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A 15-year-old Newport Beach teen is being praised after jumping into a harbor near Balboa Island to rescue a dog that was struggling in the water.
π9β€2
This has been #UndergroundWarReport for 06/19/2026
GODSPEED subterranean troops π© βοΈ π¦
Keep Preparing For You Are Dealing With Unfathomable EVIL!!!!!!
Godspeed Subterranean Troops
And to All The Wizards in the field + Support Roles.
Godspeed To Legacy Space Force Guardians.
#GWOHT
#UndergroundWarReport
#BeerandDoughnuts101
#SubterraneanWarfare101
#SubmarineTunnels101
#GREENWIZARDOFTHEDAY
#GlobalWarOnHumanTraffickers
GODSPEED subterranean troops π© βοΈ π¦
Keep Preparing For You Are Dealing With Unfathomable EVIL!!!!!!
Godspeed Subterranean Troops
And to All The Wizards in the field + Support Roles.
Godspeed To Legacy Space Force Guardians.
#GWOHT
#UndergroundWarReport
#BeerandDoughnuts101
#SubterraneanWarfare101
#SubmarineTunnels101
#GREENWIZARDOFTHEDAY
#GlobalWarOnHumanTraffickers
π₯2
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Goodnight, Doomsday! π€ π΄ π€
π₯°2
Azazel News
https://youtu.be/lQzZPRF0CIs
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ββRemnants of WWII Come Out After Dark
π₯1
Forwarded from Mezlim
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GM
β€3π₯°2π₯1
Forwarded from Mezlim
Water the babies! π§π¦πππ«πππΆππ₯π₯¬π₯¦π½π₯πππ₯π±
πSummer πΈ Gardening π©βπΎ 2026 is Mandatory #Homework
Have youβve begun????
πSummer πΈ Gardening π©βπΎ 2026 is Mandatory #Homework
Have youβve begun????
Forwarded from Mezlim
Water the babies! π§π¦πππ«πππΆππ₯π₯¬π₯¦π½π₯πππ₯π±
πSummer πΈ Gardening π©βπΎ 2026 is Mandatory #Homework
Have youβve begun????
πSummer πΈ Gardening π©βπΎ 2026 is Mandatory #Homework
Have youβve begun????
Forwarded from Mezlim
Water the babies! π§π¦πππ«πππΆππ₯π₯¬π₯¦π½π₯πππ₯π±
πSummer πΈ Gardening π©βπΎ 2026 is Mandatory #Homework
Have youβve begun????
πSummer πΈ Gardening π©βπΎ 2026 is Mandatory #Homework
Have youβve begun????
β€1
Forwarded from Mezlim
Water the babies! π§π¦πππ«πππΆππ₯π₯¬π₯¦π½π₯πππ₯π±
πSummer πΈ Gardening π©βπΎ 2026 is Mandatory #Homework
Have youβve begun????
πSummer πΈ Gardening π©βπΎ 2026 is Mandatory #Homework
Have youβve begun????
β€1
Forwarded from Mezlim
Water the babies! π§π¦πππ«πππΆππ₯π₯¬π₯¦π½π₯πππ₯π±
πSummer πΈ Gardening π©βπΎ 2026 is Mandatory #Homework
Have youβve begun????
πSummer πΈ Gardening π©βπΎ 2026 is Mandatory #Homework
Have youβve begun????
β€1
Forwarded from Azazel News (Aries)
Like Boss says
Rationing is a Myth
Be Selfish!!!!
Hoarding is a Myth!!!!
Hoarding is a myth, Hoarding myth is used so Goverments can have someone to blame and not acknowledge that rationing must take place due to a break down in the supply chain.
Boss
Rationing is a Myth
Be Selfish!!!!
Hoarding is a Myth!!!!
Hoarding is a myth, Hoarding myth is used so Goverments can have someone to blame and not acknowledge that rationing must take place due to a break down in the supply chain.
Boss
π₯2β€1
Forwarded from Azazel News (Aries)
Task A
Keep food prepping
Do it for funsies
1. Go to Twitter.
2. Write: Shortage stock up
3. Read "Top" tweets, see date.
4. Sort by "Latest", read tweets.
5. Analyze Intel.
6. Draw a hypothesis for the next 6 months.
Keep food prepping
Do it for funsies
1. Go to Twitter.
2. Write: Shortage stock up
3. Read "Top" tweets, see date.
4. Sort by "Latest", read tweets.
5. Analyze Intel.
6. Draw a hypothesis for the next 6 months.
Forwarded from Azazel News (Aries)
Task B
Take the #GoodwillChallenge.
Go check out your local Goodwill, Salvation Army, or locally owned and operated thrift store to hunt down SHTF supplies.
See what you can find to put your upcycling skills to the test. Can you repurpose what you find?
This will be an important skill to cultivate in the event of an emergency or a supply chain collapse.
Take the challenge and practice now while you have time.
People in Hurricane areas know this too well
You might have a generator but you hook it for some lights and the fridge. If its really powerful maybe AC or fans, but the little electric appliances cannot be used
Things like pressure cooker that can be place over charcoal
Cast irons, mason jars, hunting knifes, books, electronics,
Take the #GoodwillChallenge.
Go check out your local Goodwill, Salvation Army, or locally owned and operated thrift store to hunt down SHTF supplies.
See what you can find to put your upcycling skills to the test. Can you repurpose what you find?
This will be an important skill to cultivate in the event of an emergency or a supply chain collapse.
Take the challenge and practice now while you have time.
