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The Wild Hunt

Thursday, December 30, 2010

Irish Terrier Rescue Network

My friend Sandy is involved with this worthwhile organization - http://www.irishterrierrescuenetwork.org/ -

Email: directors@irishterrierrescuenetwork.org
 

The Irish Terrier Rescue Network is comprised of Rescue Organizations, Irish terrier breeders, and owners who have come together for the sole purpose of ensuring that every Irish Terrier has a hearth and a home to call their own.
Mission: To rescue, provide safe haven, and re-home abandoned, neglected, and unwanted Irish Terriers regardless of pedigree or circumstance.

Description: The Irish Terrier Rescue Network is a nationwide organization of Irish Terrier lovers, breeders and rescue organizations whose mission is to rescue, rehabilitate and re-home abandoned, neglected, or unwanted Irish Terriers.
 
Products:For Owners 
ITRN provides the following services:
Assistance in re-homing your Irish Terrier Assistance in releasing your Irish Terrier to Rescue. For Shelters and Rescue Organizations, 
ITRN provides the following services: Assistance in the placement of all Irish Terriers. Release to Rescue services. For new adoptive homes, ITRN provides: A support system with an experienced Irish Terrier Mentor.

Sunday, November 14, 2010

Veteran's Day review

Greetings readers,
I am overwhelmed by the wave of patriotism that becomes evident at this time of year.  Businesses, and esp. restaurants make very gracious gestures toward the large community of veterans.  In years past, I usually have just avoided these places due to the large number of veterans taking advantage of the offerings.  This year I was determined to enjoy at least one such meal.

We visited Applebee's in Whitehall Oh about 1 PM on Veteran's Day.  They had set up a canopy outside and were seating groups of veterans there.  Pushing in to the hostess station and placing my name on the waiting list returned a period of about 30 minutes, tempered with "It could be less, people are leaving....".  Sure enough, about ten minutes later, came our call.  My lady friend and I were seated inside the restaurant quickly and introduced to our server.  He was affable and attentive (two very good qualities for any server to have) despite having several full tables to care for that afternoon.  We placed our orders from the limited (but very inclusive) menu and in the appropriate amount of time, they were delivered with a flourish from our server.  Good Job Applebee's! 

Many restaurants that are as busy would take a much longer time to cook the meal.  The food items were both up to the usual Applebee's standards.  My lady friend's pasta dish served as an appropriate delivery system for the sauce and my Cheddar Bacon Burger with fries was both tasty and correctly cooked.  Delicious!

It so happened that we stopped at Rooster's in Whitehall later that evening with friends.  The wait staff was wearing Veteran's Day tshirts and we were greeted with an inquiry if anyone was a veteran.  After identifying myself as one, she asked if I had ID.  Not able to find my photo-copy of my DD214, I pulled my original copy from my wallet.  Many folds and creases have dramatically aged this document (it is almost thirty years old now) and upon the sight of this carefully kept piece of paper was rewarded with a $10 coupon for our dinner.  We didn't even know they were doing this!  Very good Roosters!

Our foursome ordered a varied selection from their menu - the chicken wings, salad with chicken and my pizza were delicious and up to the usual Roosters standard that keeps up coming back for more.

Looking forward to a wonderful Thanksgiving season .

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Roadfood Team visits Cincinnati

Submitted for your attention - the RoadFood Team's review 
of places to dine in Cincinnati - 
 
Darn, we missed out on the famous cream puffs at the Big E 
(Eastern States Exposition) this year, but the thought of 
them put us in mind of Jack Kerouac. Kerouac and cream 
puffs? Yes, while the great mid-20th century road warrior 
is better known for other appetites, has anyone noticed 
how often food is part of his journey? At the start of 
'On the Road' he talks about the "big glazed cakes and 
cream puffs" Neal Cassaday likes so much at Hector's in 
New York, and at the end he is eating "beautiful steaks 
for 48 cents in strange tiled Mexican cafeterias." Bet-
ween coasts, he foreshadows Buffetbuster's modus operandi:, 
"I ate another apple pie and ice cream, that's practically all 
I ate all the way across the country"; and when he gets to 
Iowa he notes, "pie bigger, the ice cream richer. Farther 
west, he finds "the sweetest cherrypie in Nebraska... with 
a mountainous scoop of ice cream on top." Kerouac's Visions 
of Cody begins with a full page ode to an old diner that 
exudes a smell that is "curiously the hungriest in America
-- it is FOODY instead of just spicy."  No, we are not 
making a case that Jack Kerouac was actually a food writer 
-- just that for him, like for so many of us, a road trip 
is not a road trip without finding good stuff to eat and 
interesting places in which to eat it.
 
On that subject, the weekend in Cincinnati proved to be 
glorious and frustrating. Glorious because the menu 
included really delicious goetta, metts to die for, 
Grippo's BBQ potato chips, five-way chili and an ice cream 
taste-off between Graeter's 
(www.roadfood.com/Restaurant/Reviews/1169/graeters) 
and Aglamesis 
(www.roadfood.com/Restaurant/Reviews/7359/aglamesis-bros); 
but frustrating because there were so many other eats for 
which there wasn't time. We nearly got Travelin' Manned at 
Tucker's diner 
(www.roadfood.com/Restaurant/Reviews/7371/tuckers), but 
fortunately happened upon chef and proprietor Joe Tucker, 
running late, while he was buying goetta in the Findlay 
Market, where he promised us he'd open up his place 
forthwith.
 
We did miss sitting down at our beloved 
Camp Washington Chili Parlor 
(www.roadfood.com/Restaurant/Reviews/119/
camp-washington-chili-parlor), forgetting that it is 
closed on Sunday. When we desperately asked a 
pedestrian if there was any good chili around, she 
reminded us that we weren't all that far from 
Price Hill 
(www.roadfood.com/Restaurant/Reviews/1166/
price-hill-chili).
Her driving directions, though, were so convoluted 
that we asked if she was hungry and if she wanted 
to join us and lead the way. She did, and got us 
there by an insider's route we never would have 
found. It turns out she is studying to become a 
pastry chef at the Midwest Culinary Institute, 
where our weekend event was taking place. Small 
world ... and some very fine chili, Coneys, and 
double-decker sandwiches at Price Hill!
 
 
The Next Roadfood Eating Tour Poll Run-Off is 
reminiscent of the 2000 Presidential election: a 
virtual dead heat among the Low Country, Connecticut 
and Chicago/Milwaukee. We won't be counting hanging 
chads; and this is one vote where we feel confident 
saying that whichever candidate wins, we'll be 
very, very happy!
 
