Monday, September 29, 2008

At the Winter Feeder


I recently came across this poem in a book of devotionals and was quite taken by it.


At the Winter Feeder

by John Leax


His feather flame doused dull
by icy cold,
the cardinal hunched
into the rough, green feeder
but ate no seed.
Through binoculars I saw
festered and useless
his beak, broken
at the root.
Then two: one blazing, one gray,
rode the swirling weather
into my vision
and lighted at his side.
Unhurried, as if possessing
the patience of God,
they cracked sunflowers
and fed him
beak to wounded beak
choice meats.
Each morning and afternoon
the winter long,
that odd triumvirate,
that trinity of need,
returned and ate
their sacrament
of broken seed.


John Leax is the Poet-in-Residence at Houghton College in Houghton, NY.

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

AR BOW, Round 2

I just can’t say enough good things about the Becoming an Outdoors Woman program! My first workshop was in September of 2007 when I attended the AR BOW weekend in Ferndale, AR. I had such a good time I knew I’d have to do it again. In April of this year, I attended the LA BOW in Pollock, LA. Despite a few differences in the setting and setup, overall it was the same great experience. This past weekend I went back to the AR BOW for a repeat performance.

Two friends rode with me to the facility at Ferndale on Friday morning. One attended the LA BOW with me last spring; the other had never attended a BOW event. The fourth person in our room was a woman from California whose husband’s family has land in our community. They’ve just started spending some time in Arkansas and that’s why she signed up for the program.

The Arkansas program gives preference to first-timers, so this time I didn’t get all my first choices in classes. I don’t think there’s any such thing as a “bad” class, so it really didn’t matter. I was just glad to get in to the program at all. Friday afternoon I took Stream Ecology. We got lots of hands-on experience testing the water in a nearby stream for chemicals, turbidity, temperature, etc. We used nets to take samples and find out what types of bugs were present… which also help determine the “health” of a stream. Saturday morning I made lots of neat things in a Nature Crafts class. It was fun despite the injury I received from a hot-glue gun. There are some folks that just shouldn’t be allowed to use glue guns….namely, ME! Fortunately my injury didn’t keep me from having a great time learning to tie flies in my Saturday afternoon class. Everyone made five: an Olive Wooly Booger, a Scud (fresh water shrimp), a Peacock Soft Hackle (nymph), a Cone-headed Shad Streamer, and an Elk Hair Caddis. My final class on Sunday morning was Basic Duck Hunting. I’ve done a fair amount of duck hunting in the past, so it was pretty much a refresher course for me. I haven’t been in quite a few years, though, so it got me psyched up to go again this year.

Just like last year, the food was wonderful; there were lots of great door prizes and fun freebies just for attending (as well as give-aways in the classes) and fantastic entertainment both nights. Sponsorship is generous and the raffle items are top quality. Various BOW programs handle their raffles differently, but in Arkansas each participant is given five tickets to risk as they choose. I spread mine out between the three fishing packages available. I was thrilled to win the first raffle announced: A Pflueger Lady Trion spinning combo rod and reel with a Shakespeare 2-tray tackle box (filled with goodies)! I only had one ticket on that item so it just goes to show…one is all it takes!

My next goal is to attend a Winter BOW somewhere. There are several states that host them and I’ve already started doing my research. I’m not really a cold weather person, but I figure I can handle it for just one weekend!

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Kilroy Was Here


Kilroy. A name I hadn’t thought of in years until I got an e-mail today with a link to an article about him! Kids of this generation have probably never heard of him, but he was a big part of my growing up. My dad was a major fan of the simple little drawing known as Kilroy. It’s probably the only positive thing he brought back with him from his tour of duty in WWII. I still have a ring binder filled with drawings he did of Kilroy – more than 150 of them! Taken from his imagination, they reflected the times we lived in: Stalin-roy, the Beverly Hill-roys, Mr. Clean-roy, Ringo-kil-beatle-roy, Ben-roy-Casey. Some were animals: elephant-roy, owl-roy, dog-roy. A few would be considered quite politically incorrect now. Most were just silly, but fun. Thumbing through the book today brought back a lot of good memories.

