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#southern Oregon coast
emersonmanandnature · 2 years
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May 3, 2022
US Highway 101
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woodland--dweller · 2 years
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Southern Coast Trip 🌲🌊
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ange111diary · 8 months
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when’s it gonna be my turn?
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mundanalyst · 1 year
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Lone Ranch Beach, Oregon; 1/1/2023
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doublescribble · 1 year
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Jusuf Nurkić and Ivica Zubac
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mimi-is-musing · 9 months
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old man, he and his dog that walk the old land
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moonrockcowgirl · 1 year
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Oregon coast I love you
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redshift-13 · 10 months
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It is a rocky, stormy, and wild coast, one that everywhere reveals nature at its most spectacular. There are the redwood groves of Northern California, the raging rivers of Southern Oregon, the Rogue Basin, and the Umpqua forest. There is the mouth of the Columbia River, with its huge waves and foaming breakers, where ocean currents and tides collide with the deadly bars. In Washington State, there are the breathtaking sea stacks of the Olympic National Park, the Hoh River, and Quinault River valleys. Also in the park are towering fir, cedar, and spruce trees draped in ghostly mosses. Then comes an inland sea, the Salish Sea, shared by Washington and British Columbia, where snow-laden mountains — the ten-thousand-foot Mt Baker and the eight-thousand-foot Mt Olympus — shelter idyllic islands whose waters are home to the last of the southern orcas.
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emersonmanandnature · 2 years
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May 28, 2022
Cape Sebastian
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woodland--dweller · 2 years
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Southern Coast Adventure 🌲🌊🏕️
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softsoundingsea · 2 months
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Diego Javier Luis is assistant professor of history at Tufts University in Massachusetts. He is the author of The First Asians in the Americas: A Transpacific History (forthcoming, 2024).
Edited by Sam Haselby.
Cape Sebastian in Oregon perches above two forested declivities along a rocky patch of the state’s southern coast. Travel there today, and you are likely to miss a roadside marker that reads:
Spanish navigators were the first to explore the North American Pacific Coast. Beginning fifty years after Columbus discovered the Western continents, Sebastian Vizciano [sic] saw this cape in 1603 and named it after the patron saint of the day of his discovery. Other navigators, Spanish, British, and American, followed a century and a half later.
Standing before this sign, I winced rather predictably as I read ‘discovery’. But simmering beneath my displeasure with this word was a deeper conviction that Sebastián Vizcaíno’s voyage was, indeed, significant, though not in the ways that the sign suggests. Thousands of miles to the east, in Seville, the old centre of the Spanish Empire, I had stumbled upon Vizcaíno’s voyage in the dusty volumes of treasury records for the port of Acapulco, Mexico. Buried in line after line of winding, Baroque script were curious notations – ‘chino’ and ‘japón’ – next to the names of seven sailors that Vizcaíno had recruited for his voyage up the North American coast. To the tune of carriages rumbling through Seville’s cobbled streets and the crinkle of centuries-old pages turning, I read the names again and again:
Antón Tomás Antonio Bengala Francisco Miguel Cristóbal Catoya Agustín Longalo Lucas Cate Agustín Sao
Seven Asian sailors – entombed by an archive and forgotten by human memory – had sailed with Vizcaíno to what is now Oregon. Where in the chronology of Asian American history could these sailors fit? Flip to the beginning of most books on Asian America, and you will find no content earlier than the 19th century. You will be in the world of the Gold Rush, the transcontinental railroad, indenture, and the San Francisco and Los Angeles Chinatowns.
These seven names transport us to a different world, a different timeline, a different Asian America. These sailors’ presence off the coast of Oregon predated not just the entire Asian American canon but also the founding of the United States and even of the Thirteen Colonies. The histories of the first Asians in the Americas do not take place in the nations born from the fires of British colonialism but, rather, they guide us to a region rarely considered relevant to Asian American history: Latin America.
Read more...
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mundanalyst · 1 year
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Harris Beach State Park, Oregon; 1/1/2023
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rootlessly · 2 years
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southern oregon coast ⋇ 2018 feb
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wttt-dirus-work · 5 months
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So, i saw a post with NY headcanons and it reminded me that while i included my own disabled headcanons in my fics, i forgot to make my own headcanons post (?) and i've got more than i though lol
So here we go!
NY: Dude got a bad eye, someday it's normal, other days it get blurred. He also has a scar over it, and his shoulders can get funky when its humid outside.
