These are random musings of my life journey, the people, animals, places, and events which have woven, and continue to weave, a tapestry that is me. We all know there is no real destination, only the ongoing experiences which blend together, creating the trail. Each step gives a glimpse of what is to come, without allowing me to see the end result. It is exciting. I have a home base that is mine, that gives me a place to rest. This is it. This is where my heart is, no matter where I journey...................

Sunday, May 31, 2009

I Am ....

.
.... waiting ....



















.... waiting ....

















.... waiting ....


















.... waiting ....


















.... waiting ....

















... but they are taking their sweet time!

I wasn't sure this little prickly pear was going
to make it, but look at that little baby go!

.... waiting .... till I can photograph the blossoms.

sigh..........

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Saturday, May 30, 2009

My Red Neck is Showing

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Wanna see a redneck flowerpot?





Ahh, duct tape! The quintessential household tool!

I noticed that one of my petunias was MIA, and I was getting rather upset with the thought that someone had stolen it! Here, in my little Eden where I don't even lock the door most of the time!! After a few minutes of stewing like a goose in a pot, I realized that it might have fallen down, and surely enough, there it was, about 8 feet down. When I retrieved it, I found that the pot was badly split. I don't have another that big, so I taped till tomorrow when I can run to town and get a new pot.

At least I live where no one will see it and judge me.

Whew. That was my biggest worry, what people would think!




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Friday, May 29, 2009

Down Off the Mountain and Back Again

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What a day! I am tired, but from something a lot more fun than yard work!!! It was a bit of a last minute thing, but that is not a deterrent for a .... shopping trip!! Early this morning four of us left Capitan headed toward Roswell. We laughed that a few years ago, had you suggested that we would be excited about a shopping trip to Roswell, NM, any of us would have laughed you down. But now, reality is that it is an event when we can go to a town with Hobby Lobby (everyone is an artist), Target, a real Super Walmart, Sam's Club, multiple eating opportunities, and a Dairy Queen for our homeward trip treat!

On the way out of Capitan we saw this big boy.


Look at that horn!! Awesome!

There is a herd of these just on the outskirts. Occasionally we get to see many of them, on other occasions just one or two. We all agreed that this was the longest set of horns any of us had seen on any of the bovines.








Holy cow bull!












Our best guess is those horns have about a five foot spread. Can you imaging is they weren't curled???




Back on the road, we yakked and gabbed away, laughed and got goofy, and the hours trip was shortened to about 15 minutes. We definitely had a lot of fun.

We all had things to get at Hobby Lobby, and I found one thing that I didn't expect to buy. I'll explain that later on.

Then it was time for lunch, and we were all famished. We hit Applebee's and had a good lunch, and many more laughs. As we left the restaurant, I reached in my pocket for the key, and I realized that I had left it in the truck! gah. I called AAA, and the locksmith was at our spot in less than 15 minutes! Meanwhile Linda and Jeannie had walked to Home Depot nearby for some supplies. Newbern stayed to wait with me, and we picked the other two up.

Next we dropped Newbie at a book store, and we went to Petco. I found some inexpensive, sturdy toys for The Kids. Little Missy, Lola, has been ripping apart all the old toys, and they desperately needed some new ones. I brought about 10 new ones, and when I got home I clipped off the tags and dumped them on the floor, and they went nutz!!


Max liked several of them, but hung with this green frog for quite a while.













Joey sniffed them all out, and when he found this plush bone, he latched onto it and still hasn't let it go. It has been almost three hours, and right now he is at the other end of the couch, his usual place, with the bone right by his nose! He knows what he likes, and he will stick with it!

Sam has played with several toys. At the moment of this snap, he was fascinated with a plush ball.

The girls have played with several, also. Lola has spent much of her time trying to take away what the others have! She is such a bratty little toddler!

Next was Sam's. I had nothing in mind, but Linda and Jeannie did, so I tagged along. And of course, I ended up spending money there, too! Some nice produce, and I brought home a HUGE crab leg for tomorrow's dinner. Tonight I had some enormous shrimp and I'm going to have some strawberries in a few minutes.

One last, fairly quick stop at Walmart. My purchase there was several watch batteries. Suddenly all my watches died! I pull the stems out to save them when I'm not wearing them, and I only occasionally wear one, but some of them were 15 or more years old.

After we finished at Walmart, we picked up Newbie and made the final stop at Dairy Queen. I got my usual MooLatte, which I do because I can't drive and eat anything that requires a spoon. And because I love those things! The trip home was as funny or funnier than the trip down. Back in Capitan we sorted out our purchases from the coolers and bags, no small task! And I headed home with treasures for myself and The Kids.


This is what I brought home from Hobby Lobby. I've been looking for a short bench or stool to put under the window for The Kids to be able to look out. When I saw this I thought, hey, same footprint, and I can store throws or something in it! (Clarification from early post .... this is a little trunk!) I had a coupon for 40% off, and when I asked if they had another as this one was scratched on one edge, they didn't, but offered another 10% off! Alright! $35 is a great price for this!




Perfect size, and the cherry wood finish suits me.















A dog cushion on top, and they came to check it out.














Jazi and Lola immediately got up on it. If you're wondering, Lola was wiggling around, and I distinctly heard Jaz say, "Cool it, you little pest!!"











Jaz demonstrates the proper use of the new trunk!
