 
Who is going to the Boudin Festival 
(www.boudincookoff.com)? It takes place in Lafayette, 
Louisiana, on October 16, and Stephen is going to be 
a judge to determine who makes the best. A daunting 
task, considering how different boudin is, link to 
link and butcher to butcher.
 
-- Jane & Michael

Monday, August 30, 2010

Troops ‘Punished’ for Skipping Concert

Troops ‘Punished’ for Skipping Concert


August 21, 2010

Associated Press


RICHMOND, Va. - The Army said Friday it was investigating a claim that dozens of soldiers who refused to attend a Christian band's concert at a Virginia military base were banished to their barracks and told to clean them up.

Fort Eustis spokesman Rick Haverinen told The Associated Press he couldn't comment on the specifics of the investigation. At the Pentagon, Army spokesman Col. Thomas Collins said the military shouldn't impose religious views on soldiers.

"If something like that were to have happened, it would be contrary to Army policy," Collins said.

Pvt. Anthony Smith said he and other soldiers felt pressured to attend the May concert while stationed at the Newport News base, home of the Army's Transportation Corps.

"My whole issue was I don't need to be preached at," Smith said in a phone interview from Phoenix, where he is stationed with the National Guard. "That's not what I signed up for."

Smith, 21, was stationed in Virginia for nearly seven months for helicopter electrician training when the Christian rock group BarlowGirl played as part of the "Commanding General's Spiritual Fitness Concerts."

Smith said a staff sergeant told 200 men in their barracks they could either attend or remain in their barracks. Eighty to 100 decided not to attend, he said.

"Instead of being released to our personal time, we were locked down," Smith said. "It seemed very much like a punishment."

The Military Religious Freedom Foundation first reported on the Christian concert. The foundation said it was approached by soldiers who were punished for not attending or offended by the religious theme of the event.

The group's president, Mikey Weinstein, claims Christian-themed events are "ubiquitous" throughout the military, and he credited the soldiers for stepping forward.

"Whenever we see this egregious, unconstitutional religious tyranny our job is to fight it," he said.

Smith said he and the other soldiers were told not to use their cell phones or personal computers and ordered to clean up the barracks.

About 20 of the men, including several Muslims, refused to attend the concert based on their religious beliefs, he said.

Smith said he went up the chain of command and traced the concert edict to a captain, who said he simply wanted to "show support for those kind of events that bring soldiers together."

While not accepting blame, the officer apologized to the soldiers who refused to attend the concert and said it was not his intent to proselytize, he said.

"But once you get in there, you realize it's evangelization," Smith said.
© Copyright 2010 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Friday, August 27, 2010

Remember the guy that wouldn't...




I received this at work - (yes, I am a civil servant working for DOD) and have taken the blatantly Christian overtones out (as they really don't apply to the story) , but the story of a 90-year-old who shows his love for his Country is worth repeating - Medal of Honor winners are few and far between - we need to appreciate them because more often than not - the effort that earns the MoH results in posthumous awards.
------------
I am not sending this along because of the possibility   (though total unlikelyhood)  of anyone,  "Kicking"  any of my body parts.....but because I think we need to make up our minds---before we HAVE to,  that we are going to take a stand to honor our Country....even if no one stands with us.  Reading this shows....we won't be standing alone.  (The threat at the end of the story does not need to be heeded - just included to show the originator's mind bent.)
----------------------------------------------------
On June 15, 1919, Van T. Barfoot was born in Edinburg -- probably didn't make much news back then.

Twenty-five years later, on May 23, 1944, near Carano, Italy, Van T. Barfoot, who had enlisted in the Army in 1940, set out to flank German machine gun positions from which fire was coming down on his fellow soldiers. He advanced through a minefield, took out three enemy machine gun positions and returned with 17 prisoners of war.

If that wasn't enough for a day's work, he later took on and destroyed three German tanks sent to retake the machine gun positions.

That probably didn't make much news either, given the scope of the war, but it did earn Van T. Barfoot, who retired as a colonel after also serving in Korea and Vietnam, a Congressional Medal of Honor.

clipping   --------------------------

What did make news last week was a neighborhood association's quibble with how the 90-year-old veteran chose to fly the American flag outside his suburban Virginia home. Seems the rules said a flag could be flown on a house-mounted bracket, but,  for decorum, items such as Barfoot's 21-foot flagpole were unsuitable.

He had been denied a permit for the pole, erected it anyway and was facing court action if he didn't take it down. Since the story made national TV, the neighborhood association has rethought its position and agreed to indulge this old hero who dwells among them.

"In the time I have left I plan to continue to fly the American flag without interference," Barfoot told The Associated Press.  As well he should.  And if any of his neighbors still takes a notion to contest him, they might want to read his Medal of Honor citation.  It indicates he's not real good at backing down.

Van T. Barfoot's Medal of Honor citation:


   Medal of Honor
This 1944 Medal of Honor citation, listed with the National Medal of Honor Society, is for Second Lieutenant Van T. Barfoot, 157th Infantry, 45th Infantry:

"For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of life above and beyond the call of duty on 23 May 1944, near Carano, Italy. With his platoon heavily engaged during an assault against forces well entrenched on commanding ground, 2d Lt. Barfoot moved off alone upon the enemy left flank. He crawled to the proximity of 1 machinegun nest and made a direct hit on it with a hand grenade, killing 2 and wounding 3 Germans. He continued along the German defense line to another machinegun emplacement, and with his tommygun killed 2 and captured 3 soldiers. Members of another enemy machinegun crew then abandoned their position and gave themselves up to Sgt. Barfoot. Leaving the prisoners for his support squad to pick up, he proceeded to mop up positions in the immediate area, capturing more prisoners and bringing his total count to 17. Later that day, after he had reorganized his men and consolidated the newly captured ground, the enemy launched a fierce armored counterattack directly at his platoon positions. Securing a bazooka, Sgt. Barfoot took up an exposed position directly in front of 3 advancing Mark VI tanks. From a distance of 75 yards his first shot destroyed the track of the leading tank, effectively disabling it, while the other 2 changed direction toward the flank. As the crew of the disabled tank dismounted, Sgt. Barfoot killed 3 of them with his tommygun. He continued onward into enemy terrain and destroyed a recently abandoned German fieldpiece with a demolition charge placed in the breech. While returning to his platoon position, Sgt. Barfoot, though greatly fatigued by his Herculean efforts, assisted 2 of his seriously wounded men 1,700 yards to a position of safety.
Sgt. Barfoot's extraordinary heroism, demonstration of magnificent valor, and aggressive determination in the face of point blank fire are a perpetual inspiration to his fellow soldiers."