With permission of the author, here’s the article in its entirety.


How 'Kilroy Was Here' Changed the World
By Heather Whipps, LiveScience's History Columnist
posted: 15 September 2008 04:40 pm ET

Each Monday, this column turns a page in history to explore the discoveries, events and people that continue to affect the history being made today.

Long before the Internet made viral marketing a cinch, one long-nosed little character named Kilroy made his way around the world the old-fashioned way, becoming a legend among the millions of military men and women who served during World War II.

The rudimentary doodle, which featured a balding head peering over a wall along with the tag "Kilroy Was Here," popped up in unexpected places across all of the theaters of war visited by American troops.

While competitions to inscribe the graffiti in obscure locations kept the battle-weary soldiers busy and its appearances kept them inspired, the mysterious Kilroy character had Japanese intelligence officers and even Hitler himself worried over the seemingly ubiquitous guy.

Reportedly spurred by an American dockworker, the "Kilroy Was Here" fad was an iconic part of World War II and 1940s lore.

The riveter that launched a thousand ships

The origins of "Kilroy Was Here" remain murky and clouded by urban legend, but the most credible source of the saying comes from a shipyard in Quincy, Massachusetts, most historians agree.

On top of their military contribution overseas during World War II, the United States was heavily involved in the war effort producing ships, tanks, planes and weapons for the Allied Forces at plants across the country.

At one of the country's most prolific shipyards in Quincy worked James J. Kilroy — a rivet inspector who, like everyone in his trade, was paid by the number of rivets he checked and recorded his day's work on the machinery itself with a chalk mark. To avoid having his marks erased and moved by unscrupulous workers continuing his line of rivets, Kilroy began inscribing "Kilroy Was Here" on the machinery, historians say.

The dire need for ships overseas meant that most were launched into action before the workers' marks, including Kilroy's, were painted over or covered up.

American GIs began noticing the puzzling phrase scrawled on outgoing ships almost immediately, often tucked into hard-to-reach spots. At first, sailors treated an appearance of "Kilroy Was Here" like a kind of talisman, certifying that their ship had been properly checked and would be protected against the enemy. GIs later adopted Kilroy's standard and began tagging the places they'd visited across Europe, Asia and Africa.

The Kilroy character — just eyes and fingers visible from behind a wall or fence — was attached to the saying sometime early in the war.

Kilroy on the Moon?

By the end of World War II, "Kilroy Was Here" had achieved cult-like status, springing up in the unlikeliest of places — probably as a result of some friendly competition among GIs, historians believe — including some top-secret military installations. Latrines in France, beaches in the Pacific and walls in Germany were covered with the tag and, as the war progressed, it became a rally cry of the mounting Allied successes.

While Americans shared a few good-hearted laughs over the mysterious Kilroy, who somehow managed to arrive at every destination first, the slogan was a more serious matter for the opposition.

Japanese troops were so mystified by a "Kilroy Was Here" painted on a bombed out tank on the Pacific island of Guadalcanal that they reported the find to their senior intelligence officers, according to a U.S. Marine interviewed by World War II author Timothy Benford.

Hitler supposed that Kilroy was some kind of "Super-GI" or spy, other unconfirmed reports have stated, and ordered a contingent of men to track down the sneaky American. He would never be found.

The identity of the real Kilroy wasn't revealed until 1946, when a national radio contest searching for the original "artist" uncovered and authenticated the story of James Kilroy in Quincy, which still celebrates its hometown celebrity with Pin-the-Nose-on-Kilroy competitions.

The legend continues...

Despite a few unique appearances reported recently in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Kilroy fad largely faded from memory after a small resurgence in popularity during the Korean War in the 1950s.

Or did it?

A bit of a personal side-note — my grandfather, a British World War II veteran whose initials are W.W., often signed his cards and letters with the same little bulbous-nosed character peeking over a wall, his fingers scrawled in the shape of two Ws. Who knows where else Kilroy remains alive and well?!

