Saturday, December 20, 2025

Saturday 9: Happy Holidays



From the archives

1. As you can see, when Sam Winters (the blog meme author) was a little girl, she loved giving her annual wish list to Santa. If you could ask Santa for anything at all, right now, what would it be?

A. The things I want are not the things Santa can bring. He can't bring world peace, or end hunger and disease, or stop greed. But he can bring me a box of milk chocolate covered cherries.

2. Are you currently on the Naughty or Nice list? How did you get there?

A. I hope I am on the nice list. To my knowledge, I haven't done anything naughty. I have donated to the local food bank and other charities. I've tried to stop swearing, even.

3. Are you traveling this Christmas? If so, are you going by car, plane or train?

A. I am not traveling.

4. Did you ship any gifts to friends and family this year? If yes, which one traveled the farthest?

A. I sent a gift to my friend in England, but that went via Amazon in England, so I don't know if that counts.

5. Did you buy yourself a gift this year?

A. I did not buy myself a gift this year.

6. Which do you prefer: candy canes or gingerbread?

A. Gingerbread.

7. Can you see any holiday decorations from where you're sitting now?

A. No. They are in the other room.

8. What's your favorite winter beverage?

A. I used to enjoy hot apple cider, back before I had ulcers.

9. Share a memory from last Christmas.

A. Last Christmas I was sick with an ear infection but still managed to carry off the holiday. It was more about the things I found to give than the things I received, although my stepmother did give me my mother's old button box, which I treasure.

_______________

I encourage you to visit the posts of other participants in Saturday 9 and leave a comment. Because there are no rules, it is your choice. Saturday 9 players hate rules. We love memes, however. 

Friday, December 19, 2025

Tracks on Mars


I was watching video this morning of Perseverance roaming around on Mars - it went 1,350 feet yesterday; its longest run in a single time period - and I could see the previous tracks the rover made as it moved around.

And I was thinking, as I watch our society decay, decline, and destroy itself, that mankind might not make it to Mars for a very long time.

When humanity does make it there, say in 3535, this period of history may well be forgotten. We're depending so much on technology that is actually rather fluid and erratic that I don't think the past 40 years will fare well in historical context. Things that live in the cloud are on somebody else's hard drive, and who is going to ensure that can be read for the next hundred years? Not to mention a couple thousand years. Just as an example, the 3.5-inch floppy disks I still have hold articles I wrote 35 years ago, and I have no way to read them.

Looking at all that is going on today, the state of the entire world feels to me perilously close to becoming that bleak world of Mars up there - like humanity itself may be close to extinction. After all, one world war of nuclear bursts would pretty much destroy all that we cherish and hold dear.

Whatever brand of humanity rose from those ashes might eventually make it to Mars, and without records - because of course they will destroy all the records, eventually - no one will remember that we've sent things there.

They'll think they've found evidence of an alien civilization that once lived on Mars. The tracks may even still be visible, depending on the weather, kind of like we still find dinosaur footprints in marshy weird places.

That would be fascinating, wouldn't it, if humanity thought its own efforts were those of aliens. It's the kind of thing we do now. We propose that aliens built the pyramids, or drew those massive characters and pictures in deserts, or destroyed the Mayan society. Whatever.

A very long time ago in Reader's Digest I read an article about archeologists uncovering a big structure. Inside they found a skeleton on a bed, staring at a big screen thing. They surmised the big screen thing was some kind of god that the humans worshipped, because so many of them were staring at it.

It was amusing in a scary sort of way.

Anyway, I like space stuff, so go Perseverance! Make more tracks. And hats off to Voyagers I and II, also. Keep moving away from here. You may one day be the last remnant that says humanity existed, and wouldn't that be something.

Thursday, December 18, 2025

Thursday 13



Now I'm going into podcasting! My podcast will be called Freezing and Wining. I will need to find a wine lover as a partner, though. Here are some of the proposed episodes. What do you think? 

Freezing and Wining

A podcast pairing weather complaints with wine language, frozen desserts, and mild absurdity.

1Crisis Coco - Emergency weather whining, paired with Chardonnay and a frozen hot chocolate situation that defeats the point. Includes existential angst stirred in with a whisk.

2Storm Cellar Stories - Exaggerated storm memories, paired with Syrah and rocky road ice cream. Optional side note: includes dramatic reenactments using a hair dryer.

3Almanac Apocalypse - The end of traditional weather forecasting after the collapse of the Farmer’s Almanac, paired with Cabernet Sauvignon and Neapolitan ice cream. Listener discretion: may include unsolicited conspiracy theories.

4. This Wind Has Notes of Hostility - Burgundy with dark chocolate gelato. With undertones of passive-aggressive sidewalk commentary.