Col. Van T. Barfoot
If you got this email and didn't pass it on - guess what - you deserve to get your butt kicked! I sent this to you, because I didn't want to get MY butt kicked.


Wednesday, August 18, 2010

New Countertops at Hof Dorn

Finally another milepost has been reached in the long running drama that is my kitchen rebuild - the kitchen countertops were installed today!

Now I just need to figure out how to post the pictures - OK, Picassa Web album is my friend here -





From top to bottom, Small counter next to range. end of counter next to refrigerator, corner, sink and over the dishwasher.  Didn't have a dishwasher in the kitchen previously (except me, when I felt like it ).  

So faucet selection, installation and completion of the plumbing will conclude the Hof Dorn kitchen remake.  There still other changes to come at Hof Dorn, but this has been a major one.

Saturday, August 14, 2010

Issac Bonewits Passes - August 12th 2010

There was a story broadcast Friday on NPR's "All Things Considered" - You may listen to the story at the link below:
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=129182786

May he be welcomed by his friends and family - Leslie Dauterman had hosted him in the past, I would like to think that she welcomed him to the Afterlife. Elric Morningstar and Lord Spam would be there as well as the neo-Pagan host that have preceded him.

Sunday, August 1, 2010

Mini Rice-Cake Stack | Lifescript.com

Mini Rice-Cake Stack | Lifescript.com

For my girlfriend who is always looking for gluten-free snacks!

Try other nut butters in this crunchy snack.

Ingredients:

* 8 mini apple-cinnamon rice cakes
* 1-1/2 tablespoons natural peanut butter
* 4 banana slices

Preparation:

1. Spread 4 rice cakes with peanut butter; top each with a banana slice and the remaining rice cakes.

Nutritional Information:

Per serving
Calories 297 kcal
Calories From Protein -
Calories From Carbs -
Calories From Fat -
Carbohydrates 40 g
Dietary Fiber 4 g
Fat 13 g
Saturated Fat 2 g
Monosaturated Fat -
Polysaturated Fat -
Protein 8 g
Potassium 293 mg
Sodium 91 mg
Iron -
Cholesterol 0 mg
Folic Acid -

Friday, July 30, 2010

Deep-Dish Apple Pie | Lifescript.com

Deep-Dish Apple Pie | Lifescript.com

With all that delicious fruit an apple pie should be healthy, but the truth is a slice can have as much as 750 calories and 30 grams of fat. For the most part, the culprit is the crust. We use whole-wheat pastry flour to add fiber and lower the saturated fat by replacing some of the butter with canola oil. The brown sugar-sweetened filling in this pie is made with two kinds of apples for the perfect balance. A slice has half the calories of a typical version and only 10 grams of fat - sweet!

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Movies | 'Agora': Rachel Weisz shines as a heroine caught in an orbit of hate | Seattle Times Newspaper

Movies | 'Agora': Rachel Weisz shines as a heroine caught in an orbit of hate | Seattle Times Newspaper

"Agora," cowritten and directed by Alejandro Amenábar ("The Sea Inside"), is a riveting drama starring Rachel Weisz as Hypatia, a fourth-century philosopher and mathematician trying to navigate religious conflict in Alexandria, Egypt.

By Tom Keogh

Special to The Seattle Times

PREV of NEXT

Rachel Weisz stars in "Agora" as Hypatia, a fourth-century philosopher and mathematician trying to navigate religious upheaval when conflict in the streets of Alexandria spills into the city's famous library, trapping her inside.
Enlarge this photo

TERESA ISASI

Rachel Weisz stars in "Agora" as Hypatia, a fourth-century philosopher and mathematician trying to navigate religious upheaval when conflict in the streets of Alexandria spills into the city's famous library, trapping her inside.

'Agora,' with Rachel Weisz, Oscar Isaac, Michael Lonsdale, Max Minghella. Directed by Alejandro Amenábar, from a screenplay by Amenábar and Mateo Gil. 127 minutes. Not rated, for mature audiences (contains brief nudity and violence). Guild 45th.

"There is more that unites us than divides us," says Hypatia (Rachel Weisz), a fourth-century scholar in Alexandria, Egypt, who teaches Christian and pagan students alike in the bold, mesmerizing "Agora."

A real-life astronomer, mathematician and philosopher who ran a Platonist school during an age of religious strife, Hypatia is usually associated with the famously lost, great library of Alexandria, destroyed during a siege by militant Christians.

Weisz portrays her as a frayed yet luminous idealist, preoccupied with unanswered questions about planetary orbits, gravity and relativity while faith-based riots bloody her city's streets. Throughout, Hypatia insists her male students remain brothers in spirit, above the fray despite potentially volatile differences.

Sadly, history has other ideas. "Agora" co-writer and director Alejandro Amenábar ("The Sea Inside") offers a savage vision of Alexandria as one long conflict between early Christians — free to worship openly during this chapter of the Roman Empire — and pagans and Jews.

Against this angry backdrop, Hypatia's students inevitably follow different callings, even after finding sanctuary together during a brutal battle.

Yet Hypatia's influence never wanes — it just comes back drenched in irony in the film's second act. "There is more that unites us than divides us," echoes Orestes (Oscar Isaac), a well-meaning but largely feckless Roman prefect trying to forge a truce between raging Christians and Jews in the film's second act.

A former student of Hypatia as well as her would-be lover, Orestes is one of the film's most fascinating figures: an enlightened politician during a very bad time. Increasingly squeezed by compromises of principle, this very likable character (even more likable for remaining Hypatia's ally years after enduring her humiliating rejection) must inevitably abandon so much that is important to him.

He's not the only one. "Agora," from one angle, is a story about all the men in Hypatia's orbit who soften their principles. Among them is her father, Theon (Michael Lonsdale), a mathematician who raised her to remain free and independent, yet whips his slaves and is partially responsible for ratcheting up the street violence.

Then there is Davus (Max Minghella), a slave who pines for his mistress Hypatia and converts to Christianity in despair, ultimately muddling his loyalties everywhere.