NJ: some of y'all already knows it, but Jersey got Tourette's. Mostly shoulder jerking, neck twitching, blinking hard and grimacing. When it gets bad his back jerks, and his vocals tics get worse (mostly whistles and pop, tho if hes anxious/stressed he does repeat some words)
Delaware: he got arthritis in his hands, and can hardly move them.
Mass: He was injured during the revolution, and walking became harder for him (limping and his legs became stiffer), then another injury during the civil war made him unable to walk for some days, therefore he use a wheelchair most of the time. He is still able to walk, but it is either too painful, or he doesn't have the energy needed to be able to stand all day.
Connie: he got shaky hands, when he's tired, nervous or angry, he cant hold anything with those. Its his nerves, and it doesnt hurt but its annoying.
Vermont: he got diabetes! Type 1; and it's so fucking expensive that it's Québec his "dealer" (it cost around 98$US when here its around 12$CAN sooo). He also got a sweet tooth, and forget to watch his sugar level (Hampshire there's for it; buddy's wayy to protective to let anything happen to Vermont)
PA: he's dyslexic, and it's mostly Mass who helps him with paperwork when he's not badgering Connie.
Florida: That gremling got Adhd, big dyslexia and his first language is spanish (which doesnt help with the reading). He also got so many scars from disturbing wildlife (anyone has seen that "yoink" dude in the everglades? Yeah thats flo). He got chronic pain in his left knee, and his right wrist always cracks when he moves it.
Louie: french lover is a people pleaser, but the chillest person you'll ever meet. He never panics, and is sometime too calm; but hurt any of the southern state (or Cal) and you're done. He's the voodoo capital, so dont mess with him
Georgia: hes an insomniac, but is fucking sleepy during the day (the math aint mathing ya know). He can sleep anywhere except during the night. He's bud with york and nevada, you can find those three driking in silence during a poker game.
Virginia: (uses they/them) they have a limp on the left leg, who always in pain (low but chronic with some real bad days). They're also a sleepwalker (think Celinaspookyboo style) and Georgia (or one of the insomniac state) each switch to watch them at night.
Montana: deer in headlights when spoken to. Will not talk to anyone when he doesnt have something to say or isnt upset (that sketch with the clown thing? Yeah he talked to them cause he was angry). Dont talk to him, dont even aknowledge him and he'll be more than happy to not exist in your mind. (Hes jealous of alaskas ability to not being seen)
Cal: dudes his always in pain. The fire, the drought, to goldrushes, hes always hurting. He got big scars from the fires, and his skin is the dryest thing ever despite all the moisturizer he uses. When he's burning up his eyes gets cloudy grey; they itch and cry all the time, and he cant see shit. He also need an oxygen mask when its too bad, and his eyes are naturaly gold.
Washington: hes a bitch. Dude got poor circulation too, so his hands and feet are always cold. When it's raining for too long his hair is oily, and when it's a drought it's the driest (he uses dryshampoo and got a routine to fight it).
Oregon : hes gay. Thats a known thing, and he's the bridge between Cal and Wash. Hes nicer to cal than wash, but he's not kind. The west coast are nice in interraction, but they ain't your friends.
Nevada: ah, vada. He got scaring from the nuclear testing, can see in the dark like nobody, and is the only state who can chose to change their physical appearance. Has coloured hair (pink or purple mostly) and the greenest eyes you'll ever see (or purple, didnt made my mind yet). Hes careful with his diet and always exercice despite the painful joins.
Texas: that idiot got sleep apnea but refuses to get checked out for it (and get a CPAP). He also has asthma (geez that word is hard to write) and colorblindness (can't see red). He only wears his shirt cause he knows what the colours are and refused to be pranked about that.
If you wanna adds your own, your welcome to do so! ^^
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mutant-distraction · 3 months
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Southern Oregon Coast - photo by @medlinphotography
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workersolidarity · 2 months
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[ 📹 Scenes from destroyed neighborhoods in Khan Yunis where Resistance forces can be heard confronting the invading Israeli occupation army in the Al-Amal neighborhood.]
🇮🇱⚔️🇵🇸 🚀🏡💥🚑 🚨
💥ISRAELI OCCUPATION COMMITS 8 NEW MASSACRES OF PALESTINIAN FAMILIES ON THE 141ST DAY OF WAR IN GAZA💥
The Israeli occupation forces (IOF), on the 141st day of Israel's genocidal war in the Gaza Strip, committed 10 new massacres of Palestinian families, resulting in the deaths of 104 civilians, mostly women and children, and wounded another 160 others over the previous 24-hours.