5Sunny but Structurally Cold - Sauvignon Blanc and lemon sorbet. Served with brief but intense eye-rolling at neighbors’ optimism.

6The Forecast Overpromised - Rosé with strawberry sherbet. Includes a small panic about whether it will actually snow next week.

7This Is a Full-Body Chill - Cabernet Sauvignon and espresso ice cream. Garnished with minor resentment toward your own coat.

8The Sun Is Decorative Only - Riesling with mango sorbet. Pairs well with sighing at the audacity of a sunny day that offers no warmth.

9Cold Enough to Make You Rethink Your Life Choices - Bordeaux and salted caramel ice cream. Also includes one regrettable decision made while shivering.

10. Snow That Refuses to Melt - Barolo with hazelnut gelato. Perfect for muttering poetic curses at the recalcitrant white stuff.

11. Wind Chill as a Personality - Syrah and dark chocolate ice cream. With subtle undertones of judging the entire street for leaving their trash bins out.

12Why Is February So Long? - Zinfandel with cookies-and-cream ice cream. Served with a side of deep sighs and vague muttering about time dilation.

13Spring Is Theoretical - Late Harvest Riesling and frozen chocolate cream pie. Pairs excellently with whispering sweet nothings to a calendar.


*An AI tool helped me with this list because, well, I know absolutely nothing about wine because I don't drink.*

_________________


Thursday Thirteen is played by lots of people; there is a list here if you want to read other Thursday Thirteens and/or play along. I've been playing for a while, and this is my 938th time to do a list of 13 on a Thursday. Or so sayth the Blogger counter, anyway.

Tuesday, December 16, 2025

Future-Casting



A friend challenged me, more or less, to make predictions about our locality for the upcoming year.

The county is feeling pressure in multiple areas. The south, particularly the Daleville area, keeps growing and creeping north. The high schools are past their fiftieth birthdays, and we have a $35 million courthouse construction project underway in the county seat.

Add to that the wind power on the mountain in Eagle Rock and its opponents, the probable Google data center at the Botetourt Center at Greenfield and the need to find water for that, along with two new supervisors, and you have a cauldron boiling that might tip over - one way or the other.

Any of the projects underway, and the ones not yet known, could change the county in ways people haven’t fully sorted out yet.

With new people on the Board of Supervisors comes new energy and the usual mix of ambition and learning curves. I've never seen new people yet take those seats and manage to do anything they campaigned on. Once in office, new leaders suddenly discover that there's a lot more to it than just yelling from a bully pulpit. Virginia is a Dillon Rule state, and that means that the county can only do what the Virginia legislature says it can do. All of those empty promises made on the campaign trail? They'll turn out to be just words.

That always happens, though. After 40 years of reporting on this kind of thing, I'm well aware that new supervisors have a big learning curve. On top of that, we've got a loud bunch of, well, complainers seems like an appropriate word - who are likely to make meetings louder and more animated, and they will continue to do so until these supervisors figure out what they can and cannot do under Virginia’s rules. 

At the same time, the county administration may see some changes in leadership, which could shake up how projects are managed and priorities are set. I for one look for the county administrator to leave. He's fulfilled his mission - Greenfield is full now and the county doesn't have a new industrial site on tap that I am aware of. With the cost of the courthouse and the needs of the school system, I don't see how the county could justify another multi-million-dollar purchase of land to prepare for another industrial park.

Especially not when they need to find eight million gallons of water for that data center. Maybe they find a new way to cool it, and maybe not. Either way, how we manage our water resources could determine how smooth - or not - that process ends up being. It may also end up being expensive.

I have a suspicion that, like the Craig Botetourt Scenic Trail (a rails-to-trails project that has been in the works since the 1970s is finally under way), another project known as Hipes Dam might get another look. That's pure speculation on my part, but if I remember that project existed, you can bet others remember it too. I think it would have to be redone to keep the new lake from wiping out the rails-to-trails project, but ultimately it would complement that if recreational tourism is a goal not only for Botetourt but also for Craig. Unfortunately, it would also wipe out a bunch of small farms and the cabins along Craig Creek.

That's in the northern end of the county. Further south, Daleville is changing fast. New apartments and some retail makes the area feel almost like a proper little hub now. However, the area is missing a fire station yet, which is starting to feel like a glaring gap. There are also rumors of a larger development near the I-81 and US 220 interchange, and if that ever takes shape, the area could look very different in just a few years.

The schools are another piece of the puzzle. Both high schools need work, if not replacement. Consolidation could modernize things, but that would put a high school near the I-81 Exit 156 interchange, feasibly, and I'm not sure that's the best place to park a high school. However, even though growth is currently mainly in the southern part of the county, between northern trails, possible dams, and whatever other surprises show up, the county might start to feel more balanced in the years ahead.

