Weelee!
Weelee…
Weelee…..
WEELEE

Entry 2/3 into the Hybrid Elixir Contest - Diamondback Raptor Lysk
all those scales. so many. so many. /sobs

Did you say Machiiiinnne hmmm? B)
Entry 1/3 into the Hybrid Elixir Contest - Crystal Dragon Jiao
What are the other two? DUNDUNDUN.
HELL O THIS IS REal STAFF YOU MUST RECORD YOURSELF BALANCING AN EGG ON YOUR BUTTCRACK SINGING EVERY SINGLE SONG LIL WAYNE HAS EVER CREATED OR ELSE YOUR ACCOUNT WILL BE DELETED AND WE WILL SEND YOU BIRD POO
tony abbott
tony abbutt
what are you hiding from us tonyhaha just kidding he does nothing to hide the fact that he’s a colossal fuckin anus
elphabaforpresidentofgallifrey:
dude
like
dragons are mentioned in almost all cultures all across the world even before they had interaction with each other and you’re telling me they didn’t exist
do not tell me this was fiction this was some well researched men of letters shit right here
PBC Pair #10.
Parents:
dunananana SHADING THAT DAMN TAIL >:( IT MADE ME UNHAPPY.

Commission #26 - Yadda Yadda
First completed Pony Commission for Sammu-Chan of his pony and my own hanging out and being bros.
Now I can finally sleep because omg so tired so tired
Blood Falls, a Natural Time Capsule Containing a Unique Ecosystem
This five-story, blood-red “waterfall” pours ever so slowly out of the Taylor Glacier in Antarctica’s McMurdo Dry Valley. Geologists first discovered the frozen waterfall in 1911, and believed the red color came from algae. Its true nature turned out to be more spectacular.
Roughly two million years ago, a small body of water containing an ancient community of microbes was sealed beneath the surface of the Taylor Glacier. Trapped below a thick layer of ice, the microbes have remained isolated inside a natural time capsule, in a place with no light, oxygen, or heat.The trapped lake has very high salinity and is rich in iron, which gives the seepage its red color. A fissure in the glacier allows the microbial subglacial lake to flow out, forming the falls without contaminating the ecosystem within.
More photos of Blood Falls can be seen on Atlas Obscura