These are a few other places where "Kilroy" is rumored to have showed up over the years:

· The Arc de Triomphe in Paris
· Mount Everest
· The Statue of Liberty
· The surface of the Moon
· The Great Wall of China

Feel free to check those out for yourself!

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Wild weekend weather

Well I'm glad that's over! We didn't get nearly as much out of Ike as we did Gustav. We ended up with less than 2" of rain and, as the end of the storm zipped through last night, we had our biggest winds. (20-25 sustained and gusts up to 45) Things could certainly have been worse!

There was a brief moment of excitement while I was working at the Red Cross shelter set up at our church. Under tornado watch most of the day and evening, we had an actual warning right after lunch. That meant rounding up all the evacuees and volunteers and moving everyone to a safer part of the church. We weren't supposed to be a shelter this time around, but many of the people who stayed with us during Katrina/Rita/Gustav showed up on Friday. It's something when you have seen folks in a situation like this often enough to recognize and call by name! For their sake, I hope we don't see them again any time soon!


We still don't know the extent of our crop losses. The beans were flooded by rains from Fay. (since when did storms from Florida head west??) Gustav, and possibly Ike, damaged the rice crop with wind. Time will tell.

More importantly, we're all waiting to hear how much damage the oil industry received over the weekend. What a mess! I don't envy either candidate running for president. I can't imagine wanting to take on the baggage this country is carrying!

Friday, September 12, 2008

Photomosaics


I held off on working the second puzzle my daughter gave me for Christmas fearing it would be a nightmare to complete. Once I had it laid out, I realized it wasn’t going to be impossible… just challenging.

The title of the puzzle is “Sunflower” and it is part of the “Photomosaics” collection by Robert Silvers. “Photomosaics” are pictures made from pictures. Thousands of tiny photographs are pieced together to form a larger image. In “Sunflower” all the photos are flowers. Stepping away from the puzzle, the sunflower image is quite distinct, but upon closer observation, the individual photos become apparent.

There are several books of Silver’s work available. I have the first, published in 1997, which provides a nifty little magnifying lens for examining the individual photos. Although all the images are impressive, two of the more notable are a portrait of Abraham Lincoln done entirely with Civil War photographs and a portrait of Marilyn Monroe commissioned by Life magazine using only photos of Life covers (including all those featuring Marilyn and others in her life). The book also includes images from nature, art history, currency and more.
It’s a fascinating form of art!

Thursday, September 11, 2008

September 11 - This day in history

The following information is taken from Wikipedia. Well, almost all of it.

