Sex god. I swear he looks just as fine in both!

I AM SEEING IT THIS SATURDAY AND I AM SO EXCITEDDDDDDD

(Source: bookjunkie26, via vannielaughs)

ravenzoe:

aros:

Breuer/Lundberg Cabin. LUNDBERG DESIGN 

livestock tank pool. 25-feet diameter and 14-feet deep.

aw man 

(via kneeeeej)

That moment of fear and excitement when the wave is approaching..

"The planet does not need more successful people. The planet desperately needs more peacemakers, healers, restorers, storytellers and lovers of all kind."

- Dalai Lama (via gpyouthid)

(via lighthouze)

(Source: sirensonthewater, via ayoosizzo)

rhamphotheca:


An unidentified species of red jellyfish, Northwest Hawaiian Islands, September, 2004.
Photographer: Dr. Dwayne Meadows, NOAA/NMFS/OPR.

climateadaptation:

From Michael Marten’s series, Sea Change, which explores rising sea levels from regular tides and also climate change. His statement:

‘Sea Change’ is a study of the tides round the coast of Britain. The views in each diptych are taken from identical positions at low tide and high tide, usually 6 or 18 hours apart.

I am interested in showing how landscape changes over time through natural processes and cycles. The camera that observes low and high tide side by side enables us to observe simultaneously two moments in time, two states of nature.

Recent landscape photography often focuses on human shaping (and reshaping) of the environment - urbanisation, globalisation, pollution. Even when critical and committed, this approach can emphasise, even glamorise, humankind’s power over nature. I’m interested in rediscovering nature’s own powers: the elemental forces and processes that underlie and shape the planet.

The tides are one of these great natural cycles. I hope these photographs will stimulate people’s awareness of natural change, of landscape as dynamic process rather than static image. Attending to earth’s rhythms can help us to reconnect with the fundamentals of our planet, which we ignore at our peril.

‘Sea Change’ also comments on climate change. The tide floods in and quickly recedes again, but rising sea levels will flood our shores and not recede for thousands or millions of years. Many of the views in these pictures may have disappeared in 100 years’ time.

— Michael Marten

Lens Culture

💛💙💜💚❤ #crayon #art #ucsc #pride
h4te:

Cute
mmollieee:

love these

(Source: vvolare, via stephanieqle)