Intense battles play out in the Al-Amal neighborhood of Khan Yunis as Resistance Forces confront invading Israeli soldiers and armored vehicles, while IOF aircraft continues to destroy large sections of residential neighborhoods in Khan Yunis.
Meanwhile, according to the Israeli human rights organization B'tselem, the Israeli occupation intends on creating a "buffer zone" one kilometer wide along the entire border between the Gaza Strip and the Israeli entity, about 60km in total, in which Palestinians, even ones who cultivated lands along the border, will not be allowed to access.
This buffer zone is intended to be covered by paved roads, with Israeli outposts and surveillance equipment, to essentially enforce the outdoor prison of Gaza. To create this buffer zone, the Israeli occupation is "currently destroying almost everything in the area it has designated for it," with one Israeli soldier describing his work as "flattening everything."
B'tselem says the Israeli occupation has demolished 1'072 of 2'824 structures located a kilometer or less from the border, the majority of which were Palestinian homes.
According to Adi Ben Nun from the Geography Department of Hebrew University, in Khan Yunis alone, 704 of 1'048 buildings, almost 70% of all structures, have been demolished by the Israeli occupation army. B'tselem says that Corey Scher of the City University of New York and Jamon Van Den Hoek of Oregon State University put the number of demolitions even higher, estimating that at least 1'329 buildings have been completely destroyed by IOF soldiers. The same can be replicated along the entire border with "Israel".
Meanwhile, Israeli warplanes have continued the work of flattening the Gaza Strip, launching several firebelts targeting residential neighborhoods in the village of Khuza'a, east of Khan Yunis, in the southern Gaza Strip.
At the same time, local medical sources say Israeli warplanes and artillery concentrated on Khan Yunis resulted in the deaths of at least 19 Palestinians.
Also in Khan Yunis, Israeli fighter jets bombed the Ammer Bin Yasser mosque in the Al-Shahayda neighborhood, north of Abasan Al-Kabira, east of Khan Yunis.
Occupation armored vehicles and soldiers continue to besiege the Nasser Medical Complex in Khan Yunis, putting the hospital out of service at this time.
Occupation aircraft also bombarded residential buildings in the Al-Amal neighborhood, west of Khan Yunis, while IOF jets also committed new massacres across residential neighborhoods in the central Gaza Strip.
In Deir al-Balah, in the central Gaza Strip, occupation artillery and warplanes bombed the Abu Zuaiter family home, killing 25 civilians who were transported to Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital.
Israeli artillery shelling also targeted Zamzam family home in the Al-Maghazi Refugee Camp, killing a woman and wounding several others.
Several other civilians were also wounded by the artillery fire of Israeli gunboats along the coast near the Nuseirat Refugee Camp.
Elsewhere, Israeli aircraft launched firebelts targeting the Al-Ghurais family home in the Nuseirat Camp, in the central Gaza Strip, resulting in the deaths of 9 civilians and wounding others.
In the south of Gaza, Israeli fighter jets launched a firebelt on the Abu Muammar family home east of the city of Rafah, killing at least 11 civilians and wounding several others.
At the same time, Israeli occupation snipers posted on local rooftops shot and killed two civilians, Amer Al-Bawab and his son, in the Al-Nasr neighborhood of Gaza City, while another woman was killed after occupation air raids on the Al-Zaytoun neighborhood.
In another horrific atrocity by the Israeli occupation forces, occupation warplanes bombed the Shaheen family home in central Rafah, which also housed members of the Abu Hamra and Abu Sultan families, resulting in the murder of 7 Palestinian civilians and wounding several others.
At the same time, occupation fighter jets carried out a series of airstrikes targeting areas near the border with Egypt, in the areas where roughly half a million displaced Palestinians have settled in tents in unbearable and dangerous conditions.
As a result of Israel's ongoing war of genocide in the Gaza Strip, after 141 days of all-out war on a civilian population, more than 36'000 Palestinians are dead or missing, the majority of which are women and children, while over 60'000 Palestinians have been wounded, including more than 11'000 injuries which require travel abroad for treatment.
#source1
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#videosource
@WorkerSolidarityNews
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