Tomorrow I'm going for a painting lesson with Linda, and then I hope to pull her away from the shop long enough to check out the newest eatery opening tomorrow. Right now, I'm tired, and frankly my sides ache from the laughing. I'm gonna have my berries and hit the sack.

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Thursday, May 28, 2009

Blogoversary .... A Bit Late

As I noted yesterday, my blogoversary, marking three years here, was 5/27. Since it slipped up on me, I wasn’t prepared to note it. So I’ve done some reflecting over the past year, and I came up with this .....

June
  • brought the boys home, first Sammy, then Max, and finally Joey; poor Sammy was so terrified of everyone, including me that he pooped if someone came in the door, or walked toward him, or looked at him!
  • That included a trip to Mason, TX; a trip to Clovis, NM; a trip to meet Caroline in OK after she picked up Joey to bring him to me
  • began the struggles of house training the new kids. Arghhhh.

July
  • I seeded lawn just to have part of it washed away
  • spent several days chasing the boys down after they kept escaping from the yard.
  • Had a great visit with visiting cousins
  • added a hammock & hammock chair to the deck
  • Sam wouldn’t move with leash on; I was trying to get him to go for a walk, but he was terrified of the leash; if I wanted him to sit still, all I had to do was attach the leash and he wouls sit like a petrified pup!

August
  • Jazmyn came home, including a trip to OK to pick her up and attend my niece's wedding
  • I said goodbye to China, pretty much breaking my heart in two; Ali mourned her, too.
  • I met The Guy; OK, he was nice enough, but I guess he just didn’t have his life together, and the next few months were .... frustrating. He’s gone.

September
  • in my creative moments I created a screen door to make the dogs’ lives easier as they could go outside by themselves; and I built stone steps between my two driveways, dang! was I tired!
  • Paul Newman died, breaking my heart, right along with a million other women.
  • Ali’s appetite was wavering and I knew he wasn’t doing well; he was mourning China and just plain tired of life, I think.
  • Sam beginning to walk on leash.

October
  • Ali, my sweet buddy, left me to be with China and Mai Lin; how I miss him
  • I voted early, for Obama, of course
  • in the store one day, I took on a racist checker; he got fired
  • built a walkway with concrete blocks to the storage area.

November
  • I had the Great Thanksgiving “smoke out” at my house; No, not some great contest or event, just a smoked-up house when the turkey dripped and nearly caught on fire; thank goodness it was before the guests arrived!
  • I began dancing lessons

December
  • I learned the dogs love the snow! They would stay out till they were covered with snowballs clinging to their fur, wet, shivering, and miserable!
  • took a photo-excursion to Bosque del Apache, my second trip there
  • I had a reflective holiday season, looking back over special, memorable holiday events

January
  • a trip to Clovis, NM brought Lola came home to complete the family
  • Medicare packet arrived, reminding me that in 3 months, I would be eligible

February
  • a fun trip to Santa Fe for a wonderful visit with an old, dear friend

March
hmmmm. Not much notable happened. Boring!

April
  • I turned ..... gasp ..... 65! Medicare is now a reality for me! I had a physical and it was all good
  • I had another wonderful visit with a visiting cousin and her hub
  • Jazi had a rough week with a fox tail grass seed in her eye
  • I added birds, finches to the household; 5 dogs, 5 birds, I used to have 5 kids in the house; do you see a trend here?
  • began yoga classes

May
  • “building” the lawn again
  • rebuilt the stone steps
Somewhere in there I started a Facebook page, too, but I don't remember quite when! You don't have "page a versaries" to remind you over there!!

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This has been some year.

In addition to the above highlights, there are some other things that don’t fit in any one particular month. A major one is the settling of the dogs. They have really found their places, for the most part. The house training was a nightmare, and I sometimes didn’t know if I would make it. Sammy, who was so terrified of humans that I couldn’t walk near him without his bodily functions failing him, now runs into the house, jumps on the couch and thrown his body against me, looking up at me with such trust that it melts my heart. Max has learned that he doesn’t have to growl at every movement of his siblings. Joey has settled in, quietly the canine leader of the pack, yet playful and loving. Jazmyn is the Queen of all in LyniluLand, little as she may be. And little Lola is everybody’s darling .... and devil!

I’m thinking back on my advice to some others in the past year about how it takes a year to own something new, a job, a home, a relationship, etc. It occurs to me that the one-year rule fits for my life with my brood, too. The first three months were frustrating, with house training and relationship development. Then the second three months were filled with smoothing out the rough edges, making it all fit together and work. And since then it has just continued fall into a sensible routine. There are still some areas that need work, but it is feeling like home now.

I’ve had a number of self-recognitions. By that I mean the aha moments when I learn something new about me. Sometimes that means something like realizing that I have smarts or skills to do something new, to reason out a problem alone, to accomplish something I never guessed I would need/want to do. Other times, it comes in the form of recognizing a strength that I didn’t realize about myself, a personality trait that I overlooked in the past, an introspective moment that tells me something new about who I am. Most of them aren’t of the sort that would impress others, but for me .... big. They are the kind of things that make me know myself better. And most of them make me glad to be me.

Yeah, it has been a good year.

Cute!!

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This is delightful!

A commercial for glue.


http://www.culturepub.fr/videos/rubber-cement-colle-les-nonnes.html

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Something to Make You Smile and a Giggle, too

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I spent the morning working on my plants on the deck, pulling out dead foliage, trimming, repotting, cutting off pieces to root for new plants. It was quite a task, but the pots look nicer. I have at least a couple dozen airplane or spider plants in water to root. Anyone one a couple?