It's no wonder Hypatia is engrossed in determining the center of the cosmos, a nice metaphor for her own, increasingly doomed position as a woman used to having the ear and respect of men from all stations. As if racing against a growing shadow, she struggles with understanding the motions of heavenly bodies and the workings of gravity, her determination pure and timeless in an era of madness.

Amenábar is similarly caught up in the bracing forces that make "Agora" a strikingly physical as well as thoughtful drama. There are many moments in the film's ferocious yet exhilarating first half when you expect Charlton Heston to show up, such is the familiar, epic vitality Amenábar brings to this widescreen, sword-and-sandal drama.

At the same time, the director, like Hypatia, yearns to transcend the earthbound, to see larger patterns and understand the relationship between the particular and infinite. Amenábar employs a couple of visual refrains, including several looks at Egypt from outer space and overhead views of rioters that make them look like scampering ants. (Just to underscore the point, he throws in a close-up shot of real scampering ants.)

There might not be anything subtle about such images. But in a film featuring a heroine trying to know the seemingly unknowable through logic and deduction, one can't help but wonder what measurable equations or distinctive forms could be culled from a heavenly observation of so much fear and hate.

Tom Keogh: tomwkeogh@yahoo.com

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Threats to your Wallet

So I check my mail today and mixed in with the bills and ads is an envelope with "Second Notice" in red underneath "Official Notification - Requires Immediate Response". A window under "Second Notice" is titled "Last day to respond:" and over the address window is the heading "Time Sensitive Communication For:" - hmmm, all my instincts are shouting "Bill Collector", so I flip it over to read Return address on the flap of the envelope - PO Box 9084, Clearwater FL 33758-9084. I don't owe anyone in Florida money, so I begin to think "SCAM" - just like that - in really BIG LETTERS!

I open up the envelope - a single page is within - blocks of sickly yellow background highlighting "PRIZE STRUCTURE" and "OFFICIAL PRIZE LISTING" - oh, and the OFFICIAL DOCUMENT stripe along the left.

So who is E. Wright and why are they writing me? Just another SCAM Sweepstakes that will not close until 03/12/2012. Plenty of time to declare the Sweepstakes has been closed and some bogus individual is the winner. But you are in grave danger if you pass along your personal information to an organization like this I am sure!

Be aware of these threats to your identity and to your wallet! Don't be a willing victim! I'm putting this letter in the recycling bin after I shred it! I advise you to do the same if this SCAM letter falls into your mailbox.

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Greg Mortenson - Unlikely Tutor Giving Military Afghan Advice

National Public Radio had a very entrancing interview with Mr. Mortenson on Saturday or Sunday. I found the New York Times article after searching for more on Greg Mortenson. He has a most interesting idea that makes sense to me.


New York Times
July 18, 2010
Pg. 1

Unlikely Tutor Giving Military Afghan Advice

By Elisabeth Bumiller

WASHINGTON — In the frantic last hours of Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal’s command in Afghanistan, when the world wondered what was racing through the general’s mind, he reached out to an unlikely corner of his life: the author of the book “Three Cups of Tea,” Greg Mortenson.

“Will move through this and if I’m not involved in the years ahead, will take tremendous comfort in knowing people like you are helping Afghans build a future,” General McChrystal wrote to Mr. Mortenson in an e-mail message, as he traveled from Kabul to Washington. The note landed in Mr. Mortenson’s inbox shortly after 1 a.m. Eastern time on June 23. Nine hours later, the general walked into the Oval Office to be fired by President Obama.

The e-mail message was in response to a note of support from Mr. Mortenson. It reflected his broad and deepening relationship with the United States military, whose leaders have increasingly turned to Mr. Mortenson, once a shaggy mountaineer, to help translate the theory of counterinsurgency into tribal realities on the ground.

In the past year, Mr. Mortenson and his Central Asia Institute, responsible for the construction of more than 130 schools in Afghanistan and Pakistan, mostly for girls, have set up some three dozen meetings between General McChrystal or his senior staff members and village elders across Afghanistan.

The collaboration, which grew in part out of the popularity of “Three Cups of Tea” among military wives who told their husbands to read it, extends to the office of Adm. Mike Mullen, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Last summer, Admiral Mullen attended the opening of one of Mr. Mortenson’s schools in Pushghar, a remote village in Afghanistan’s Hindu Kush mountains.

Mr. Mortenson — who for a time lived out of his car in Berkeley, Calif. — has also spoken at dozens of military bases, seen his book go on required reading lists for senior American military commanders and had lunch with Gen. David H. Petraeus, General McChrystal’s replacement. On Friday he was in Tampa to meet with Adm. Eric T. Olson, the officer in charge of the United States Special Operations Command.

Mr. Mortenson, 52, thinks there is no military solution in Afghanistan — he says the education of girls is the real long-term fix — so he has been startled by the Defense Department’s embrace.

“I never, ever expected it,” Mr. Mortenson, a former Army medic, said in a telephone interview last week from Florida, where he had paused between military briefings, book talks for a sequel, “Stones into Schools,” and fund-raising appearances for his institute.

Mr. Mortenson, who said he had accepted no money from the military and had no contractual relationship with the Defense Department, was initially critical of the armed forces in the days after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks as “laptop warriors” who appeared, he said, indifferent to the civilian casualties inflicted by the American bombardment of Afghanistan.

In its early days “Three Cups of Tea,” the story of Mr. Mortenson’s efforts to build schools in Pakistan, was largely ignored by the military, and for that matter by most everyone else. Written with a journalist, David Oliver Relin, and published in hardcover by Viking in March 2006, the book had only modest sales. Most major newspapers, including this one, did not review it.

But the book’s message of the importance of girls’ education caught on when women’s book clubs, church groups and high schools began snapping up the less expensive paperback published in January 2007.

Sales to date are at four million copies in 41 countries, and the book’s yarn is well known: disoriented after a 1993 failed attempt on Pakistan’s K2, the second-highest mountain in the world, Mr. Mortenson took a wrong turn into the village of Korphe, was nursed back to health by the villagers and, in gratitude, vowed to build them a school.

He returned to Pakistan a year later with a $12,000 donation from a Silicon Valley benefactor and spent most of it on school construction materials in the city of Rawalpindi — only to be told he could not get his cargo to Korphe without first building a bridge.

The story of that bridge, Mr. Mortenson’s relationships with Pakistanis, and the schools that followed appealed so much to one military spouse that in the fall of 2007 she sent the book to her husband, Christopher D. Kolenda, at that time a lieutenant colonel commanding 700 American soldiers on the Pakistan border.

