1. yougottahearthis:

myself by paul clark taken on my bronica

    yougottahearthis:

    myself by paul clark taken on my bronica

    1 month ago  /  7 notes  /  Source: yougottahearthis

  2. photo

    photo

    photo

    photo

    photo

    photo

    photo

    1 month ago  /  297,150 notes  /  Source: kaajoo

  3. tacticalstuff:

























All images captured during the course of a specialized Disruptive Environments Urban Darkness exercise.Learn more about the Disruptive Environments Program here: http://haleystrategic.com/disruptive_environments.php

(via)

    tacticalstuff:

    All images captured during the course of a specialized Disruptive Environments Urban Darkness exercise.Learn more about the Disruptive Environments Program here: http://haleystrategic.com/disruptive_environments.php

    (via)

    3 months ago  /  24 notes  /  Source:

  4. (via rebeccaxhart)

    10 months ago  /  450,511 notes  /  Source: drugwar

  5. 1 year ago  /  2 notes  /  Source: jakecleave

  6. photo

    photo

    photo

    photo

    1 year ago  /  48,991 notes  /  Source: thecolorrun.com

  7. human slingshot!

    1 year ago  /  1 note

  8. Rope Swing!

    1 year ago  /  0 notes

  9. 1 year ago  /  0 notes

  10. rhamphotheca:

Rise Above Plastics
There is a section of the Pacific Ocean twice the size of the continental United States called the Great Pacific Garbage Patch. Within it, 100 million tons of plastic swirl in a vortex of currents. There is so much plastic in the water that it outnumbers zooplankton by six to one!
This plastic ends up in the stomachs of marine birds and animals. In fact, one million seabirds and 100,000 marine mammals die globally each year due to ingestion of or entanglement in plastics…
(Find out more about how plastics are affecting the oceans.)

    rhamphotheca:

    Rise Above Plastics

    There is a section of the Pacific Ocean twice the size of the continental United States called the Great Pacific Garbage Patch. Within it, 100 million tons of plastic swirl in a vortex of currents. There is so much plastic in the water that it outnumbers zooplankton by six to one!

    This plastic ends up in the stomachs of marine birds and animals. In fact, one million seabirds and 100,000 marine mammals die globally each year due to ingestion of or entanglement in plastics…

    (Find out more about how plastics are affecting the oceans.)

    (via shaaarks)

    1 year ago  /  412 notes  /  Source: rhamphotheca