After finishing that I decided to clean out the water tub I keep out for the deer. I dump it and change the water every few days to keep it fresh and free of mosquito larvae. I let Jazi go with me. She stays in the yard, and I don't have to worry about her other than that she doesn't usually want to come back in. We walked down to the well house, and while I the hoses hooked up (I bought some new ones and a splitter, and they needed to be unrolled, etc. The well house is 75-100 feet away from the house, just off the road.

Jaz followed me down and stayed in that area while I did the hose work. I walked back up the hill to the house to get something I'd left on the deck, and she was wandering around the area near the dear water. When I started back down the hill, I turned around to get the camera. About half way down I got this picture.

Do you see it? Look closely.







OK, I'll help you out.










Zoomed in a little so you could see the girl stretched out on a rock.








Just chillin'!

Literally. She loves the cool rocks.


She stayed right on that rock for about 30 minutes while I did my various tasks. In fact, as usual, she would budge when I was ready to come in the house. I had to go pick her up and carry her in! Litttle stinker. But at least I don't have to worry about her staying put.

I'm going to try the others at this, too. I think Joey and Sam will be fine, and I suspect Lola won't leave my side. She's still insecure about the big ol' scary world out there. Max is still my concern. I'll see how it goes, one at a time, and hopefully I can take them all when I am walking around the yard at some point. It would be nice to not have to worry about them taking off at every chance.




Want some fun and silliness? This is a great clip from Johnny Carson with Dom DeLuise as his guest.

http://www.milkandcookies.com/link/138148/detail/

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Wednesday, May 27, 2009

I Am Tired ....


.... yet, strangely jazzed to have it done!

My day started with spreading grass seed, topping it with a little top soil, then spreading some top soil in a "forgotten" area just outside the fence and putting flower seeds out there. I was out just a couple hours or maybe two and a half. I was really pleased to get that DONE!!! We were supposed to have rain this afternoon and evening, so I wanted to get those things out of the way and ready for being watered by Mother Nature.

I made it. With room to spare, as it turns out. The rain didn't come till around 4:00, and I've had .20 inch so far. It is probably going to rain overnight, too. Now, if it just doesn't rain so hard and fast as to wash away the seeds, I'll be very happy. With luck, I won't have to reseed again, and top soil application will come again in the fall. In a week or so I will spread fertilizer, but I'll wait till the rain in nearly over for that.

My "old" grass was beginning to come up really well, and my hope is that today's labor will fill in bare or light spots and give a good solid covering of grass. It would be really nice to not have to worry so much about what the pups are walking through and tracking inside the house. My carpet is a total mess right now with all the topsoil I've put down in the last couple weeks. I have company coming in about 10 days, and I'd like to have enough grass to minimize the tracking. I need to shampoo the carpet before she arrives, and I'd hope to not have to do it again too soon.

Damn, I was hot when I got finished. I took a lukewarm shower and it felt marvelous. I've spent the rest of the day just kicked back. Well, I did take time to put my deck plants out on the steps to benefit from the rain, then brought them back up after the showers stopped.

Gee, I wonder what crazy thing I can dream up for tomorrow?? I'll get back to you on that.

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Juke Box

Ruth sent this to me recently, and I thought it would be fun to put up here. It's a good time waster, and that's what I'm here for!!

It went through 1979, but when I looked at the site, it actually had years through 1997, so I added them. If you want music later that 1997 .... well, you're probably at the wrong blog, cause my readers aren't that young!!!

YOUR own JUKE BOX
There is about 20 songs in each one of these, plenty to choose from....

PS - I totally forgot this is my blogoversarary!! Thanks to some alert folks out there, I'm adding this little "Happy Blogoversary to me" note!! Three years! I can't remember life before blogging!! LOL!

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Tuesday Trivia

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Today's collection is related. Sorta. Money, the Stock Market, and The Supreme Court. Yeah, there's a thread in that. ;)


MONEY
There are over 60 communities throughout the United States that have their own form of local currency. California has the most communities with their own currency, including many popular colleges like Berkeley and Santa Barbara.

A quarter has 119 grooves on its edge, one more than a dime. The reason the mint started using ridges was to prevent counterfeit and devaluing of the coin.

A penny weighs 2.5 grams, which is the average weight of a humming bird. A can of soda has four pennies worth of sugar.

America once issued a 5-cent bill during the civil war to combat the coin shortage at the time.

There is more Monopoly money printed in a year, than real money printed throughout the world. The amount of money in a Monopoly game is $15,140.

The United States Government used to keep its supply of silver at the United States Military Academy, West Point, New York. It now only keeps on hand enough for minting purposes.




THE STOCK EXCHANGE
New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) was founded in 1792 on Wall Street in New York City. It is the largest stock exchange in the world by dollar value.

The first publicly traded security in the U.S. consisted of $80 million in U.S. Government bonds that were issued in 1790 to refinance Revolutionary War debt.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average is an index of the stock prices of 30 of the largest and most widely held public companies in the United States and is compiled to gauge the performance of the industrial sector of the American stock market.

A bull market tends to be associated with increasing investor confidence, motivating investors to buy in anticipation of future price increases and future capital gains. A bear market is a steady drop in the stock market over a period of time.

There have been a number of famous stock market crashes like the Wall Street Crash of 1929, the stock market crash of 1973–4, the Black Monday of 1987, the Dot-com bubble of 2000.

