I am amazed at how quickly the snow is accumulating, already. I am sure we didn't have this much last year at this time.
I took these photos today.
If you compare them to the ones I posted below you can see the difference.
Especially in the one below, which was taken from inside the patio door. That is our bbq and chairs buried beneath that mountain of snow.
All this snow wouldn't be so bad if we owned a snow machine of some kind, or at the very least a pair of snow shoes. You have to be a winter sports fanatic to see the joy in all this, don't you think?
Monday, December 8, 2008
Sunday, December 7, 2008
Christmas Edition of Getting To Know You
This is one of those email things that goes around... it is silly but a fun thing to fill out. Here are my answers..........................
1. Wrapping paper or gift bags?............. I prefer Gift Bags... so much less muss and fuss
2. Real tree or Artificial?................... Artificial
3. When did you put up the tree?................... The last week in November
4. When will you take down the tree?.......... As soon as possible... usually right after Jan 1st
5. Do you like egg nog?.................. Sometimes
6. Favorite gift received as a child?.................. Easy Bake Oven... that is what led me to be the excellent cook I am today...teehee. I also really liked my Lite Brite and Spirograph. Just a little blast from the past to all the baby boomers.
7. Do you have a nativity scene?........ I do have a couple of Christmas decorations that are nativity scenes
8. Hardest person to buy for?............ Just about everybody these days
9. Easiest person to buy for?....................... Me
10. Mail or email Christmas cards?.................... I do both
11.Worst Christmas gift you ever received?.............. Hard to say. I am grateful for every gift I receive because it meant that person was thinking about me
12. Favorite Christmas Movie?............... It's a Wonderful Life......... I watch it every year. Poor Bruce.
13. Have you ever recycled a Christmas present?.................. Well... Maybe
14. Favorite thing to eat at Christmas?......................... Dressing
15. Clear lights or colored on the tree?.......... Every year is different...depends on how I feel
16. Favorite Christmas song?.............. Oh Holy Night... brings me to tears every time I hear it
17. Travel at Christmas or stay home?............ This is our first time in years that we are going to spend Christmas with family so for this year I would have to say travel
18. Can you name all of Santa's reindeers?............ Dasher, Dancer, Prancer, Vixen, Cupid, Comet, Donner and Blitzen and Rudolph. I had to really think
19. Open the presents Christmas Eve or morning?................ Christmas morning
20. Most annoying thing about this time of year?............. Commercialism and Greed
21. Favorite ornament, theme or color?............ In years gone by I have fond memories of a roto wheel which my family used every Christmas.. it had four colors on it and it turned and the colors would illuminate the room. I love the lights and colors of Christmas. Now I would have to say my ceramic Christmas tree and my animal ornaments I bought for my dogs Bailey and Dylan
22. Favorite food for Christmas dinner?................. Turkey and the trimmings
23. What do you want for Christmas this year? Good Health and Peace for my family members and I... you cannot put a price on that
24. Who is most likely to respond to this?............... Doesn't matter................... The End........
To all my dear Friends and Family Members I wish You all a very Merry Christmas. May Your lives be filled with the joy and beauty of the season and may You experience a prosperous and peaceful New Year!
Much Love,
Karen
1. Wrapping paper or gift bags?............. I prefer Gift Bags... so much less muss and fuss
2. Real tree or Artificial?................... Artificial
3. When did you put up the tree?................... The last week in November
4. When will you take down the tree?.......... As soon as possible... usually right after Jan 1st
5. Do you like egg nog?.................. Sometimes
6. Favorite gift received as a child?.................. Easy Bake Oven... that is what led me to be the excellent cook I am today...teehee. I also really liked my Lite Brite and Spirograph. Just a little blast from the past to all the baby boomers.
