theoliveolive Moscow

Is it bad that i’m doing this instead of my bio final project?

The Morning Benders

my loves… <3

The Rumble Stips Girls and Boys in Love
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363 Plays

unkrabbypatty:

mmmm

cheesy stuff...: Bahahaha :) Cookies by Douglas Adams (author: “Hitchhiker’s Guide to...

unkrabbypatty:

Bahahaha :)

Cookies by Douglas Adams (author: “Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy”)

This actually did happen to a real person, and the real person was me. I had gone to catch a train. This was April 1976, in Cambridge, U.K. I was a bit early for the train. I’d gotten the time of the train…

// It’s times like this I want to run away //

but it’s two months till I graduate and that’s not an option anymore, can I

Ellie Goulding Don't Panic
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183 Plays
thoughts-thatfly:

can we talk about the fact that this makes me legitimately sad

thoughts-thatfly:

can we talk about the fact that this makes me legitimately sad

(Source: noonewould)

scipsy:

Rubber Chicken in Space
A group of high school students from California launched an helium balloon sending “Camilla”, a rubber chicken, to an altitude of 36.5 kilometers. The mission of Camilla is part of an astrobiology project, that aims to find out if microbes can live at the edge of space. Camilla was launched right into a solar storm to be exposed to high-energy solar protons and she was equipped with a pair of radiation badges to measure the radiation, a ship full of instruments (four cameras, a cryogenic thermometer, GPS trackers, seven insects and 24 sunflower seeds), and a knitted space-suit.
Camilla flew twice: on March 3 and on March 10. The second launch coincided with one of the strongest proton storms of the year, with satellites reporting solar proton counts at about 30000 times normal.
Eventually Camilla returned back to Earth. […]

scipsy:

Rubber Chicken in Space

A group of high school students from California launched an helium balloon sending “Camilla”, a rubber chicken, to an altitude of 36.5 kilometers. The mission of Camilla is part of an astrobiology project, that aims to find out if microbes can live at the edge of space. Camilla was launched right into a solar storm to be exposed to high-energy solar protons and she was equipped with a pair of radiation badges to measure the radiation, a ship full of instruments (four cameras, a cryogenic thermometer, GPS trackers, seven insects and 24 sunflower seeds), and a knitted space-suit.

Camilla flew twice: on March 3 and on March 10. The second launch coincided with one of the strongest proton storms of the year, with satellites reporting solar proton counts at about 30000 times normal.

Eventually Camilla returned back to Earth. […]

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