Found this post on IG and I’m wondering what this community’s stance is. With winter now officially here*, I think it’s a valid question.

Edit: *where I live

  • @[email protected]
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    46 minutes ago

    That’s an icicle, sticks are wooden. I like his spirit though, that icicle has stick vibes.

    • @[email protected]
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      12 hours ago

      …that’s not a poke!

      Seriously - this doesn’t count as a stick - this is a close approximation of a stick in that it has many similar properties but it is far from it. Watch how in a few hours it dissolves on the ground (or inside?).

      However it does beautifully capture the novelty-based appreciation of sticks. There’s something to this, for sure…

  • @[email protected]
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    6115 hours ago

    I just realized there is an entire continent where there are no trees, and thus no sticks.

    And it isnt a small continent either. it is larger than all of Europe and also larger than Australia. We arent talking about an island or archipelago or even some random landlocked desert. It is a continent.

    the fact that there are no sticks that naturally occur there at all… it confuses and concerns me.

    This is deeply unsettling to me.

        • esa
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          150 minutes ago

          Coastal Norway is also pretty warm in this sense, but there aren’t any trees far north. I suspect there’s more than just warmth they want

    • @[email protected]
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      48 hours ago

      It makes sense why there are no sticks. But I agree, the thought of a lack of sticks seems to be unsettling, not a lack of trees or bushes.

      Are we that naturally attracted to sticks because of primate evolution? I wonder if the earliest human ancestors developed this awareness of sticks as it is a primitive tool used to survive.

    • @[email protected]
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      712 hours ago

      also larger than Australia

      Not all that well-known, but Australia claims about 42% of Antarctica as part of it’s territory.

    • Fuck spez
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      14 hours ago

      Don’t worry. At this rate, the ice will be gone soon and… oh

      • @[email protected]
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        1814 hours ago

        So i did a little research. The sad/fun part about my realization is… if you go back far enough in time, before the ice and nothingness, archeologists have pointed out that Antarctica was once a massive forest continent.

        Millions of years ago, it had trees, and thus, sticks for days and days.

        Once again we are living in the wrong time. Too late to explore all continents having sticks. But also too early to live where all continents have sticks. In the grand scheme of things, we exist in the uneven ground.

        It’s a sad equilibrium to be sure.

        • @[email protected]
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          28 hours ago

          There’s also stuff we’re pretty sure first evolved there. Because it used to connect south America to Australia

  • @[email protected]
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    6917 hours ago

    This is likely an extremely powerful weapon that can only be used once before it breaks so save it for the last boss.

      • @And009
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        1815 hours ago

        Along with 999 medium health elixirs

  • @[email protected]
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    1916 hours ago

    Can you poke things with it? Can you swish it around and pretend it’s a sword? Does it bring joy to your heart? Then it’s a stick.

  • @[email protected]
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    714 hours ago

    You bet you’re cold white pasty ass it counts. Now go spear a narwhal or do something cool with it!

  • @[email protected]
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    1718 hours ago

    Is there no flotsam from elsewhere washed ashore in Antartica?

    But independent of that, I think that’s an awesome ice stick!

    • @[email protected]
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      3318 hours ago

      You can’t bring anything that could carry non-native lifeforms on it, to preserve Antarctica’s unique Flora and Fauna from invasive species.

      • Arghblarg
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        16 hours ago

        What, not even our nice Norwegian ~shape-shifting assimilating microbes~dogs?

        EDIT: I am sad lemmy doesn’t appear to support strikethrough.

      • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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        214 hours ago

        Wouldn’t anything that didn’t evolve to deal with Antarctica’s brutal climate just immediately die?

        • @[email protected]
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          19 hours ago

          With the number of species that live on a stick, you could get unlucky and transport one which would randomly happen to have traits good for thriving in Antartica.

          • @[email protected]
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            19 hours ago

            I agree, but don’t humans carry the even more microbial live than sticks? And what about birds and seals? I am guessing there is quite a lot of exchange of microbes between Antarctica and the other continents.

            • @[email protected]
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              19 hours ago

              Yea, you’re right, and I don’t have any counter point. I don’t know what the experts think about this.

  • Semi-Hemi-Lemmygod
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    1017 hours ago

    Just like dopamine and serotonin: If you don’t have homemade, store bought is just fine

  • NaibofTabr
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    18 hours ago

    “…there are no sticks here. Nothing grows…” so far

    […] we demonstrate a clear but nonlinear trend towards a greater area of vegetation cover across the [Antarctic Peninsula] in recent decades […] Crucially, the rate of change in vegetation cover has increased considerably in recent years

    […]

    Regardless of the complexities discussed in the preceding, the overall statistically significant trajectory of APwide greening from 1986 to 2021 […] provides strong evidence of rapid and ongoing response of AP vegetation to climate change, and presents a compelling case for future widespread changes in the AP’s terrestrial ecosystems.