animatedamerican:

rowanthesloth:

brigdh:

weiila:

whitetigerdemoness:

weiila:

The first time you see how cashew nuts grow, you’re gonna think somebody’s posting a joke picture or a weird art installation.

ok but you say this….then don’t give us pictures 

LOOK AT THESE RIDICULOUS THINGS

And it gets even weirder!

The shell of the nut itself:

contains a resin that’s so toxic just touching it causes burns to the skin, similar to poison ivy. Which is why cashews are never sold unshelled, because processing them requires safety measures like this:

How humanity ever figured out to eat this nut is beyond me.

In case you ever wondered why cashews are so expensive. Now you can wonder why they aren’t more expensive.

what i’m wondering now is how anybody ever found out that you could eat cashews

fuocogo:

little-forestfire:

easol:

camillabech:

easol:

PSA: As a real life Scottish person please stop using the argument that Celtic peoples had dreadlocks when talking about the cultural appropriation of dreadlocks. We didn’t. Ever. Please don’t lie about my culture in order to validate your racism. 

Little PSA from Scandinavia (I’m Danish): vikings never had dreads either. They had braids and other styles, but never dreads.
The vikings were, by the past standards, obsessed with cleanliness and bathing. Most washed daily and you can not get dreads, as a white Scandinavian, if you clean your hair daily or even weekly.

!! this !!

Neither did the Irish!!

For those unaware, the distinction of cleanliness is important because actual locs are based off curl pattern and very cleanly BUT white people without the appropriate curl pattern can get matted hair from being filthy that they call “locs”.