As a hermit crab grows, its shell becomes a tighter fit so eventually the crabs need to move into a bigger one, leading to this amazing exchange 🦀🐚
Without shells, the crabs will bake under the sun’s punishing rays, if they aren’t eaten first. So, the hermit crabs form a conga line ordered from largest to smallest crab. As the largest crab enters its new home, the next crab in line takes the vacated shell, leaving an open shell for the crab behind him.
The shell swapping continues down the line until everyone has upgraded. This chain reaction is called a “vacancy chain,” and it’s an ingenious way for the creatures to survive while sharing limited resources
The Flash - S09E09 - It's My Party and I'll Die If I Want To : https://trakt.tv/shows/the-fla....sh-2014/seasons/9/ep
LIFE is f’n hard either route u go & shxt happens. inflation is kicking our ass (regardless ppl post about it or not), not everything is always good & happy. however, i’m firm on believing u can choose ur hard (u are entitled to cry & complain about it first tho, lol), u have to believe u are that m’f b4 the title/position is even given to u. manifest all ur shxt & make it look good n’ easy. i at least want to say i became who i wanted to be & did all of what i wanted to in my life, that’s my real life goal tbh 😌🔮🙏🏾
The origin of the term "Tree hugger"
The first tree huggers were 294 men and 69 women belonging to the Bishnois branch of Hinduism, who, in 1730, died while trying to protect the trees in their village from being turned into the raw material for building a palace. They clung to the trees, while being slaughtered by the foresters. But their action led to a royal decree prohibiting the cutting of trees in any Bishnoi village ..now those villages are virtual wooded oases amidst an otherwise desert landscape the Bishnois inspired the Chipko movement that started in the 1970s, when a group of peasant women in the Himalayan hills of northern India threw their arms around trees designated to be cut down. Within a few years, this tactic spread across India, ultimately forcing reforms in forestry and a moratorium on tree felling in Himalayan regions.