In short selling, the trader borrows stock then sells it on the market, hoping for the price to fall. The trader eventually buys back the stock, making money if the price fell in the meantime or losing money if it rose.




MILESTONE SUPREME COURT CASES
1803 - The Marbury v. Madison case gave the Court a greater degree of power as it was the first time a law passed by Congress was declared unconstitutional. This decision established the Court's right to overturn acts of Congress - something that was not explicitly granted by the Constitution.

1819 - McCulloch v. Maryland is significant because it allowed for a loose construction of the Constitution. The Court upheld the right of Congress to create a Bank of the United States, ruling that it was a power implied but not enumerated by the Constitution.

1954 - Racial segregation in schools was invalidated in the Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka case. The Court declared “in the field of public education, the doctrine of ‘separate but equal’ has no place” and contending that “separate educational facilities are inherently unequal.”

1963 - In the Gideon v. Wainwright case, a defendant's right to legal counsel was guaranteed after the Supreme Court overturned the Florida felony conviction of Clarence Earl Gideon, who had defended himself after having been denied a request for free counsel. The Court held that the state violated the Fourteenth Amendment's due process clause by failing to provide Gideon with counsel.

1973 - The Court ruled in the groundbreaking Roe v. Wade case that a woman has the right to an abortion without interference from the government in the first trimester of pregnancy, contending that it is part of her “right to privacy.” The Court did, however, grant states the right to intervene in the later trimesters of pregnancy.

1978 - In the Regents of the University of California v. Bakke case, the Court ruled that affirmative action was unfair if it lead to reverse discrimination. The case involved the University of Calif., Davis, Medical School and Allan Bakke, a white applicant who was rejected twice even though there were minority applicants admitted with significantly lower scores than his. A closely divided Court ruled that while race was a legitimate factor in school admissions, the use of rigid quotas was not permissible.



Stay out of trouble, OK?
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Monday, May 25, 2009

Nature

While I was working in the yard Saturday, I saw an eagle flying right overhead, perhaps 25 feet above me! Now, I'm not an expert on the differences between eagles and hawks, but I'm reasonably certain. He was just soaring, drifting, probably eyeing some squirrel or rabbit. Thank goodness the dogs were all on the deck, covered and safe. All that being said, it was awesome to see that majestic creature that close! And of course, after I closed my mouth and resumed thinking, I began wishing I had my camera; however, carrying a camera and a shovel at once just doesn't seem to make sense.

Then later, I saw a crow, a huge big o' thang, sitting in my yard. In fact, it could have been a raven, but I don't think it was that big. He eating what appeared to be a small rock. You know, like a piece of gravel, the white gravel we use for decorative gardens. But it was almost perfectly round. And I realized that the damn bird was eating the egg of another bird, almost certainly stolen from a nest! Vile creature!

A few days ago I was driving back from town, and I saw the strangest thing of all. A crow was flying along, and there was a little bird of some kind attacking him! The smaller bird was zooming up underneath, apparently pecking at the crow's belly and under wings, and he was apparently making painful contact, because the crow was dodging away every time! My best guess is the crow had robbed the nest of the smaller bird. Vile creature, again!

And farther down the road I spied a turkey vulture sitting on a fence post. Weird looking birds they are. blech.

Interesting how many birds have been in my view lately. Wonder that that's all about?

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Memorial Day

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Remember


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Special Trivia for Memorial Day

“Heroism is latent in every human soul - However humble or unknown,
they (the veterans) have renounced what are accounted pleasures and cheerfully undertaken
all the self-denials - privations, toils, dangers, sufferings, sicknesses, mutilations, life..."

Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain, (1828-1914),
American college professor from the State of Maine,
who volunteered during the American Civil War to join the Union Army.


Memorial day was first celebrated on May 30, 1868. It was observed by placing flowers on the graves of Union and Confederate soldiers during the first national celebration. Gen. James Garfield made a speech at Arlington National Cemetery, after which around 5,000 participants helped to decorate the graves of the more than 20,000 Union and Confederate soldiers who were buried there.

Since the late 1950’s on the Thursday just before Memorial day, around 1200 soldiers of the 3d U.S. Infantry place small American flags at each of the more than 260,000 gravestones at Arlington National Cemetery.

On Memorial Day, the flag should be at half-staff until noon only, then raised to the top of the staff.

Moina Michael came up with an idea of wearing red poppies on Memorial day in honor of those who died serving the nation during war. She was the first to wear one, and sold poppies to her friends and co-workers with the money going to benefit servicemen in need.

In the year 2000 the National Moment of Remembrance Resolution passed. At 3pm on Memorial Day all Americans are asked to voluntarily and informally observe in their own way a moment of remembrance and respect by pausing from whatever they are doing for a moment of silence or listening to Taps.

The south refused to honor the dead on Memorial Day until after World War I when the meaning of Memorial Day changed from honoring civil war dead to honoring Americans who died fighting in any war.


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“Grilling, broiling, barbecuing - whatever you want
to call it - is an art, not just a matter of building a pyre
and throwing on a piece of meat as a sacrifice to the gods
of the stomach.”

James Beard, (1903-1985), American chef and food writer.



BARBECUE
The first barbecuers may well have been prehistoric cavemen. Anthropologists say they may have started roasting meat some 1.4 million years ago.Language development didn't occur until 200,000 B.C. or later.Other sources say this originated in the Caribbean where the native Indians used wood gratings over a slow fire to cook strips of meat.