9 - Battle of the Teutoburg Forest ends.
506 - The bishops of Visigothic Gaul meet in the Council of Agde.
1185 - Isaac II Angelus kills Stephanus Hagiochristophorites and then appeals to the people, resulting in the revolt that deposes Andronicus I Comnenus and places Isaac on the throne of the Byzantine Empire.
1226 - The Roman Catholic practice of perpetual adoration begins.
1297 - Battle of Stirling Bridge: Scots led by William Wallace defeat the English.
1390 - Lithuanian Civil War (1389–1392): the Teutonic Knights begin a five-week siege of Vilnius
1541 - Santiago, Chile, is destroyed by indigenous warriors, lead by Michimalonko.
1609 - Expulsion order announced against the Moriscos of Valencia; beginning of the expulsion of all Spain's Moriscos.
1609 - Henry Hudson discovers Manhattan Island and the natives living there.
1649 - Siege of Drogheda ends: Oliver Cromwell's English Parliamentarian troops take the town and execute its garrison.
1683 - John III Sobieski of Poland arrives on Kahlen Hill, leading to the Battle of Vienna the next day.
1697 - Battle of Zenta
1708 - Charles XII of Sweden stops his march to conquer Moscow outside Smolensk, marking the turning point in the Great Northern War. The army is defeated nine months later in the battle of Poltava, and the Swedish empire is no longer a major power.
1709 - Battle of Malplaquet: Great Britain, Netherlands and Austria fight against France.
1714 - Barcelona surrenders to Spanish and French Bourbon armies in the War of the Spanish Succession.
1773 - The Public Advertiser publishes a satirical essay titled Rules By Which A Great Empire May Be Reduced To A Small One, which is written by Benjamin Franklin.
1776 - British-American peace conference on Staten Island fails to stop nascent American Revolution.
1777 - Battle of Brandywine - major American Revolutionary war victory for British in Chester County, Pennsylvania.
1786 - The Beginning of the Annapolis Convention.
1789 - Alexander Hamilton is appointed as the first United States Secretary of the Treasury.
1792 - Hope Diamond is stolen along with other crown jewels when six men broke into the house used to store the jewels.
1802 - France annexed the Kingdom of Piedmont.
1814 - The climax of the Battle of Plattsburgh, a major United States victory in the War of 1812.
1847 - Stephen Foster's well-known song, Oh! Susanna, is first performed at a saloon in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
1857 - The Mountain Meadows Massacre: Mormon settlers and Paiutes massacre 120 pioneers at Mountain Meadows, Utah.
1888 - Death of the Argentine politician Domingo Sarmiento, after whom the Latin American Teacher's Day was chosen.
1891 - The Jewish Colonization Association is established by Baron Maurice de Hirsch.
1893 - First conference of the World Parliament of Religions is held.
1897 - After months of pursuit, generals of Menelik II of Ethiopia capture Gaki Sherocho, the last king of Kaffa, bringing an end to that ancient kingdom.
1903 - First race is held at The Milwaukee Mile in West Allis, Wisconsin. It is the oldest major speedway in the world.
1906 - Mahatma Gandhi coins the term "Satyagraha" to characterize the Non-Violence movement in South Africa.
1914 - Australia invades New Britain, defeating a German contingent there.
1915 - The Pennsylvania Railroad begins electrified commuter rail service between Paoli and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, using overhead AC trolley wires for power.
1916 - The Quebec Bridge's central span collapses, killing 11 men. The bridge initially collapsed in toto on August 29, 1907.
1919 - U.S. Marines invade Honduras.
1921 - Nahalal, the first moshav in Israel, is settled.
1922 - The British Mandate of Palestine begins.
1922 - The Treaty of Kars is ratified in Yerevan, Armenia.
1922 - One of the Herald Sun of Melbourne, Australia's predecessor papers The Sun News-Pictorial is founded.
1926 - An assassination attempt on Benito Mussolini fails.
1931 - Salvatore Maranzano is murdered by Charles Luciano's hitmen.
1932 - Franciszek Żwirko and Stanisław Wigura, Polish Challenge 1932 winners, are killed in a plane crash when their RWD 6 crashes into the ground during a storm.
1940 - George Stibitz pioneers the first remote operation of a computer.
1940 - World War II: Buckingham Palace is damaged during a German air raid.
1941 - Ground is broken for the construction of The Pentagon.
1941 - World War II: the U.S. Navy is ordered to attack German U-boats.
1941 - Charles Lindberg's Des Moines Speech accusing the British, Jews and FDR's administration of pressing for war with Germany.
1943 - World War II: German troops occupy Corsica and Kosovo-Metohija.
1943 - World War II: start of the liquidation of the Ghettos in Minsk and Lida by the Nazis.
1944 - World War II: the first Allied troops of the U.S. Army cross the western border of Nazi Germany.
1944 - World War II: RAF bombing raid on Darmstadt and the following firestorm kill 11,500.