People in Hurricane areas know this too well
You might have a generator but you hook it for some lights and the fridge. If its really powerful maybe AC or fans, but the little electric appliances cannot be used
Things like pressure cooker that can be place over charcoal
Cast irons, mason jars, hunting knifes, books, electronics,
Forwarded from Mezlim
Summer Gardening Jobs πΊ
Summer does not arrive quietly. It settles over the garden with weight and intensity, stretching daylight into long hours and asking every plant to meet the seasonβs demands. Growth is no longer tentative. Stems thicken, roots reach deeper, flowers open fully, and vegetables race toward harvest. The work shifts from encouraging life to sustaining it.
The first task is observation. Walk the garden in the cool of morning before heat settles in. Notice which plants thrive and which struggle. Leaves reveal muchβwilting, yellowing, insect damage, nutrient deficiencies. Summer rewards attention as much as effort.
Water becomes the seasonβs constant responsibility. Deep, infrequent watering encourages stronger roots than daily sprinkling. Water early whenever possible, allowing foliage to dry before evening and reducing disease pressure. Refresh mulch around vegetables, flowers, shrubs, and trees to conserve moisture and moderate soil temperatures.
Harvest often. Beans, cucumbers, zucchini, herbs, tomatoes, peppers, and summer fruits produce more generously when gathered regularly. Missed harvests quickly become oversized, woody, or exhausted. Summer abundance depends on keeping pace with growth.
Weeds flourish alongside crops. Remove them before they flower and set seed. A few minutes each day prevents hours of work later. Cultivate lightly to disturb young weeds while protecting valuable roots beneath the soil.
Support heavy growth. Tie tomatoes, guide climbing beans, secure tall flowers, and check stakes and trellises after storms. What seemed sturdy in spring may bend under summerβs fullness.
Deadhead spent blooms from annuals and many perennials to encourage continued flowering. Trim back plants that become leggy or exhausted. Summer is both a season of growth and gentle correction.
Pests and diseases reach their peak now. Inspect leaves carefully for aphids, caterpillars, beetles, mildew, and fungal spots. Intervene early when problems are small. Encourage birds, pollinators, and beneficial insects that help maintain balance.
Succession sowing keeps harvests coming. Plant additional beans, carrots, beets, lettuce in shaded spots, basil, dill, and quick-growing greens for late-summer and autumn harvests. Empty spaces need not remain empty.
Summer invites enjoyment as much as labor. Sit among the flowers. Watch bees move from bloom to bloom. Listen to evening birdsong. Notice the scent of herbs warmed by the sun and the quiet satisfaction of food grown by hand.
Yet even at its height, summer carries reminders of change. The first fading flower, the earliest seed head, the subtle shortening of days all suggest that abundance is temporary. The garden teaches stewardship rather than ownership. We tend, harvest, support, and appreciate, knowing the season will not last.
Summer is generosity in motion. It asks for consistency rather than urgency, patience rather than haste. Water deeply, harvest often, observe carefully, and respond when needed. In return, the garden offers its richest rewardsβcolor, fragrance, nourishment, and the simple pleasure of witnessing life at its fullest expression.
Summer does not arrive quietly. It settles over the garden with weight and intensity, stretching daylight into long hours and asking every plant to meet the seasonβs demands. Growth is no longer tentative. Stems thicken, roots reach deeper, flowers open fully, and vegetables race toward harvest. The work shifts from encouraging life to sustaining it.
The first task is observation. Walk the garden in the cool of morning before heat settles in. Notice which plants thrive and which struggle. Leaves reveal muchβwilting, yellowing, insect damage, nutrient deficiencies. Summer rewards attention as much as effort.
Water becomes the seasonβs constant responsibility. Deep, infrequent watering encourages stronger roots than daily sprinkling. Water early whenever possible, allowing foliage to dry before evening and reducing disease pressure. Refresh mulch around vegetables, flowers, shrubs, and trees to conserve moisture and moderate soil temperatures.
Harvest often. Beans, cucumbers, zucchini, herbs, tomatoes, peppers, and summer fruits produce more generously when gathered regularly. Missed harvests quickly become oversized, woody, or exhausted. Summer abundance depends on keeping pace with growth.
Weeds flourish alongside crops. Remove them before they flower and set seed. A few minutes each day prevents hours of work later. Cultivate lightly to disturb young weeds while protecting valuable roots beneath the soil.
Support heavy growth. Tie tomatoes, guide climbing beans, secure tall flowers, and check stakes and trellises after storms. What seemed sturdy in spring may bend under summerβs fullness.
Deadhead spent blooms from annuals and many perennials to encourage continued flowering. Trim back plants that become leggy or exhausted. Summer is both a season of growth and gentle correction.
Pests and diseases reach their peak now. Inspect leaves carefully for aphids, caterpillars, beetles, mildew, and fungal spots. Intervene early when problems are small. Encourage birds, pollinators, and beneficial insects that help maintain balance.
Succession sowing keeps harvests coming. Plant additional beans, carrots, beets, lettuce in shaded spots, basil, dill, and quick-growing greens for late-summer and autumn harvests. Empty spaces need not remain empty.
Summer invites enjoyment as much as labor. Sit among the flowers. Watch bees move from bloom to bloom. Listen to evening birdsong. Notice the scent of herbs warmed by the sun and the quiet satisfaction of food grown by hand.
Yet even at its height, summer carries reminders of change. The first fading flower, the earliest seed head, the subtle shortening of days all suggest that abundance is temporary. The garden teaches stewardship rather than ownership. We tend, harvest, support, and appreciate, knowing the season will not last.
Summer is generosity in motion. It asks for consistency rather than urgency, patience rather than haste. Water deeply, harvest often, observe carefully, and respond when needed. In return, the garden offers its richest rewardsβcolor, fragrance, nourishment, and the simple pleasure of witnessing life at its fullest expression.