According to the Indiana Propane Company, the most common barbecue items (beside ribs) are: hamburgers, steaks, hot dogs, and chicken breasts.

Three out of 4 American households own a grill and they use it on average of 5 times per month.

Lexington, North Carolina is known as the Barbecue Capital of the World. October is Barbecue Month there, with a month-long Annual Barbecue Festival. The city's first barbecue restaurant opened in 1919; there are currently over 20 barbecue restaurants.

People in the Northeast U.S. are the heaviest barbecuers in the nation. The next most frequent barbecues are in the North Central region of the U.S., followed by the South and then the Western U.S.

The word "barbecue" may have come from the French phrase "barbe a queue" (from whiskers to tail-The term refers to the original method in which a whole animal was cooked on a spit over an open fire), or the Taino Indian word for their method of cooking fish over a pit of coals (barbacoa).




Saturday, May 23, 2009

My Widdle Biddy Garden

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Welcome to my mini garden!

This pot has 2 Heat Wave Tomatoes, a clump of peppermint (Mojitos!!!), and a Better Boy Tomato.













This little pot has two clumps of cilantro. I love cilantro in so many dishes. I just love cilantro!














This on has 3 Better Boys. I bought these on a whim. The were small plants, but already budding and they were on sale, 4 for $2. Couldn't pass it by!











This pot has 2 Beefsteak tomatoes, a clump of dill (love dill on my fish) and a clump of chives (Potatoes!! Cottage cheese!!).












I "fenced" them in with $10 of wire fencing. I could only get chicken wire by 100 feet bundles, and I couldn't think of anything I'd use it for. This was a little more expensive per foot, but I don't have something to store that I may never use. And I'm glad I bought it, because in retrospect, it is much sturdier.


Why do I need the fence?






Jazi demonstrates for you. I can't keep these dogs out of plants!

















Then on the fun side, I got some little impatients, red ones and white ones. I found these cool lined iron baskets. Aren't those the bomb? I can't wait for the little plants to fill the space and bloom all over the place.











And I got some petunias in a basket.














And two baskets of double petunias.

I wanted some begonias, but the place I went to today didn't have them. I'll pick some up on a different day.


I put geraniums in the iron kettles a couple weeks ago. They are little starter plants. They were about 4-5 inches tall and they are now about 8 inches and branching out. And a couple are already budding! I think they will be beautiful in about a month. Can't wait!

Mums in those iron kettles are coming back from last year, and the grasses I planted in them are greening up, too. I put some daisy and marigold seed in the pots today, too. They should all be filled out and looking wonderful soon.

Lastly I randomly scattered some wildflower seed. I have more to put out, but I'm done for today. I will do the rest on the next day without falling rain. Hopefully my house will surrounded with beautiful, amazing colors for the remainder of the summer!



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My Rainbow

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Interesting.


Your rainbow is shaded yellow.


What is says about you: You are a joyful person. You appreciate optimism. You're good at getting people to like you.

Find the colors of your rainbow at spacefem.com.




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It's Saturday!!

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OK, that title is for all of you, 'cause Saturday is just another day to me. But I remember that for working people Saturday is wonderful, and Saturday on a long weekend is the best! So enjoy!

First off, Happy World Turtle Day!




It is sunny and just partly cloudy this morning. The clouds are beginning to build in the west for the promised pluie du jour or for non-French speaking folks rain for the day, so I want to get a couple quick things done outside. I got the huge pots lugged onto the deck, and I'm getting ready to fill them. One didn't have drain holes, so I drilled holes this morning. Next I have to carry up two humongous bags of soil. Then I can plant the new baby plants I brought home yesterday. With this on my mind, the following cartoon tickled me.



And finally this cartoon made me burst out laughing aloud. It's funny, but I explain the connection to one of the dogs after you read it.


Here's the deal .... Lolita is such a toddler. Well, I guess she is about four or five now. Last night after we went to bed, everyone was settled in nicely and The Girl suddenly decided she didn't want to sleep yet. Her head popped up, then she sat up and looked around at her sleeping siblings. She wandered around the bed aimlessly, then she got to the floor and wandered the room a while. Back on the bed she tried instigating things with the siblings. I made her stop, as all the others were already relaxed and snoozing. Then she tried to go under the covers. I wouldn't let her do that because she would just rouse the others. She laid down a couple minutes, staring at me as if willing me to change my mind or die, whichever came first. Then she moved up next to me and nestled down by my shoulder. Good, I thought. I could read a few more minutes, and she would be settled in for the night.

After a few minutes, I was immersed in my book again, and I didn't notice at first that she was moving a little bit again. The little stinker was trying to get her nose under the covers! I told her firmly, No, stop it. She rolled her eyes up at me, gave a big, loud snort and just froze for a few seconds. Then she got up, stomped across the bed to the farthest corner and flopped down like a disgusted kid throwing herself onto the couch after losing the argument with mom! Seriously! The bed shook with her stomps and again with the flop! Joey and Max even raised their heads and looked at her as if irritated that she woke them! I stifled my laugh, because Ididn't want to break the spell!! OMG!! I chuckled and giggled softly for several minutes! She kept giving big, disgusted sounding snorts and sighs, and a couple times she lifted her head and looked over her shoulder at me before flopping it back down with a sigh. She also rearranged her position two or three times, more or less throwing herself with each one, jerking motions that moved the bed! She was apparently very pissed at me!! She even slightly bumped Sammy with one such move, and he, her best playmate and buddy, gave her a little soft growl.