1945 - World War II: liberation of the Japanese-run POW and civilian internee camp at Batu Lintang, Kuching, Sarawak on the island of Borneo by Australian 9th Division forces. Over 2,000 prisoners, including women and children, were due to be executed on September 15.
1955 - Dedication of the first Temple of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Europe, the Bern Switzerland Temple.
1956 - People to People International is founded by President Dwight D. Eisenhower.
1958 - Kelly is born! Today marks her 50th birthday!
1960 - The Young Americans for Freedom, meeting at home of William F. Buckley, Jr., promulgate the Sharon Statement.
1961 - Foundation of the World Wildlife Fund.
1961 - Hurricane Carla strikes the Texas coast as a Category 4 hurricane, the strongest storm ever to hit the state.
1965 - The 1st Cavalry Division of the United States Army arrives in Vietnam.
1968 - Air France Flight 1611 crashes off Nice, France, killing 89 passengers and 6 crew.
1970 - 88 of the hostages from the Dawson's Field hijackings are released. The remaining hostages, mostly Jews or Israeli citizens, are held until September 25.
1970 - The Ford Pinto is introduced.
1971 - The Egyptian Constitution becomes official.
1972 - Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) in San Francisco, California begins regular service.
1973 - A CIA backed coup in Chile headed by General Augusto Pinochet topples the democratically elected President Salvador Allende. Pinochet remains in power for almost 17 years.
1974 - Eastern Air Lines Flight 212 crashes in Charlotte, North Carolina, killing 69 passengers and two crew.
1978 - U.S. President Jimmy Carter, President Anwar Sadat of Egypt, and Prime Minister Menachem Begin of Israel meet at Camp David and agree on a framework for peace between Israel and Egypt and a comprehensive peace in the Middle East.
1980 - Voters approve the present Constitution of Chile.
1981 - A small plane crashes into the Swing Auditorium in San Bernardino damaging it beyond repair.
1982 - The international forces that were guaranteeing the safety of Palestinian refugees following Israel's 1982 Invasion of Lebanon leave Beirut. Five days later, several thousand refugees are massacred in the Sabra and Shatila refugee camps.
1985 - Baseball: Pete Rose gets his 4,192nd career base hit, breaking Ty Cobb's record which had stood for over 60 years.
1987 - Dan Rather walks off the set of the CBS Evening News over disapproval of the handling of a major event being interrupted and postponed by a sports program, leaving six minutes of dead air.
1989 - The iron curtain opens between the communist Hungary and Austria. From Hungary thousands of East Germans throng to Austria and West Germany.
1990 - U.S. President George H. W. Bush delivers a nationally televised speech in which he threatens the use of force to remove Iraqi soldiers from Kuwait, which Iraq had recently invaded. He mentions the term "New World Order" in this speech for the first time, which is also named "Towards a New World Order".(full text of the speech)
1992 - Hurricane Iniki, one of the most damaging hurricanes in United States history, devastates the State of Hawaii, especially the islands of Kauai and Oahu.
1994 - Frank Eugene Corder steals a Cessna plane, intending to crash it into the White House. 1996 - Union Pacific Railroad purchases Southern Pacific Railroad.
1997 - NASA's Mars Global Surveyor reaches Mars.
1997 - After a nationwide referendum, Scotland votes to establish a devolved parliament, within the United Kingdom.
1998 - Independent counsel Kenneth Starr sends a report to the U.S. Congress accusing President Bill Clinton of 11 possible impeachable offenses.
1998 - Opening ceremony for the 1998 Commonwealth Games in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Malaysia is the first Asian country to host the games.
2000 - Activists protest against the World Economic Forum meeting in Melbourne, Australia. View of the WTC on fire and the Statue of Liberty
2001 - Coordinated attacks result in the collapse of the World Trade Center in New York City, destruction of the western portion of The Pentagon in Arlington, Virginia, and an unplanned passenger airliner crash in Shanksville, Pennsylvania, which happened after airplane passengers fought back on the plane. In total, 2,974 people are killed in the September 11, 2001 attacks.
2002 - Through extreme and coordinated effort, The Pentagon is rededicated after repairs are completed, exactly one year after the attack on the building.
2003 - Swedish foreign minister Anna Lindh dies after being assaulted and fatally wounded on September 10.
2003 - The Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety enters into effect.
2004 - All passengers are killed when a helicopter crashes in the Aegean Sea. Passengers include Patriarch Peter VII of Alexandria and 16 others (including journalists and bishops of the Greek Orthodox Church of Alexandria).
2005 - The State of Israel completes its unilateral disengagement from the Gaza Strip.
2007 - Russia tests the largest conventional weapon ever, the Father of all bombs.