7. Do you have a nativity scene?........ I do have a couple of Christmas decorations that are nativity scenes
8. Hardest person to buy for?............ Just about everybody these days
9. Easiest person to buy for?....................... Me
10. Mail or email Christmas cards?.................... I do both
11.Worst Christmas gift you ever received?.............. Hard to say. I am grateful for every gift I receive because it meant that person was thinking about me
12. Favorite Christmas Movie?............... It's a Wonderful Life......... I watch it every year. Poor Bruce.
13. Have you ever recycled a Christmas present?.................. Well... Maybe
14. Favorite thing to eat at Christmas?......................... Dressing
15. Clear lights or colored on the tree?.......... Every year is different...depends on how I feel
16. Favorite Christmas song?.............. Oh Holy Night... brings me to tears every time I hear it
17. Travel at Christmas or stay home?............ This is our first time in years that we are going to spend Christmas with family so for this year I would have to say travel
18. Can you name all of Santa's reindeers?............ Dasher, Dancer, Prancer, Vixen, Cupid, Comet, Donner and Blitzen and Rudolph. I had to really think
19. Open the presents Christmas Eve or morning?................ Christmas morning
20. Most annoying thing about this time of year?............. Commercialism and Greed
21. Favorite ornament, theme or color?............ In years gone by I have fond memories of a roto wheel which my family used every Christmas.. it had four colors on it and it turned and the colors would illuminate the room. I love the lights and colors of Christmas. Now I would have to say my ceramic Christmas tree and my animal ornaments I bought for my dogs Bailey and Dylan
22. Favorite food for Christmas dinner?................. Turkey and the trimmings
23. What do you want for Christmas this year? Good Health and Peace for my family members and I... you cannot put a price on that
24. Who is most likely to respond to this?............... Doesn't matter................... The End........
To all my dear Friends and Family Members I wish You all a very Merry Christmas. May Your lives be filled with the joy and beauty of the season and may You experience a prosperous and peaceful New Year!
Much Love,
Karen
Sunday, November 30, 2008
Winter/Christmas Top Twenty Five List
Well it is that time to produce my favorites for winter list. Much harder for me than my autumn list. But to make it easier I have added in my why I like Christmas list and because there are so many reasons I have expanded the list to 25. Here goes.....................
1. Fresh undisturbed snowfall.
2. Huge snowflakes falling softly and quietly without a hint of wind. This is what I think of as
Christmas snow. A beautiful miracle.
3. Going for a walk in the woods in the snow and seeing the trees covered. Such beauty!
4. The beauty of Hoarfrost. The world looks to be bathed in crystal. A true winter wonderland.
5. Staying in when it is storming outside and watching the snow collect. Putting on warm
flannel pajamas and covering up with a blanket without a care in the world.
6. A beautiful sunny day making the snow sparkle like diamonds.
7. Milder winter days when the snow starts to melt and run like rivers down the road. On those
days I love to go for a walk and enjoy the warmth of the sun.
8. I love the days leading up to springtime. The snow that falls is spring snow and the smell of
spring is in the air.
9. Going on a winter picnic. Nobody else around. Having a fire and roasting hotdogs, drinking
hot chocolate out of a thermos and then roasting marshmallows before going home to a nice
warm house.
10. Tobogganing.
11. Christmas lights...driving around with a coffee or hot chocolate enjoying other people's lights
12. Decorating the house for Christmas.
13. Finishing the mundane chores like addressing cards and wrapping Christmas parcels.
14. Christmas music.
15. Walking through the decorated malls.
16. A full day of Christmas shopping. Coming home laden with Christmas swag. Nothing better
than finding a great deal.
17. The Christmas feast! All the home made goodies. Christmas chocolates. My butter tarts.
Christmas buns.
18. Getting together with family and friends and making fresh memories.
19. Remembering loved ones who are no longer with us.
20. All the Christmas traditions from years gone by.
21. The Christmas bells that Barb R and I exchanged so many years ago when we were 12. The
memory of those days and the warmth of the beginning of a life long friendship have never
left me.
22. Buying, wrapping and helping my Bailey open up her presents on Christmas morning and
the look of excitement and joy on her face. I'm missing her so much this Christmas!
23. The relief that Christmas is finally over on Jan 2nd.
24. Taking down the decorations.
25. Celebrating the birth of baby Jesus... the true reason for the season!!!!
Saturday, November 22, 2008
First Blast of Winter 2008
I had a feeling our beautiful autumn was about to come to an end. I had hopes it would hold out for a couple more weeks but it wasn't to be. Last Wednesday we got hit with a vengeance. It started snowing in the early morning and continued all day and into the night.