Colonel Kolenda knew well the instructions about building relationships with elders that were in the Army and Marine Corps’ new counterinsurgency manual, which had been released in late 2006. But “Three Cups of Tea” brought the lessons to life.

“It was practical, and it told real stories of real people,” said Colonel Kolenda, now a top adviser at the Kabul headquarters for the International Security Assistance Force, in an interview at the Pentagon last week.

Colonel Kolenda was among the first in the military to reach out to Mr. Mortenson, and by June 2008 the Central Asia Institute had built a school near Colonel Kolenda’s base. By the summer of 2009, Mr. Mortenson was in meetings in Kabul with Colonel Kolenda, village elders and at times President Obama’s new commander, General McChrystal. (By then at least two more military wives — Deborah Mullen and Holly Petraeus — had told their husbands to read “Three Cups of Tea.”)

As Colonel Kolenda tells it, Mr. Mortenson and his Afghan partner on the ground, Wakil Karimi, were the American high command’s primary conduits for reaching out to elders outside the “Kabul bubble.”

As Mr. Mortenson tells it, the Afghan elders were often blunt with General McChrystal, as in a meeting last October when one of them said that he had traveled all the way from his province because he needed weapons, not conversation.

“He said, ‘Are you going to give them to me or am I going to sit here and listen to you talk?’ ” Mr. Mortenson recalled. The high command replied, Mr. Mortenson said, that they were making an assessment of what he needed. “And he said, ‘Well, you’ve already been here eight years, ” Mr. Mortenson recalled.

Despite the rough edges, Colonel Kolenda said the meetings helped the American high command settle on central parts of its strategy — the imperative to avoid civilian casualties, in particular, which the elders consistently and angrily denounced during the sessions — and also smoothed relations between the elders and commanders.

For Mr. Mortenson’s part, his growing relationship with the military convinced him that it had learned the importance of understanding Afghan culture and of developing ties with elders across the country, and was willing to admit past mistakes.

At the end of this month, Mr. Mortenson, who lives in Bozeman, Mont., with his wife, Tara Bishop, and two children, is going back for the rest of the summer to Afghanistan, where to maintain credibility he now has to make it clear to Afghans and a number of aid organizations that he has no formal connection to the American military.

Mr. Mortenson acknowledges that his solution in Afghanistan, girls’ education, will take a generation and more. “But Al Qaeda and the Taliban are looking at it long range over generations,” he said. “And we’re looking at it in terms of annual fiscal cycles and presidential elections.”

Sunday, July 18, 2010

Angelica herb

Angelica Tea and Its
Many Health Benefits
Published July 15, 2010 by:
Yolanda Triana

The angelica plant is one of the most highly regarded herbs. Steeped in legend and valued for its many medicinal properties, angelica has been used for the past 2,000 years. Many magical claims for this herb have persisted through the years, although its pagan link - protection from the poisons and the spells of witches - is now just folklore.

Today herbalists suggest other, more viable uses of the herb, such as for treating indigestion, fatigue, insomnia and tension. There are many species of the herb; Angelica archangelica is the one used most in Western medicine. Its properties promote digestion, eliminate bloating and relieve cramps. In addition, nervous stomach complaints respond very well to it. Furthermore, angelica tea can stimulate the functions of the gallbladder, the liver and the pancreas. It increases stamina, strengthens the whole body and may help to prevent disease, as well.

Antibacterial pinene is a main component of angelica root's essential oil. The herb also contains bitters, tannins, resins, coumarins, pectin and sugar. The whole plant, the roots, stems and seeds, is a warming expectorant effective for asthma and bronchitis. Angelica also has antiseptic and diuretic properties, which can help treat urinary tract infections.

For Bloating

Angelica tea relieves feelings of fullness and bloating, especially after large meals. When poor digestion, swallowing air while eating, eating too quickly or poor food choices causes gas build up, angelica tea can help to alleviate these uncomfortable symptoms, strengthening normal digestive function at the same time.

For Mood Lifting

Drinking angelica tea may enhance your mood, lift depression and improve general malaise. It also relieves nerve related digestive problems and insomnia due to tension and anxiety.

Tea Preparation
Add 2 teaspoons of angelica root to 1 cup of cold water and bring to a boil under low heat. Boil briefly and then remove from heat. Steep for 5 to 10 minutes and strain. Keep the pot covered while you are steeping the tea so that the essential oils are retained. Drink 1 cup of angelica tea 3 times per day about half hour before meals. You can sweeten the tea with honey if desired.

For Nervous Stomach

2 teaspoons angelica root
2 teaspoons lemon balm leaves
½ teaspoon fennel seed

Bring angelica to a simmer in 4 cups of water. Turn off heat, add the lemon balm and fennel. Steep for 10 minutes and strain. Drink 2 to 3 times a day to relieve indigestion due to nervousness, anxiety and irritability.

A Word of Caution

The furocoumarins in angelica make the skin sensitive to sun and cause irritation. If you have a reaction, avoid sun exposure while drinking angelica tea.

Resources
The Herbal Drugstore, White, Linda B, Foster, Steven M.D., Rodale Inc. 2000

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

July 6th 2010

After all the 'patriotic' ads over the weekend, I now see Walgreen's pushing "Silly Bands" and Wendy's pushing YMCA "CampDonateInside" - sheesh, what has this world come to...

Just don't know what to say...

Monday, July 5, 2010

Crockpot recipes - July 5th 2010

These recipes can be put in the crockpot to give you a hot meal overnight or after work without heating up the house - just what you need in the summer!

Recipes are from EatingWell.com

-- Oatmeal is satisfying and filling no matter what season of the year --

Overnight Oatmeal
Here's an easy way to serve a crowd a hearty breakfast before facing the elements for a day of winter sports. You can assemble it in the slow cooker in the evening and wake up to a bowl of hot, nourishing oatmeal with a creamy consistency. No need for constant stirring either. Use steel-cut oats; the old-fashioned kind gets too soft during slow-cooking.

Serves: 8
Preparation time: 7-8 hours

Ingredients
8 cups water
2 cups steel-cut oats
1/3 cup dried cranberries
1/3 cup dried apricots, chopped
1/4 teaspoon salt, or to taste

Preparation
1. Combine water, oats, dried cranberries, dried apricots and salt in a 5- or 6-quart slow cooker. Turn heat to low. Put the lid on and cook until the oats are tender and the porridge is creamy, 7-8 hours.