Shis is a hilarious little dog! Lola is entertaining, exasperating, adorable and frustrating at times! All I can say is .... The Girl gots 'tude!!!!

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Friday, May 22, 2009

Segueing Into the Weekend

My yoga class was something else today! It just about did me in.

In Monday's class there were just 5 of us, and there was tine to do some specific 1:1 work. I was having a little trouble assuming or holding some of the positions, and the instructor and I talked through some points. She asked if certain things were painful, and as we processed through it, I told her that I have scoliosis (spinal curvature), which made her perk up. She understood right away what some of the problem was. She made a few adjustments, the main one being to stand with some added padding under my left foot, my longer leg. This forces my right leg to stretch to keep me balanced. As soon as I was doing that, I could feel a difference! And it was visibly noticeable, as a man facing me across the room could see the change in my stance. My left hip has been sticking out for some time now, and when I added just about 1/4 inch on that side and stretched the right leg, I could feel the difference in my body and also when I ran my hands down both hips. They were nearly even!

Again today, a small class, just 3 of us. She was working with me today on ways to relieve sciatica and back pain from scoliosis. It was really helping, and I was far into it with excitement for being able to do this on my own to improve my posture and my body alignment, while reducing pain I've learned to tolerate. It was hard work, as I have come to expect, and I was sweating big time. But it felt very good. I could feel the muscles being stretched and pulled, and although one doesn't necessarily expect that to feel "good," it did. About 40 minutes into the session, I began to feel some very slight nausea. I went ahead working, but I had to stop within 5 minutes more. The instructor looked at me and asked if I was OK. She said I was very flushed. I said I felt some nausea, and needed to sit out a few minutes.

This happens to me when I get overheated. This is why I'm careful, taking many breaks, when I'm working outside. I didn't expect it in this situation, because we were inside (no sun to aggravate it), the overhead fan was on, and the temperatures were cool (more about that in a bit). But I sat it out till the end, as the nausea didn't completely subside. One of my fellow students slipped to the restroom and wet a strip of paper towel, bless her soul! That helped a lot.

I'll be going for another class on Monday. I'm not going to let it stop me! Although I'm not as good as I should be about doing yoga on my own, I can feel a difference in my posture, in my muscles as they are strengthening. It is very good for me, and I want to continue until I can do these things with greater ease. I really feel this is my key to the the door of better physical condition.

It is still raining. It has been fairly slow all day with few breaks in the downfall. I have about .30 inches, so it is clearly coming down slowly enough to allow it to soak in. It doesn't appear that my topsoil is running away, at least not much of it. The rain feels very good. What doesn't necessarily feel good is the temperature. The top I've seen today is 49°. For May 22, this is not typical. With the rain it feels very dank and bone-chilling. I've even turned on the heater, because the inside temp was 62°, and it finally just got to me. I am wearing sweats! Last week I was wishing for more pairs of shorts!

I hope the rain lets up enough tomorrow to allow me to get the new pots out of the bed of the truck without getting soaked. I want to get those new plants in the soil and let them begin growing. The sooner they grow, the sooner I eat! The weather forecast is for continuing thunderstorms through next Thursday(!!) but decreasing from 50% now, to 40% and finally to 10% on Wed and Thur. I'm assuming there will be some breaks in the rain along the way. The temps are better, too. Tomorrow is 64° and by Monday, it looks like we will have mid 70s. That is much more tolerable!

OK, I'm gone for now. For those of you still around, not already off on your weekend fun, have a truly marvelous weekend! Happy Memorial Day, and remember why we have this holiday. My thanks for all those who served in our military services to protect our freedom.

A Quickie. NO!! Not That Kind!

My rain gauge say just a little bit over .10 inch. That means that so far all is good. It is raining slowly enough to soak in. Whew! I can't see any topsoil runoff, either. Whew again! This is very nice!

I drove into Ruidoso this morning and bought two huge pots for the deck. I also bought tomato plants, chives, dill and mint to plant in them, and within a few weeks I will be enjoying all of those all summer long! Yippee-skippee!! The pots are beautiful, and I thought about how gorgeous they would look with bright flowers in them, but the truth of it is, when I considered the joy of pulling a red tomato off the vine and chomping into it .... well, you know which one won!! I'm not much of a gardener, but a few tomato plant in deck pots with a few herbs surrounding them is hardly a back-breaking labor investment. And as I said, fresh off the vine tomatoes is a weakness. Oh yes, and fried green tomatoes are in my future!! Woo-hoo!!

I'm doing the pots on the deck for a couple reasons .... first the deer can't get to them and eat all my lovely tomatoes, and secondly, the convenience will be excellent. Oh, and third, I don't have to try to dig up this rocky soil to plant them.

I'll do some pix later on. Right now I gotta eat some rice and veggies, change clothes and get to yoga! talk to ya later, y'all!!!

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Maybe A Monsoon?

It is raining, very lightly, but that is great. In fact, for now a shower is best as it will soak in the dry soil better that way. It is getting so terribly dry here, and it is thrilling that rain is finally happening!