I took photos from inside throughout the day. I couldn't believe how quickly it accumulated.
Bruce out shoveling. It won't be long before we have huge snowbanks like last year. We had our first snow November 25th last year and it stayed right through to April. I hope we have periods of melting throughout the winter this year.
It doesn't look as bad in photos as it did at the time from inside. And I know we didn't get as much as some other areas did this week. Like London Ontario where I heard they got up to three feet! Can you imagine?
But... this is more than enough for me! Thank you.
I took photos from inside throughout the day. I couldn't believe how quickly it accumulated.
Bruce out shoveling. It won't be long before we have huge snowbanks like last year. We had our first snow November 25th last year and it stayed right through to April. I hope we have periods of melting throughout the winter this year.
It doesn't look as bad in photos as it did at the time from inside. And I know we didn't get as much as some other areas did this week. Like London Ontario where I heard they got up to three feet! Can you imagine?
But... this is more than enough for me! Thank you.
Saturday, November 15, 2008
My Dad.... My Hero
I am going to attempt to compose a decent memorial to my Father, on the 1st anniversary of his death,
November 16th. I have been putting this off, not feeling quite up to the task. Even now as I write I wonder
if I am capable of doing his memory justice.
Showing his playful side in the photo above.
Looking very dapper standing in front of a store.
And a casual pose, enjoying the sun.
November 16th. I have been putting this off, not feeling quite up to the task. Even now as I write I wonder
if I am capable of doing his memory justice.
I would like to describe just who my Father was and what he
meant....... to me.
A brief biography would be in order.
Samuel Michael Kushner was born into this world September 21, 1929, at
Kingston,Ontario of Russian parents, Nathan and Eva.
Sam, the youngest,had two sisters and a brother.
He had a typical upbringing for that time, which
happened to be at the beginning of the great depression.
They were a poor family and had many struggles.
Sam was athletic and enjoyed playing sports.
In 1947 at the age of 17 Sam joined the Armed Forces.
He started off his years in the service as an aircraft technician and then
re-mustered as a draftsman around 1952.
While stationed at the Base in Trenton, Ontario he met and married
Barbara Mae Walsh on April 19th, 1951. Sam was then transferred
to Ottawa.
The next year on October 10th they welcomed their first child,
a son, Michael Thayne, who by circumstance was born in Trenton.
David Robert followed on January 20th, 1955, born in Ottawa.
And finally Karen Lynn arrived in 1959.
By then the family had transferred to the Toronto area.
Three photos of Dad in his younger years.
I must make mention of the fact that Sam was a drummer in the pipe band
during his time in the forces.
He really enjoyed this activity and met many people who shared the
same interests.
I don't have any photos of him in his band uniform
unfortunately.
Showing his playful side in the photo above.
Looking very dapper standing in front of a store.
And a casual pose, enjoying the sun.
Sam developed his artistic talents while in the service and was a
successful draftsman.
He left the service in 1967 and worked for a couple of companies as
a graphic artist before eventually opening his own business in downtown
Toronto sometime in the seventies.
He did very well and was busy right up to the late seventies/early eighties
when the economy changed and his clients were changing their business
strategies by using their own people to do the work that my Dad had been
doing up till then.
This is the outside of his business card at the top and
the inside of the card below.
In 1967 the family moved to Peel Village in Brampton where we lived until the
early eighties. Sam sadly closed his business in Toronto and he and my mother
returned to the Trenton area permanently. They moved to the village of Frankford
which is between Trenton and Belleville and remained in the same house on the river
right up to Sam's death last year in November. My mother lives there still.
Sam did what he could in the Quinte region to make a living. He tried to keep his
graphic arts business afloat and commuted back and forth to Toronto for a while to
service his customers. Times were tough back then all over but he managed to find
work locally utilizing his artistic skills, working for the Shoppers Market and doing
the odd job where he could, working from his office at home.
When he got out of that line of work his final job was as a security guard at the
Anchorage (retirement condo complex) in Belleville. He finally fully retired in 2004.