Nutrition Facts
Per serving:
193 calories
3 g fat (0 g sat, 1 g mono)
0 mg cholesterol
34 g carbohydrate
6 g protein
9 g fiber
195 mg potassium
77 mg sodium

Nutrition Bonus: fiber (36% Daily Value)

-------------------- Cuban inspired Pork Stew with Salsa ---------------------------

Slow-Cooker Braised Pork with Salsa
With just a few ingredients, you can produce a full-flavored, tender pork stew in your slow cooker. Serve over quinoa or rice. Tomatillo salsa (sometimes labeled salsa verde or green salsa) is a blend of green chiles, onions and tomatillos.

Serves: 8
Preparation time: 7-8 hours

Ingredients
3 pounds boneless pork shoulder, or butt
1-1/2 cups prepared tomatillo salsa
1 3/4 cups reduced-sodium chicken broth
1 medium onion, thinly sliced
1 teaspoon cumin seeds, or ground cumin
3 plum tomatoes (1/2 pound), thinly sliced
1/2 cup chopped fresh cilantro, divided
1/2 cup reduced-fat sour cream

Preparation
1. Trim and discard pork surface fat. Cut meat apart following layers of fat around muscles; trim and discard fat. Cut into 2-inch chunks and rinse with cold water. Place in a 5- or 6-quart slow cooker. Turn heat to high.

2. Combine salsa, broth, onion and cumin seeds in a saucepan and bring to a boil over high heat. Pour over the meat. Add tomatoes and mix gently. Put the lid on and cook until the meat is pull-apart tender, 6-7 hours.

3. With a slotted spoon, transfer the pork to a large bowl; cover and keep warm. Pour the sauce and vegetables into a large skillet; skim fat. Bring to a boil over high heat. Boil, skimming froth from time to time, for about 20 minutes, to intensify flavors and thicken slightly. Add the pork and 1/4 cup cilantro; heat through.

4. To serve, ladle into bowls and garnish each serving with a dollop of sour cream and a sprinkling of the remaining 1/4 cup cilantro.

Nutrition Facts
Per serving:
252 calories
10 g fat (4 g sat, 4 g mono)
141 mg cholesterol
7 g carbohydrate
50 g protein
1 g fiber
854 mg potassium
278 mg sodium

Nutrition Bonus: zinc (27% Daily Value), potassium (24% DV)

-------------- Chicken and Sweet Potato Stew ------------------

Chicken & Sweet Potato Stew
Here's a dinnertime warmer with a hint of spring's sweetness, designed for that day when you'd rather be outside planting flowers in the garden instead of stuck inside cooking.

Serves: 6
Preparation time: 5 hours 20 minutes

Ingredients
6 bone-in chicken thighs, skin removed, trimmed of fat
2 pounds sweet potatoes, peeled and cut into spears
1/2 pound white button mushrooms, thinly sliced
6 large shallots, peeled and halved
4 cloves garlic, peeled
1 cup dry white wine
2 teaspoons chopped fresh rosemary, or 1/2 teaspoon dried rosemary, crushed
1 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon freshly ground pepper
1-1/2 tablespoons white-wine vinegar

Preparation
1. Place chicken, sweet potatoes, mushrooms, shallots, garlic, wine, rosemary, salt and pepper in a 6-quart slow cooker; stir to combine. Put the lid on and cook on low until the potatoes are tender, about 5 hours. Before serving, remove bones from the chicken, if desired, and stir in vinegar.

Nutrition Facts
Per serving:
285 calories
6 g fat (2 g sat, 2 g mono)
50 mg cholesterol
35 g carbohydrate
17 g protein
5 g fiber
866 mg potassium
519 mg sodium

Nutrition Bonus: vitamin A (430% Daily Value), potassium (25% DV), fiber (20% DV)

------------------- This is what your crockpot was designed to do ----------------

Slow-Cooked Beans
By cooking your own dried beans, you save money, reduce sodium and get better flavor along with, surprisingly, more vitamins and minerals. If you can't use the whole batch, freeze surplus cooked beans for later use in soups, salads and dips. The range of time for cooking beans is wide and varies with the age and the type of beans selected.

Serves: 6
Preparation time: 3-1/2 to 5 hours

Ingredients
1 pound dried beans, such as cannellini, black, kidney, black-eyed peas, great northern or pinto
1 onion, chopped
4 cloves garlic, minced
6 sprigs fresh thyme, or 1 teaspoon dried
1 bay leaf
5 cups boiling water
1/2 teaspoon salt

Preparation
1. Soak beans in enough cold water to cover them by 2 inches for 6 hours or overnight. (Alternatively, use the quick-soak method: Place beans in a large pot with enough water to cover by 2 inches. Bring to a boil over high heat. Remove from heat and let stand for 1 hour.)

2. Drain the beans and place them in a slow cooker. Add onion, garlic, thyme and bay leaf. Pour in boiling water. Cook, covered, on high until beans are tender, 2 to 3-1/2 hours. Add salt, cover, and cook for 15 minutes more.

Enjoy!

Nutrition Facts
Per cup:
260 calories
1 g fat (0 g sat, 0 g mono)
0 mg cholesterol
48 g carbohydrate
15 g protein
19 g fiber
726 mg potassium
201 mg sodium

Nutrition Bonus: folate (61% Daily Value), iron (25% DV), magnesium (24% DV), potassium (21% DV), calcium (15% DV)

---------------- (Ropa Vieja) Beef Stew ------------------

Ropa Vieja
This stew has a simple list of ingredients, but plenty of great taste thanks to flank steak, a cut that’s known for its excellent meaty flavor. The flank is also known for its long, grainy and sometimes, tough texture. In this stew the texture is a great asset – the meat shreds apart into tasty strips after it’s cooked in the slow cooker.

Serves: 10
Preparation time: 8-1/2 hours

Ingredients
1 1/2 cups reduced-sodium chicken broth
1/4 cup sherry vinegar
2 stalks celery, thinly sliced
1 large onion, chopped
1 large red bell pepper, seeded and chopped
3 cloves garlic, minced
1 tablespoon ground cumin
1 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon freshly ground pepper
3 pounds flank steak, trimmed of fat, each steak cut into thirds
1/2 cup packed fresh cilantro leaves, chopped
1/2 cup chopped pickled jalapenos
10 corn tortillas, heated

Preparation
1. Combine broth, vinegar, celery, onion, bell pepper, garlic, cumin, salt and pepper in a 6-quart slow cooker. Add beef, submerging it by tucking the vegetables under, over and between the pieces.