The weather people say that we will have rain at some level or 4 to 7 days. In fact, they say we may be getting a monsoon, and it is a month earlier than is usual. I hope we get rain for all seven days or even more, just not really hard! I hope it rains every day, but not enough to have a lot of runoff. We need it to be slow so it can soak in. I spread topsoil last week, and I surely hope it doesn't just run down the mountain! It is fairly well set in now, and the grass is coming up through it, so hopefully, it will hold. Wish me luck for a mild monsoon!

I had a list of tasks to get done before the rain, and I thought I had all day, but the clouds began building and I hurried to finish the last few. It began sprinkling about 15 minutes after I came in. Fortunately I got everything done but one thing, and I can finish it on the deck. I got a lot done, even a couple small tasks that weren't on the "must do today" list. Now with the rain beginning, I will be relegated to inside chores. But that's a good thing, too. I've neglected those things for a couple weeks, doing only the most necessary ones.

OK, I think I need a nap. Don't call me, I'm sleeping!

The Star Spangled Banner

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Do you have a few minutes? Good. Get a cuppa something, if you want, then sit down and have a listen.

When we were kids in school we all heard the story of The Star Spangled Banner, right? But either I'm so old my memory is failing me or in my childish foolishness I didn't listen, or .... what I really think .... the whole story was not taught in school. What is on the following audio clip just blows my mind and warms my patriotic soul. And it should be taught to kids more than once so hat the listen and remember it. It is an amazing story.

Now click, listen and be amazed at the history of our national anthem, and ending with one of the most beautiful renditions of it I've heard.





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Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Delightful!!

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This is absolutely delightful! This couple, married for 62 years, walked into the May Clinic, saw a piano and played an impromptu duet. If you don't smile over this, you're not alive, I swear!

Enjoy! Enjoy!

http://www.fark.com/cgi/vidplayer.pl?IDLink=4365716


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Interesting Start to My Day

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This morning I was watching the Today Show, and the power went out. This happens occasionally, and I think it is sort of expected in a rural setting. But usually it lasts a few seconds to a few minutes, so when it hit 10 minutes, I began to wonder. I called the power company, and I knew it was bigger than just me when they didn't answer until after 10 rings. I was asked my name and address, and a phone number. I gave my cell # since all my house phones are electronic, thus weren't working. Yes, I was told, they are aware of it. "It appears to be very widespread, and the cause is not known as yet." I thanked the woman and began to think about what to do in lieu of internet and vacuuming, the two immediate plans.

I called Allan on the cell to see if he was affected, and yes, he was. he lives about 10-12 miles from me. And I called a friend who lives about 20 miles in the opposite direction; yep, no power there either. It was widespread.

I putzed around for a while doing some things on the deck, and came back in the house just in time to hear the power surge through the house again. Bings and beeps signaled appliances turning on and the ensuing whirring of motors was assuring. While the power was out, several items around the house were giving out beeping alerts, and it totally freaked the dogs, especially Jazmyn. They went outside, and although I brought Jaz in after the power was back on, she went to the deck and still hasn't come back in, over two hours later! After the power was back on and everything was reset, I kept hearing an occasional beep. I couldn't figure out what had not been reset. Every 15 minutes or so, I'd hear a single beep and simply could not find where it was coming from. After about an hour I finally found it .... my cell phone was trying to tell me I'd had a call! Duh! I checked it out and it was the power company check to be sure I had power back on! I guess they called while I was outside. Can you believe that? How cool!

OK, I'd better get busy. I have things to do, places to go and people to see!! Before I go, here's something to make you smile. It's part of a graduation speech, and isn't it good advice?? For ALL of us!




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Tuesday Trivia

I'm late!! I'm late! I know. I forgot it last night, and then this morning, there was a power outage that effected most of the county, and just threw everything off!


UNUSUAL LAST WILLS
Magician Harry Houdini left the rabbits he pulled out of his hat to the children of friends. His wife was given a secret code - ten words randomly chosen that he would use to contact her from the afterlife. She held annual seances on Halloween for ten years after his death, but Houdini never appeared.

Animal lover Jonathan Jackson's will stipulated that his money be used for the creation of a cat house -- a place where cats could enjoy comforts such as bedrooms, a dining hall, an auditorium to listen to live accordion music, an exercise room, and a specially designed roof for climbing.

American hatmaker S. Sanborn left his body to science, bequeathing it to Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr., (then a professor of anatomy at Harvard Medical School) and one of Holmes's colleagues. The will stipulated that two drums were to be made out of Sanborn's skin and given to a friend on the condition that every June 17 at dawn he would pound out the tune "Yankee Doodle" at Bunker Hill to commemorate the anniversary of the famous Revolutionary War battle. (Eeewwwuuu!!)

Vermont tanner John Bowman believed that after his death, he, his dead wife, and two daughters would be reincarnated together. When he died in 1891, his will provided a $50,000 trust fund for the maintenance of his 21-room mansion and mausoleum, even requiring servants to serve dinner every night just in case the Bowmans were hungry when they returned from the dead.

Just two days before her death of an overdose in 1970, singer Janis Joplin changed her will to set aside $2,500 to pay for a posthumous all-night party for 200 guests at her favorite pub in San Anselmo, California, "so my friends can get blasted after I'm gone." The bulk of her estate reportedly went to her parents.

Eleanor E. Ritchey, heiress to the Quaker State Refining Corporation, passed on her $4.5 million fortune to her 150 dogs when she died in Florida in 1968. The will was contested, and by the time it was finally settled, only 73 of the dogs were still alive to recieve the established $14 million. When the last dog died in 1984, the remainder of the estate went to the Auburn University Research Foundation for research into animal diseases.