Barb and Sam joined the Lion's Club in Frankford in 1999 where Sam was able to once
again put his talents to good use by donating his services as a graphic artist as
needed as well as volunteering for many fundraising events such as the Christmas
Share program, and a Road Toll every year, and many bingos.
He worked tirelessly for the Lion's right up until shortly before his death when
he was too ill to work any longer.
My Dad in the early years while building his career was not home much between
work and travel time from Brampton to Toronto.
I remember many evenings he would come home, weary,
and would eat the plated supper we had put away for him
and then go to bed only to get up and do the same the following day.
He and my Mother were bowlers and had been since their early Forces days.
They enjoyed their leagues and all the people they met through bowling
over the years.
They enjoyed going to the wrap up bowling banquets with
their friends where they would dance all night.
They also really enjoyed going out to nice restaurants for dinner and always
became well known to the owners who enjoyed seeing them come and
treated them like family.
Even though Dad was busy with work, there were nice moments where
he exerted his fatherly influence and tried taking care of me when I
was ill.
I remember him making me this home made concoction one time when
I was sick with the flu and a bad cough.
It was a drink his mother had made for her kids when they were sick.
It was hot milk with butter and honey in it.
I remember it tasting pretty funky.
He also wanted to make a mustard poultice for my chest but
couldn't remember how...
Thank goodness for small mercies!
One time when I was young I had to prepare a project for school.
Dad came up with the idea of a collage using cut outs from
magazines and then pasted on bristol board.
He gathered up all the materials I needed and began
"helping" me to put together my project.
After I went to bed he must have worked on it all
night and it was done by morning.
A very beautiful presentation,
which I remember getting a very high mark on which of
course I was undeserving of since it was Dad
who had done all the work.
I am sure the teacher must have suspected...
I could not have turned out such a masterpiece on my own.
Good thing I got a high mark...
he might have taken it badly if I hadn't.
Dad was my biggest fan,
always cheering my accomplishments and
encouraging me to move forward and to
reach for the stars.
He was pleased that I was selected to participate
in a French Immersion program,
the first of it's kind at our school.
Despite my reservations he encouraged me to try.
He was thrilled at my creative writing abilities
and always read with great pride my stories.
Sometimes he would get it into his head that I
needed to embrace an idea he had for my
potential greatness.
He really hoped I would join the armed forces and
follow in his footsteps.
He thought it a great idea for something worthwhile
that I could accomplish in my life, to have a path to follow
that would secure my future.
I always felt bad for letting him down and deciding
not to go through with his dream for me.
But I knew he understood when I chose a
different path.
Dad always loved Christmas.
He would get so excited for us kids but maybe more so for himself.
We always had plenty of presents to open and Dad was
interested in watching our delight upon opening them.
Every year I did some Christmas fun stuff such as preparing a chain
of the days till Christmas and Dad got a kick out of that.
Somebody in the family would read to me
"Twas the Night Before Christmas"every year on Christmas Eve
and even after I was married Dad read it to me still.
His enthusiasm never decreased over the years despite us getting older.
In fact it grew even more as the grandchildren began arriving and he
would get as much joy out of Christmas as in the earlier years.
What he loved the most about Christmas, I think,
was the gathering of family around he and my Mom.
It was one of the many times he would show just how important
we all were to him.
His happiest times were Christmases spent with my Mom's family in
Trenton in the early years of their marriage.
I missed many a Christmas after I moved out west and every year Dad
would express how sad he was not to have me home with the family.
He was truly excited at Bruce and I coming home to live last year and the
fact that we would be there for my first Christmas in years.
I wish he could have held on just another few months.
Dad and I became even closer after I married in 1980.
He was no longer in Toronto working at his business by then
and was home more often.
Even though I was married and had a home of my own
I would go to visit often.
Dad and I would sit at the kitchen table and he would
tell me stories from his bygone days and we just enjoyed
each other's company.
Dad had a very sarcastic but quick sense of humor and
loved to laugh which we did together.... a lot.
Both my Mom and Dad enjoyed my friends that would come around
and they thought of some of them as daughters and had close
relationships with them.
Dad of course was strict and very protective of me especially,
and likely no boyfriend was good enough for me in his eyes.
But he would always accept them and welcome them into our
home with no reservations.