2. Put the lid on and cook on low until the meat is fork-tender, about 8 hours.

3. Transfer the meat to a cutting board; let stand for 10 minutes. Shred the meat with 2 forks and return it to the slow cooker. Stir in cilantro. Garnish with jalapeno and serve warm tortillas on the side.

Enjoy!

Nutrition Facts
Per serving:
265 calories
11 g fat (4 g sat, 4 g mono)
53 mg cholesterol
18 g carbohydrate
24 g protein
3 g fiber
474 mg potassium
376 mg sodium

Nutrition Bonus: vitamin C (100% Daily Value), zinc (33% DV), iron & vitamin A (20% DV)

-------------- Save this one for winter or early spring ----------------
Enjoy the fresh fruits of summer and dry the over-abundance of your favorite fruits to use in this dish during the winter.

Dried Fruit Compote with Green Tea & Lemon
When a good selection of fruit is lacking, poaching shelf-stable dried fruit in lemon-infused green tea creates a luscious fruit compote. Serve topped with low-fat plain yogurt and chopped pistachios for breakfast or dessert.

Serves: 8
Preparation time: 1-3/4 to 4-1/4 hours plus chilling time

Ingredients
3 green tea bags
3-1/4 cups boiling water
2 tablespoons sugar
2 teaspoons freshly grated lemon zest
3 cups mixed dried fruit, such as apples, apricots, pears, figs and/or raisins

Preparation
1. Steep tea bags in boiling water for 3-5 minutes. Remove tea bags. Stir sugar and lemon zest into the tea. Cut any large pieces of fruit into halves or quarters. Place the fruit and tea in a 4-quart or larger slow cooker. Cover and cook until the fruit is plump and tender and the liquid is syrupy, 1-1/2 to 2-1/2 hours on high or 3-1/2 to 4 hours on low. Transfer to a bowl and let cool slightly. Cover and refrigerate until chilled.

Enjoy!

Nutrition Facts
Per serving:
146 calories
0 g fat (0 g sat, 0 g mono)
0 mg cholesterol
39 g carbohydrate
1 g protein
4 g fiber
462 mg potassium
10 mg sodium

Nutrition Bonus: vitamin A (30% Daily Value)

-------------- A different side dish --------------------

Barley Risotto with Fennel
This convenient alternative to traditional stovetop risotto uses healthy, fiber-rich whole grains – either barley or brown rice – seasoned with Parmesan cheese, lemon zest and oil-cured olives. The gentle, uniform heat of a slow cooker allows you to cook a creamy risotto without the usual frequent stirring.

Serves: 6
Preparation time: 3-4 hours

Ingredients
2 teaspoons fennel seeds
1 large or 2 small fennel bulbs, cored and finely diced, plus 2 tablespoons chopped fronds
1 cup pearl barley, or short-grain brown rice
1 small carrot, finely chopped
1 large shallot, finely chopped
2 cloves garlic, minced
4 cups reduced-sodium chicken broth, or “no-chicken” broth
1 to 1-1/2 cups water, divided
1/3 cup dry white wine
2 cups frozen French-cut green beans
1/2 cup grated Parmesan cheese
1/3 cup pitted oil-cured black olives, coarsely chopped
1 tablespoon freshly grated lemon zest
Freshly ground pepper, to taste

Preparation
1. Coat a 4-quart or larger slow cooker with cooking spray. Crush fennel seeds with the bottom of a saucepan. Combine the fennel seeds, diced fennel, barley (or rice), carrot, shallot and garlic in the slow cooker. Add broth, 1 cup water and wine, and stir to combine. Cover and cook until the barley (or rice) is tender, but pleasantly chewy, and the risotto is thick and creamy, 2-1/2 to 3-1/2 hours on high or low.

2. Shortly before serving, cook green beans according to package instructions and drain. Turn off the slow cooker. Stir the green beans, Parmesan, olives, lemon zest and pepper into the risotto. If it seems dry, heat the remaining 1/2 cup water and stir it into the risotto. Serve sprinkled with the chopped fennel fronds.

Nutrition Facts
Per serving:
242 calories
6 g fat (2 g sat, 1 g mono)
9 mg cholesterol
36 g carbohydrate
10 g protein
8 g fiber
330 mg potassium
474 mg sodium

Sunday, July 4, 2010

Liberty - 4 July 2010

Selena Fox from Circle Sanctuary has the following to say:

http://www.circlesanctuary.org/circle/articles/pantheon/GoddessFreedom.html

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Ten years after... July 1st 2010 - Remembering Leslie Dauterman

So just who was Leslie Dauterman?

Leslie was a driving force in the early years of the Pagan Community Council of Ohio (PCCO). She was the binding force that held PCCO together during the '90's. Leslie came to the Pagan Community Council of Central Ohio with the organizational experience of having served as seneschal, or steward with the local Society for Creative Anachronism group at OSU. Leslie brought this experience to PCCO and established responsibility and accountability during her service as Outreach Chairman and later, as President. On many occasions, she assumed fiscal responsibility personally to assure that events could be held, paying the site reservation fees when our treasury was unable to meet that expense.

Leslie named many of the events that PCCO held during the '90's; events such as Brigid's Fire, Springbourne, Shadowmas, and Winterfire were her creations. Furthermore, the newsletter that was recognized as the best regional pagan newsletter of 1994, "YAPN – Yet Another Pagan Newsletter" was so named by Leslie to bring to an end a hours-long discussion of what to name the newsletter. She also contributed to the development of PCCO events - The Greening and Summerset; making suggestions for main guests and offering workshops that were unique and distinctly Leslie.

Leslie did not drive due to medical conditions; but she did not let that hold her back. Ultimately, these medical conditions contributed to her death in 2000. While she is no longer with us, her proud spirit touched those of us who were lucky enough to have known her.

During the '90's, Leslie served as PCCO's Outreach Chairman and often was the sole representative of PCCO at public functions. She was instrumental in putting together the Anti-Klan rituals held at the Ohio Statehouse before and after the KKK rally in the early '90's. She introduced a food drive “Cans, not Candy” for Mid-Ohio Food Bank during Beggar's Night in Columbus. She promoted a public Samhain ritual, “Take Back the Rite,” which was held at various downtown Columbus locations. Leslie's presence at the PCCO booth for ComFest was almost constant. Her energy and drive was hard to equal, though many of us tried to do so.