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

Something fishy here

Now here's something you don't see every day.

Sept. 7, 2008 05:33 PM
Associated Press

LITTLE ROCK, Ark.- It's a fishing tale that packs a wallop so strong it broke the jaw of a southeastern Arkansas teen and covered him in fish blood and guts. Seth Russell, 15, of Crossett, was cruising Lake Chicot on a large inner tube towed by a boat when a Silver Asian carp leaped from the water and smacked him in the face. Seth was knocked unconscious.
"He doesn't remember anything at all," the boy's mother, Linda Russell, said last week. "He was laughing, and the next thing he remembers, he is waking in a hospital."
The teen has had oral surgery to wire several teeth together and still experiences back pain that doctors attribute to whiplash from the high-speed collision, his mother said.
He's not the only one who's had a run-in with the "flying" Silver Asian carp."They do not fly, but they are quite good jumpers," said Carole Engle, director of aquaculture and the fisheries center at the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff. "Over the past year, we have had some calls about fish jumping and causing injuries on Lake Chicot."Their jumping behavior is a problem, and their population appears to be growing there," Engle said. Silver Asian carp were first imported to the United States in the 1970s. Catfish farmers brought them here to remove algae and other suspended matter from their ponds. The Environmental Protection Agency started a program allowing cities to use them to help clean the water in sewer treatment plant ponds.




We use to grow catfish in the Arkansas Delta. A few years ago we transferred a few of the carp from there to the pond we have at home in an attempt to control the weeds and grass. (see photo)


While on the topic of fish, I have another sad loss to report. I looked in my 55 gallon fishtank this morning and my plecostomus was dead!! I don't remember exactly what year I bought him, but I know when I moved my tank eight years ago he was already a few years old. I'm guessing he was around ten. A mere inch or two in length when I brought him home, he'd grown to a good 8" or better. Too big to flush! Sadly, I dipped him out (with a large net) and bagged him up for the garbage. I have no pictures of him, but this Wikipedia entry will give you a good idea of what he looked like.

Sunday, September 7, 2008

I'm not going to read that!

This has been a good summer for reading. If you’ve kept an eye on my Shelfari, you’ve seen a variety of books cross the shelf. Two from the past month are books that, for some reason, I originally had no intention of reading.

Jan Karon started the "Mitford" series in the mid-90s with At Home in Mitford. The series continued with eight additional novels and several “companion” books. I was hooked by the simplicity of life in the books… a welcome escape from the real world. As with any books where I’ve grown to love the characters, I hated to see the series end. Still, when it was announced that there would be a new, related series entitled the “Father Tim” books, I balked. I had no desire to go back in time to the childhood of the main character. This summer I noticed Home to Holly Springs lying on a table at my aunt’s house. With her encouragement I decided to give it a try. I can’t imagine now why I was so opposed to reading it! It was wonderful! Set in present day, it followed Father Tim’s journey to his hometown and, with the help of flashbacks, resolved many of the issues that plagued him from his childhood throughout the original series. I’m not sure where the new series will go from here, but I’m certainly willing to go along for the ride.

I first remember Sue Monk Kidd from Guideposts Magazine. I always enjoyed her writing style and didn’t hesitate to buy her first novel, The Secret Life of Bees. It was very good and I looked forward to more from her. When The Mermaid Chair was released in 2005 I must have read something in a review that made me decide I didn’t want to read it. That persisted until I ran across it on the bargain shelf at Barnes & Noble last month and was able to thumb through a copy. Different from her first novel, I thought it was quite good, despite the poor reviews it received at Amazon.

Just think of the pleasure I would have missed out on if I’d stuck with my belligerent ways!

Friday, September 5, 2008

Farewell Melissa and Tom


Those who followed my blog at 360 know I use to spend a lot of time at our pasture and frequently made entries about our goats. I've been less involved in the day to day activities during the past year or two. I don't even know exactly how many goats we have at this point, but I do try to keep tabs on some of the older goats... ones with names and distinct personalities. It saddens me to report that we lost Melissa and Tom this week.