When I finally got married at the age of 21,
I am sure he breathed a sigh of relief that I would
be well taken care of.
At the end of 1984 my husband and I moved out
west to Fort McMurray.
This was my first time so far away from family
and I know it hurt my parents to no longer have me close by.
They came out to Alberta to visit several times over the years.
I was divorced in 1991 and still living in McMurray and they came
out to see Bruce and I at our home and we also met them on another
occasion in Edmonton and went on a trip through the Rockies together.
Dad and Mom came out west one more time together to see us when
we lived in Redcliff and it was a truly memorable visit.
They were with us for 10 short days when they had to get back
because Dad had to return for work.
We really had a great time and I will never forget how much
we enjoyed their visit.
.................................................................................................................................................................................
When I was called to come home after my Dad
went into the hospital for what would be his final
journey it was the moment I had been
dreading since first hearing of his terminal illness.
I didn't want to see him ravished by his illness.
I would rather have remembered him as he was in the past......
my strong and loving Father.
One who I had become so dependent upon through
my lifetime.
But now he needed his children and the tables were turned.
We owed him that much after all his years of
dedication to us, to see this through and usher him out
with all our love and respect, as difficult and painful as
it would be... as it was.
Due to timing and circumstances,
Dad left this world in the early morning hours on
November 16th without any of us there with him.
For this I will always be sad and regretful
but a part of me believes
this is how he wanted it to be.
To spare us, his family,
the pain and sadness of seeing him take his
final breath.
His final act of love for his wife and children.
I wish you hadn't had to leave us so soon.
I miss you every single day.
...........................................................................................................................................
At his memorial many people approached me wanting
to share with me stories of what a wonderful friend
he had been to them.
This really meant the world to me to hear how much
he was loved and how he would be missed.
The Lions put on a lovely tribute to him and I
discovered some things about him I had not been aware of.
What he had done for the club and the awards he had received.
My Dad's life had maybe not been anything more than
typical and average as most people's lives are
but he was a superstar to those that knew and
loved him and if a man's success in life can be measured
by how many
people loved him then......
Samuel Michael Kushner was a very rich man!
Love you Dad!
Sunday, November 9, 2008
Remembrance Day
Remembrance Day – also known as Poppy Day, Armistice Day (the event it commemorates) or Veterans Day – is a day to commemorate the sacrifices of members of the armed forces and of civilians in times of war, specifically since the First World War. It is observed on 11 November to recall the end of World War I on that date in 1918.
I have to be honest. As a child and a younger adult I was not overly interested in Remembrance Day I am ashamed to say. I did not understand and did not seek out the answers in order to grasp the significance of November 11th. I was not interested in the sacrifices made by so many selfless Canadians on my behalf. It wasn't until the start of my family history work that I could finally put a human face onto the meaning of the day, and fully appreciate what it was about. Once the significance was clear it became very important to learn all I could about my ancestors and the part they played towards our freedoms today. I collected documents from the internet such as the enlistment papers of my deceased relatives, photos of the war graves, a page from the 1st World War Book of Remembrance. I gathered photos and stories and my cousin Lynda supplied letters that were written by my Great Uncle Doug, some from the front lines of the war at Vimy Ridge, France over 90 years ago. These artifacts brought my ancestors to life and how could I not be forever touched by the details I had come to learn. I must relay some of what I had learned, here and now, to honor their memory.
My two great uncles... George Douglas (75th Bn, Canadian Infantry...enlisted 03 Sept, 1915 at Trenton, Ontario) and his brother Edward Hector Friend (80th Overseas Bn CEF, enlisted 06 Nov, 1915 at Trenton, Ontario) after enlisting arrived in England on May 30, 1916 and were sent to France. Although Doug was of age, Hector was a mere 14 when he enlisted.
The powers that be became aware of this fact and sent Hec home July 10, 1917, but he was not formerly discharged until March, 1918. By then he had been promoted to the rank of Corporal. Both Doug and Hec saw the bloody battles of the Somme.
An excerpt from one of the letters, dated Jan 1, 1917, Doug wrote to his family from a trench:
I am writing this from the trenches where we have just spent New Years and also Xmas. On Xmas day I had nothing to eat until supper when I fared sumptuously on bully beef and hard tack. He signed it Pte Doug Friend (Sniper).