Leslie enjoyed these responsibilities, but most of all, she delighted in running the children activities at PCCO events and often paid for the crafting materials without asking for reimbursement. Children at PCCO events recognized her as a friend and confidant; often asking for her while their parents were checking into the event.

Additionally, Leslie was instrumental in running events; the planning and execution of a successful event often hinged upon Leslie calling individuals to assure that necessary actions were accomplished in a timely manner. Working herself ragged during an event was a given; she would often take shifts at registration and security back to back. Leslie helped with site preparation as well; she was something to see wielding a chain saw.

The Greening 2000

The Greening 2000 was held at Camp Wyandot over the Memorial Day weekend. Leslie had taken complete responsibility for this event, which was one of PCCO's most successful events. She personally arraigned much of the event preparations: lining up the guests, hiring the musicians and coordinating whom would lead the Main Ritual. Opening and Closing rituals she chose to lead herself. The Greening 2000 was a warm and open event that reflected Leslie's nature.

Leslie's Death

After The Greening 2000, Leslie returned to her usual work pattern that Tuesday, However on Wednesday, while waiting for her morning bus to work, she suffered a cerebral hemorrhage. By the time she was transported to OSU Hospital, she had fallen into a coma from which she never recovered. She remained in that coma for four weeks and on July 1st 2000, life support was removed and she passed to the Summerlands shortly afterward.

Leslie was survived by her her father and her two sisters as well as her cat, Gracie (Burns) and her partner, Stacy B. Bartley. Her memorial service held at the First Unitarian-Universalist Church in Columbus was very well attended with many individuals traveling several hours to show their respect for Leslie.

I consider myself to have been blessed to have known her.

Saturday, June 26, 2010

June 26. 2010

Watch out for the multi-tasking driver - saw a fellow tooling around town - talking on a cell phone with his left hand, cigarette in his right alternating with a drink - all the while cruising at 25-30 mph down Livingston Ave.

Just cruising around "blog-land" and I found these - 27 different door mats
http://www.djmick.co.uk/really/funny-rude-bizarre-doormat-pictures/
and this one - 36 different flavors of Pepsi around the world
http://www.djmick.co.uk/really/36-unusual-pepsi-flavours-from-around-the-world/

Apparently not supervising your children at some of these places will result in gaining a pet (plus / minus for the added caffeine or energy drink) or indenture http://www.djmick.co.uk/laughs/amusing-unattended-children-warning-signs/

Cigarette flip box mobile phone - http://www.djmick.co.uk/really/in-pictures-cigarette-box-mobile-phone/ ?????

Thursday, June 24, 2010

Bog People - June 24 2010

Just caught the last ten minutes of a Discovery Kids program "Mystery Hunters" - one of the subjects was Bog People (an area I have been interested in for a while) - bodies that have been preserved by the chemistry of the bog and the why and how they got into the bog. Episode title is "Grand Canyon Honeymooners/Bog Body" - (Christina heads to Denmark where human remains are turning up in peat bogs.) The show deals with the subject in a matter-of-fact style that does not sensationalize the "sacrifice to the Gods" aspect that most historians have come to explain on why these bodies are being found in peat bogs. Begin your research at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bog_body

Monday, June 14, 2010

Flag Day - June 14th, 2010

One of our holidays that does not get the universal recognition that it should -

From Wikipedia -
"In the United States, Flag Day is celebrated on June 14. It commemorates the adoption of the flag of the United States, which happened that day by resolution of the Second Continental Congress in 1777.[1]

In 1916, President Woodrow Wilson issued a proclamation that officially established June 14 as Flag Day; in August 1949, National Flag Day was established by an Act of Congress."

Poems of Patriotism - http://www.usflag.org/poetry.html

I can't seem to find it, but I once heard a reading given at my Colonel's retirement service describing a timeline of where the Flag has been sent and fought for since the adoption of the Flag. Very moving!

Saturday, June 12, 2010

June 12th, 2010

As some of you may know - I have been rehabbing my kitchen from total disaster.  We (my friend Allen and I) installed the kitchen cabinets over the Memorial Day weekend starting that Thursday.  With that complete, we are now ready to install countertops, tile the backsplash as well as the associated plumbing and electrical work to make this a working kitchen once again. 

My girlfriend and I  just returned from a day-long shopping and investigatory trip.  Signature Cabinets (http://www.signaturecabinetryinc.com/) seems to fit our needs for countertop and Hamilton-Parker (http://www.hamiltonparker.com/index.cfm) turned out to be a most interesting find.  Tiles of almost unimaginable detail are available here; and we found what we needed and then some in the "Blow-out Sale" area.

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Fried Squirrel…

I don't drive around looking curbside for animals to be there, honest I don't!!!

Wrote this before the turkey buzzard observation....

Ever watch squirrels tight-rope walk across power lines? They never seem to be flustered or concerned even when confronted with another squirrel going in the opposite direction. But this morning, I saw one make a fatal error on the highway in the sky the tree rat must have made a misstep as it reached the pole by completing a circuit and frying itself before dropping to the pavement below right in front of me.

Sometimes it takes something immediate like this to bring sense to my world. There are times when I want to let myself indulge in self-pity; like when we found water and mold damage to my house last year (still havent completed replacing the kitchen yet.)

Or thinking that if not for bad luck, Id have no luck at all when coming home on a Friday and the girlfriend announces We are going to the emergency room!, after one look at my face which had a very pronounced droop on the right side. Turns out I had a bout of Bells Palsy and was allowed to go home Saturday afternoon. (Any overnight stay in the hospital is not on my top ten list of things to do.) - Yes, I do appreciate the medical profession and have spent much time under their loving care, but for something that I anticipated as being nothing much turns out to be nothing much. It tends to be a joy killer.

Furthermore, a month later coming out of a local Mexican restaurant and finding my drivers side glass broken out and car stereo stolen. More importantly the smucks took my girlfriends purse which had no real money in it, but did have several mementos of her sister who has passed over from breast cancer. At the least, she would dearly love to recover any of those items. Doesnt look like it will happen

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Coincidences

I never see turkey buzzards along the side of the freeway, but tonight I saw two! One just after I got on the freeway and one just before my exit.

Another blog to take up your time

June 8th, 2010 -
Just starting out - who knows where this might take us.

Michael