“Back in my day..” he says, about hunting things like moving fungus, as though that’s supposed to be normal.
In 1981, Japan’s last five living toki were removed from a wild that had become too dangerous for them.
Two hundred years ago, the wetlands of Japan rustled with pink-tinged feathers. Tall, pale birds stepped carefully through reeds and iris, hunting small fish, crabs, and frogs.
Nipponia nippon, it would be dubbed by the national ornithological society, a bird emblematic of its country. The Crested Ibis. The Toki. The Peach Flower Bird.
Marshes slowly changed to rice fields, with farmers who resented the toki for ruining crops; to kill the birds was outlawed, so children chased them from the fields, singing warnings.
The doors of the country were pried open. Laws changed. Farmers bought their first guns, their sights set on birds who were no longer protected. The toki, the red-crowned crane, and many others began to suffer. But the worst was yet to come.
Pesticides are indiscriminate killers. The poison sprayed to kill a beetle can travel up the foodchain, toppling a cascade of larger animals, or affecting their ability to reproduce. It was reckless pesticide use that nearly wiped out the Bald Eagle. In the rice fields, the peach-flower-bird had little chance.
In 1981, Japan’s last five living toki were removed from a wild that had become too dangerous for them.
I tell a lot of sad stories here, about mistakes we’ve made and animals we’ve lost. This isn’t one of those. This is a story about one of those precious times when we were able to fix the things we’d broken.
A joint effort between Japan & China, and the discovery of seven more birds in that country, led to a successful breeding program, which in 2008 saw the first ibises fly free again in Japan. Today, at least 5000 toki exist in the world.
The last wild-born toki, one of those captured in 1981, lived almost long enough to see her species’ return. Reaching the equivalent age of a centenarian human, she died in 2003—not of old age, but injury after throwing herself against her cage door.
Her name was ‘Kin’. ‘Gold’.
Mended things can never be as whole as they once were. There will always be cracks that show, weak spots that remain vulnerable. Yet, like the shining seams of a kintsugi piece, these scars speak an important truth: here is a thing that someone chose to save; handle with care.
The title of this painting is ‘Restoration’. It is gouache on 22x30 inch watercolor paper
I tell a lot of sad stories here, about mistakes we’ve made and animals we’ve lost. This isn’t one of those. This is a story about one of those precious times when we were able to fix the things we’d broken.
A joint effort between Japan & China, and the discovery of seven more birds in that country, led to a successful breeding program, which in 2008 saw the first ibises fly free again in Japan. Today, at least 5000 toki exist in the world.
The last wild-born toki, one of those captured in 1981, lived almost long enough to see her species’ return. Reaching the equivalent age of a centenarian human, she died in 2003
#fucking DECADES of 'it's not gay what are you talking about'#and four straight years of 'okay maybe it comes off as gay but i can't make it gay because that would be disrespectful to terry'#and now 'it was always gay and terry and i always intended it that way'#funniest celebrity ever#why do you care about tumblr clout man it does not matter#just admit you saw dollar signs like we all know you did#even if you don't want admit that say some shit like the outpouring of love from fans and the different readings you've seen#made you see it in a different light#instead of THEE most obvious lie ever bc you want the people in your askbox to think you're cool (via @npdclaraoswald)
For the last two decades ‘we are a Judeo-Christian society’ has been used by western Christians and atheists who absolutely do not give a fuck about Judaism, to say ‘there is no place for Muslims in our society’ without saying the bigoted part out loud. It’s interesting to see how easily it gets wielded as an anti-China thing now.
Is that why the first thing these drones do to most efficiently accomplish their mission without issue is to disable their control systems/kill their handler?
I just can't uncouple this headline from that fact.
I’m getting to the end of my rope and it’s only been a year (possibly plus five months if they started counting from there).
I just want some T and less tits.