Another letter, dated Feb 4, 1917 says... I am out for a 6 days rest after 18 days in the trenches.
I think this war brings a man closer to God than ever before. At the last front we were on, there was a piece called Death Valley that Fritz used to (illegible) with shells all the time, it is lined with dead and at every crossing of it, someone is killed. I had to cross it on my trips to and from the front line and every time I crossed I used to repeat to myself these words, Yea tho' I walk thro' the Valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil.
A telegram arrived home on March 16, 1917, declaring Doug missing on March 1st. A second telegram arrived March 21st, declaring Doug officially reported killed in action March 1st, 1917.
Douglas is forever remembered with honor at the Vimy Memorial, Pas de Calais, France. And forever lovingly remembered by his remaining family 91 years later.
Hector upon his return home, moved to Windsor Ontario and changed his name to Edward Johnston. He lived there with his wife and children until his death in 1962. He was buried at Windsor Grove Cemetery in the military section honoring his years of service.
With all I have learned, I now am proud to say I respectfully honor our fallen each and every Remembrance Day. I have also memorialized my ancestors in my scrapbooks with all the information I have found through my research and I enjoy going through it every year close to November 11th and personally remembering my great uncles' sacrifices. On November 11th at 11:00 am I plan on stopping what I am doing and reflecting upon why I am thankful to be a Canadian.
In Flander's Fields
In Flanders fields the poppies blow
Between the crosses, row on row,
That mark our place; and in the sky
The larks still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.
We are the Dead. Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved and were loved, and now we lie
In Flander's fields.
Take up our quarrel with the foe:
To you from failing hands we throw
The torch; be yours to hold it high.
If ye break faith with us who die
We shall not sleep, tho poppies grow
In Flander's fields.
Liet. -Col. John McCrae
Friday, November 7, 2008
Most Annoying and Overused Phrases
Okay, so today on Canada AM they were discussing the Oxford University list of most annoying phrases for 2008. This got me thinking about the phrases that annoy me. First I will post Oxford's list and then add my own list.
According to Oxford University
1 - At the end of the day
2 - Fairly unique
3 - I personally
4 - At this moment in time
5 - With all due respect
6 - Absolutely
7 - It's a nightmare
8 - Shouldn't of
9 - 24/7
10 - It's not rocket science
I have to agree with #6, #9 and #10. And to add to that...................
Welcome to My Crib
My Bad
Buzzword
Win-Win
Just Sayin
It's All Good
Ya Gotta Love It (Why do I gotta love it?)
You Do the Math
Touch Base
Bring Me Up to Speed
Outside The Box
Amazing
Having Said That or That Being Said
I Hear Ya or I Feel Your Pain
I Digress
Nuff Said
Joe The Plumber (too overused in this 2008 presidential election)
Baby Momma or Baby Daddy
It Is What It Is
That Bad Boy, or That Puppy referring to an
an inanimate object
Carbon Footprint
Nucular instead of Nuclear
Bling
I am sure there are tons more. I am not sure why certain phrases are so annoying but they just are. Now... Nuff Said!!!!
According to Oxford University
1 - At the end of the day
2 - Fairly unique
3 - I personally
4 - At this moment in time
5 - With all due respect
6 - Absolutely
7 - It's a nightmare
8 - Shouldn't of
9 - 24/7
10 - It's not rocket science
I have to agree with #6, #9 and #10. And to add to that...................
Welcome to My Crib
My Bad
Buzzword
Win-Win
Just Sayin
It's All Good
Ya Gotta Love It (Why do I gotta love it?)
You Do the Math
Touch Base
Bring Me Up to Speed
Outside The Box
Amazing
Having Said That or That Being Said
I Hear Ya or I Feel Your Pain
I Digress
Nuff Said
Joe The Plumber (too overused in this 2008 presidential election)
Baby Momma or Baby Daddy
It Is What It Is
That Bad Boy, or That Puppy referring to an
an inanimate object
Carbon Footprint
Nucular instead of Nuclear
Bling
I am sure there are tons more. I am not sure why certain phrases are so annoying but they just are. Now... Nuff Said!!!!