Tom (along with Ma and Jolly) was one of the first goats we bought. They were purchased while we were still clearing our pasture in order to help with the brush. We think Ma and Tom were about a year old when we got them and never were sure of Jolly's relationship to them. As we added goats to our herd, Tom established his dominance and remained "top dog...er, goat" until the end. Despite a few run-ins with him (see my "Killer Goat" entry at 360), I was quite fond of Tom and will miss him. My husband saw that he was dead Wednesday morning , but couldn't get to his body because of all the water. Sadly, the buzzards had already started in by the time he was able to bury him yesterday and he wasn't able to verify the cause of death. We're assuming he drowned.

Melissa and DR were Shelley's first set of twins born in July of 2005. They were handled often as kids which made them more like pets than just livestock. DR was sold when they were about a year old. Melissa remained here and had several kids of her own. Melissa's body was discovered yesterday morning in one of the cows' watering holes and had obviously been chased there by dogs (dog tracks led up to the water). Goats do not like water as it is, and with the remnants of Gustav... well, there was a lot more water than normal.

I've taken many pictures of Tom over the years. The one I've used here is the most recent, taken two months ago. The photo of Melissa (at the top) is one of my favorites. It was taken in September of '05 when she was about 2 months old. I'll miss those goats.

Thursday, September 4, 2008

What a week!

What a week it's been! Hard to believe just last Thursday my daughter and I were spending some "end of the summer" time relaxing in the pool. Well, relaxing until I realized there was a snake swimming with us! He might have been small, but he was fast! I finally managed to net him so we could swim in peace.

The rest of the weekend was spent packing and taking care of last minute things. Even though my daughter is in an on-campus apartment with a kitchen this year (and is a good cook in her own right), I prepared some of her favorites dishes as a farewell. I also baked bread and tried the blueberry muffin recipe using chocolate chips this time. Yum!

Sunday was spent driving and moving in, all the time keeping an eye on Gustav. Monday we drove to my sister's house for a fun visit. We went out for lunch with her, my niece and my two great-nephews. Always an entertaining crew!! By that time I knew if I wanted to get home before all the rain I had to get going. I dropped my daughter back at her college at 4:00 and arrived home at 9:00, only driving in the rain for about the last hour.

It still amazes me that a hurricane making landfall 300 miles away can cause so much damage! We ended up with 9" of rain at our house. My husband said it was the first time he had ever seen water going over the spillway of our pond in addition to the two pipes. As of yesterday, there were 90,000 Entergy customers without power in Arkansas and no telling how much flooding and wind damage. After getting 10" of rain on our bean crop a few weeks ago, we're still waiting to see what the wind did to our rice crop this week.

Every evening our inside dogs go out one last time before bed, always hoping there will be a bunny in the yard to chase. Of course it was Tuesday evening with the wind blowing and the rain falling that their wish came true. The chase was on the minute the door opened and no amount of hollering on my part could stop things. Unfortunately, the rabbit didn't manage to escape in time. So... there I was in my nightshirt and raincoat trying to corral dogs (by this time my outside dogs were trying to get involved on the other side of the fence) and dispose of the rabbit.

Yesterday, after taking the summer off from my craft group, I arrived at the church to find that our craft room had flooded! Our church serves as a Red Cross Shelter and some of the evacuees volunteered to help clean things up. What a blessing! I recognized some of the faces and realized many were folks who had stayed at our church during Katrina/Rita.

Hopefully things will now settle in to the usual busyness of fall, without the added drama. Here's a fun distraction to end with: Flying Use your mouse to steer.

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

Should You Vote for Obama or McCain?



Your Issue Profile: 16% Obama, 84% McCain



The results are in, and John McCain is definitely your choice.

You're probably not surprised. It's possible you've had your eye on McCain for years.

Popular or not, you will likely stick by McCain. For you, it's a matter of principle.

And besides, there's something exciting about rooting for the underdog!