"I have enough money to last me the rest of my life,
unless I buy something."

~~Jackie Mason, (1936-), American stand-up comedian.
(Me, too!!)



DISASTERS, THE TITANIC
The Titanic was designed to hold 32 lifeboats, though only 20 were on board; White Star management was concerned that too many boats would sully the aesthetic beauty of the ship.

Survivors were rescued by the Carpathia, which was 58 miles southeast of the Titanic when it received the distress call.

The Titanic boasted electric elevators, a swimming pool, a squash court, a Turkish Bath, and a gymnasium with a mechanical horse and mechanical camel.

Lillian Gertrud Asplund, the last American survivor of the Titanic tragedy, died in Massachusetts on May 6, 2006, at age 99. Her mother and a brother also survived, but her father and three other brothers perished.

Eleanor Shuman, who was the inspiration for Kate Winslet's Rose, died on March 7, 1998, at age 87.

The wreckage of the Titanic was located in 1985, 12,500 feet down, about 350 miles (531 km) southeast of Newfoundland, Canada.




BOOKS
Bet you didn't know these books were banned...

Where's Waldo? Series by Martin Hanford: Schools in Michigan and New York put a ban on Waldo books because "on some of the pages there are dirty things", including a topless lady on the beach.

The American Heritage Dictionary: The whole dictionary was banned by a school district in Anchorage, Alaska in 1981 because they didn't approve of the inclusion of certain slang usage for words like bed and knockers.

The Complete Fairy Tales of The Brothers Grimm by Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm: The fairy tales we were told as kids are actually watered down versions of the Grimm stories like Little Red Riding Hood and Hansel and Gretel. The original works featured a great amount of blood and not-so-happy endings.

The Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank: It wasn't the subject matter that got this literary work banned from a school in Alabama. Their reason - they just felt the book was "a real downer."

The Adventures of Tom Sawyer by Mark Twain: Libraries in New York and Colorado banned Mark Twain's adventurous tale soon after the book came out, claiming Tom Sawyer was a protagonist of "questionable character."

Steal This Book by Abbie Hoffman: Stores around the United States wouldn't carry this book for fear the title would encourage customers to shoplift. However, had it been carried it probably would have been banned anyway for Hoffman's descriptions of how to make a pipe bomb, steal credit cards, and grow marijuana.

Monday, May 18, 2009

Deeeee-vine!

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Know what is an awesome dessert? I bought some Mexican coconut ice cream, and if you drizzle Hershey's chocolate syrup over it ........ sheer heaven!!!





PS - The brand is Helados Mexico Ice Cream. If you want to know about the ice cream, go to: http://www.heladosmexico.com/helados_finos.htm They also make those marvelous ice cream on a stick in the tropical flavors that are sold in stores and in some places (where there is a strong Mexican population) by street vendors.
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The Girl

I have been chuckling about Lolita a lot lately. She is the funniest little dog!

For one thing, there is a new twist in the bed time routine. When it is time for bed, we head to the bedroom , and I give them a treat. While they enjoy their treats (read that "scarf down their treats") I brush my teeth and wash my face. When I am ready to get into bed, they are all already on the bed, jockeying or having jockeyed, for favorite places. That's the normal routine.

Not long ago I began to have a problem every night that at this point Lola was not there. She had gone outside. No problem. I'm glad she does her business before bedtime. However, when she was slow coming in, I discovered that she was out there chasing bugs! Seriously! It is actually fun to watch her run and jump and twist around in attempts to catch moths. She is almost like a cat in her behaviors at this.

The problem is that she didn't want to come in! She is a night owl in this respect. The first couple times, I had to go pick her up and carry her in. Later, when this became a nightly event, I let her out, and after she is in I lower the doggy door to keep her inside. After she settled down I would slip out of bed and open the door again for the overnight. After a few nights of this, she got the idea, and I haven't had to close the door. She knows what the routine is, and she is doing well. So she plays a few minutes, and when I call her in, it is time for bed.

Once we are in bed, she has another thing that has recently begun. She loooooooves to burrow under the covers. I have only a sheet and a light blanket on the bed, but she gets under the blanket and scoots around all over the bed, bumping into her siblings or me. If someone on top or underneath where she is responds, she loves it. She will softly growl and struggle against the fabric and the unseen opponent for a minute then move on to the next one. Sometimes this lasts a few minutes and sometimes I have to tell her we are done and it is time for sleep. When I do, she rolls over for a belly rub, and we are done for the night.

Lola is a very smart little dog. She learns quickly about "no," or "go to bed," or "sleep now," and several other common phrases. She is pretty easy to live with, thanks to that. Yesterday I found my house shoe outside, and when I opened the door, she looked at it, about 10 feet away from her, back at me and ducked her head! She knew before I said anything. I just picked it up, saying "no," and came inside. She followed me in the house, and came to me with her head lowered, and we made up.

Lolita certainly entertains herself well. As you see in the above photos, she occupies herself well. While the others are hanging out inside with me, snoozing or following me around, she loves to be outside. So, The Girl sits on the deck and watches the world go by or catches a few winks. Or she does the same in the back yard. And when she wants to play with one of the others, she comes inside and aggravates him/her until the race is on. The Girl is self-sufficient!



And isn't she cute? She's really quite The Girl.

(Caroline, doesn't she look like Ali in this photo? :') I miss the old boy.)