Tuesday, November 4, 2008
Serpent River
The weather today was absolutely magnificent. Both Bruce and I couldn't bare to spend time indoors and miss what turned out to be a day of very spring like temperatures and plenty of sunshine so we went for a long walk and when we got home our neighbors John and Debi invited us to accompany them on a drive to a nearby recreational spot on Highway 17 at Serpent River. It is a very scenic place and I took 40 pictures... I am sharing just a few here on my blog. A couple were taken by John or Debi with their camera which is much better than ours and with a much better zoom. Their closeups are amazing. The photo above was a tree we happened upon which on the one side shows a huge crater which was dug out by woodpeckers. The photo below is the same tree on the other side and you can see all the holes made by the woodpeckers.
Bruce looking at the tree in awe!Debi and I deep in conversation.
This is Oggie Doggie. He had a good time, exploring and sniffing and marking his territory!
John and Bruce looking at the river.
John and Bruce and Oggie approaching a walkway.
Debi getting ready to take a photo of me.
The river.
We spent quite a bit of time at Serpent River, communing with nature and each other. I am really enjoying springtime revisited. It very well could be the calm before the storm... literally!
Labels:
Scenery
Thursday, October 30, 2008
The Witching Hour...Happy Halloween!
Spooky..ghoulish..murky..dark..dank..haunting..hair-raising..horrific..gruesome..fiendish..goose bumps..terrifying..black as pitch..frightening..witchy..twitchy..batty..demonic..scary..ghostly...
Words to describe a wonderfully wacky time of year when the little witches and goblins come out to trick or treat us before scurrying back into their little worlds of weirdness till the next October 31st.
I always enjoyed Halloween as a child. My friends and I would go out and scour the nearby neighborhoods for as much candy as we could get our hands on before the witching hour was over. I remember one Halloween when my Dad planned out and made my costume. I was around nine or ten. He decided I would be a contessa and he made me a very tall cone like hat out of bristol board with long streamers from the top of the hat. I had some kind of sparkly purple dress and he painstakingly did my makeup... I remember I had lots of red blusher and blood red lips. I was totally regal... just as he intended.
One year I returned the favor. I was in my teens at that time and our neighbors were having a Halloween party. My Dad didn't think he wanted to go because he couldn't think of a good costume. I came up with the idea that he should go as an accident victim. We had a set of crutches that he used and gauze and tensor bandages. Dad wore his pajamas and covered himself with the bandages and gauze around his head and did his makeup to make it look like he was in a terrible accident and covered with blood. He looked so awesome... I believe my mother has photos in one of her albums.
When my brother Dave got older he didn't think it was right to go out trick or treating but he wanted to collect money for Unicef. Away he went and at each house they would insist he take some candy. His pockets were soon so full of candy he ran out of room to store it so some kind person gave him a bag and he ended up coming home with way more candy than I did. It was a really unselfish thing for him to do and he was rewarded for his act of kindness.
When I was a really small child my Dad made up my brothers to be pirates or some such costume and when they came downstairs and I saw them I totally freaked out and was screaming and crying with fright. My parents couldn't convince me it was only Mike and Dave, my brothers. I never quite believed that it was them and I was inconsolable. I never got over that fright... I remember it quite well to this day!
I love this story...................
Words to describe a wonderfully wacky time of year when the little witches and goblins come out to trick or treat us before scurrying back into their little worlds of weirdness till the next October 31st.
I always enjoyed Halloween as a child. My friends and I would go out and scour the nearby neighborhoods for as much candy as we could get our hands on before the witching hour was over. I remember one Halloween when my Dad planned out and made my costume. I was around nine or ten. He decided I would be a contessa and he made me a very tall cone like hat out of bristol board with long streamers from the top of the hat. I had some kind of sparkly purple dress and he painstakingly did my makeup... I remember I had lots of red blusher and blood red lips. I was totally regal... just as he intended.
One year I returned the favor. I was in my teens at that time and our neighbors were having a Halloween party. My Dad didn't think he wanted to go because he couldn't think of a good costume. I came up with the idea that he should go as an accident victim. We had a set of crutches that he used and gauze and tensor bandages. Dad wore his pajamas and covered himself with the bandages and gauze around his head and did his makeup to make it look like he was in a terrible accident and covered with blood. He looked so awesome... I believe my mother has photos in one of her albums.
When my brother Dave got older he didn't think it was right to go out trick or treating but he wanted to collect money for Unicef. Away he went and at each house they would insist he take some candy. His pockets were soon so full of candy he ran out of room to store it so some kind person gave him a bag and he ended up coming home with way more candy than I did. It was a really unselfish thing for him to do and he was rewarded for his act of kindness.
When I was a really small child my Dad made up my brothers to be pirates or some such costume and when they came downstairs and I saw them I totally freaked out and was screaming and crying with fright. My parents couldn't convince me it was only Mike and Dave, my brothers. I never quite believed that it was them and I was inconsolable. I never got over that fright... I remember it quite well to this day!
I love this story...................
The Headless Horseman Pursuing Ichabod Crane
"The Legend of Sleepy Hollow" is a short story by Washington Irving contained in his collection The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent., written while he was living in Birmingham, England, and first published in 1820. With Irving's companion piece "Rip Van Winkle", "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow" is among the earliest examples of American fiction still read today.
(1858) by John Quidor
Headless Horseman. Here are the lyrics to that timeless song written by Don Rage and Gene De Paul.
When the spooks have a midnight Jamboree
They break it up with fiendish glee
Ghosts are bad, but the one that's cursed
It's the Headless Horseman, he's the worst
That's right, he's a fright, on Halloween night
But when he goes a-joggin' 'cross the land
Holdin' his noggin in his hand
Demons take one look and groan
And hit the road for parts unknown
Beware, take care, he rides alone
And there's no spook, like a spook who's sporned
They don't like him, and he's really burned
He swears to the longest day he's dead
He'll show them that he can get a head
They say he's tired of his flamin' top
He's got a yen to make a swap
So he rides one night each year
To find a head in the hollow here
Now he likes them little, he likes them big
Part in the middle, or a wig
Black or white or even red
The Headless Horseman needs a head
With a hip-hip and a clippity-clop
He's out lookin' for a top to chop
So don't stop to figure out a plan
You can't reason with a headless man
Now if you doubt this tale is so
I met that spook just a year ago
No, I didn't stop for a second look
For once you cross that bridge, my brook friends
The ghost is through, his power ends
So when you're riding home tonight
Make for the bridge with all your might
He'll be down in the hollow there
He needs your head, look out, beware
With a hip-hip and a clippity-clop
He's out looking for a head to swap
So don't try to figure out a plan
You can't reason with a headless man
Have a great Halloween everybody and stay safe!!!!!!!
(1858) by John Quidor
Headless Horseman. Here are the lyrics to that timeless song written by Don Rage and Gene De Paul.
When the spooks have a midnight Jamboree
They break it up with fiendish glee
Ghosts are bad, but the one that's cursed
It's the Headless Horseman, he's the worst
That's right, he's a fright, on Halloween night
But when he goes a-joggin' 'cross the land
Holdin' his noggin in his hand
Demons take one look and groan
And hit the road for parts unknown
Beware, take care, he rides alone
And there's no spook, like a spook who's sporned
They don't like him, and he's really burned
He swears to the longest day he's dead
He'll show them that he can get a head
They say he's tired of his flamin' top
He's got a yen to make a swap
So he rides one night each year
To find a head in the hollow here
Now he likes them little, he likes them big
Part in the middle, or a wig
Black or white or even red
The Headless Horseman needs a head
With a hip-hip and a clippity-clop
He's out lookin' for a top to chop
So don't stop to figure out a plan
You can't reason with a headless man
Now if you doubt this tale is so
I met that spook just a year ago
No, I didn't stop for a second look
For once you cross that bridge, my brook friends
The ghost is through, his power ends
So when you're riding home tonight
Make for the bridge with all your might
He'll be down in the hollow there
He needs your head, look out, beware
With a hip-hip and a clippity-clop
He's out looking for a head to swap
So don't try to figure out a plan
You can't reason with a headless man
Have a great Halloween everybody and stay safe!!!!!!!
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