At the end of the day, none of this is set in stone. Some of it will happen, some of it won’t. What matters most is that residents pay attention, talk with each other - nicely, please - and make their voices heard. Botetourt is lucky in that it has room to grow, but our leaders must navigate the changes carefully, thoughtfully, and with a little foresight.

Monday, December 15, 2025

Five Things


Last week, I:

1. saw the chiropractor.

2. did Christmas stuff.

3. hunted up my recipe for fudge and penuche, then went to the store for ingredients. Crickey, that will be expensive fudge. $4.99 was the cheapest I saw for semi-sweet chocolate. I can remember when it was regularly priced at a $1.99.

4. watched it snow and took snow pictures.

5. wrote a couple of letters.


________________________

In solidarity with federal workers, who were tasked in late February 2025 with listing 5 things they did the prior week in order to keep their jobs, I started listing 5 things I did last week every Monday. On August 5, 2025, the federal government decided this was a waste of employees' time (as if we all didn't know that already). I have decided to keep it up, at least for now. I may stop it at any time.

Sunday, December 14, 2025

Sunday Stealing




1) What one word describes your personality?

A. Neurotic, according to some people. I prefer "eccentric."
 
2) What's the best way to get on your good side?

A. Be kind, not only to me, but to others.
 
3) What person do you feel most comfortable with?

A. My husband.

4) Do you handle criticism well?

A. Who are you calling defensive and thin-skinned? I have never! I handle criticism perfectly well, thank you very much!
 
5) Are you the type to tell someone, if asked, that their pants DO make them look fat?

A. No, I would never tell someone that. I might say, well, I think they don't fit as well as some others you have, or something like that.

Thank you for playing! Please come back next week.

__________

I encourage you to visit other participants in Sunday Stealing posts and leave a comment. Cheers to all us thieves who love memes, however we come by them.

Saturday, December 13, 2025

Saturday 9: First Christmas




Unfamiliar with this week's tune? Hear it here.

I'd never heard this song before. It's quite lovely.

1) The song mentions snowmen and snow on a windowpane. Has it snowed near you yet?

A. Oh yes. We've had two snows already, one piling on the other. It's still on the ground.

2) Diane Keaton sings that hearing "I'll Be Home for Christmas" makes her miss someone she loved who won't be coming home at all. Is there a Christmas song that reminds you of a loved one?

A. Not really, no.
 
3) After the song was first released for Christmas 2024, Diane said she appreciated how many people posted on her Instagram, sharing their "First Christmas journeys," explaining how they navigated the first holiday season without a special someone. What have you recently posted on social media (other than this blog post)?

A. My blog is mostly where I post. On Facebook, I posted a press release from the National Trust for Historic Preservation. Because I once was a journalist and a historian, and that's what I do.
 
4) Diane appeared in the Broadway musical Hair and sang in movies like Annie Hall and The First Wives Club. Still, she didn't consider herself "much of a singer." How about you? What's something you do, even though you're not completely comfortable doing it?

A. Does going out in public count? I'm not comfortable with that anymore. But I do it. I also don't consider myself "much of a singer" yet I have YouTube videos up of myself singing along with my guitar.
 
5) This was Diane's first and, sadly, her only record. She was nervous doing it, but it helped that the lyrics was written by her friend, Carole Bayer Sager, and that both Carole and her writing partner, Jonas Myrin, were with Diane in the studio. Tell us about a friend who came through for you.

A. Oh, my friend Brenda came through for me many times, especially when my mother passed away. Her mother died the same year, and we sort of helped each other through those difficult days. Brenda was a very quiet and very secretive person who held her cards so close to her vest they nearly disappeared from view. Alas, she passed away in 2021. I miss her.

6) After her 75th birthday, Diane said she was excited that new ventures were coming her way, and she found herself saying "yes" more often. In addition to recording this week's song, she accepted an unexpected offer from Look Optic to design eyewear. Have you recently tried something you've never done before? Or what's something you'd like to try?

A. I have tried to knit and crochet and am a poor student when it comes to those crafts. I'd like to try to draw and color with colored pencil or perhaps acrylic; I could never do oils because of the odor, but I would like to be able to draw. I took a couple of art courses in college and did OK, but fortunately I had a teacher who graded on effort, not on results, because I never did produce anything worthwhile.
 
Now for some questions about the holiday season ...

7) Do you display the holiday cards you receive?

A. I do. I tape them to a wall. Now there are just a few, but back in the day, like 30 years ago, I would receive so many cards that not only did I tape them to the wall, I ran them on a string and down the front of closet doors. I used to send out about 200 cards. Now my list is down to 40, and they are mostly my husband's distant cousins.

8) This is a big time of year for necklaces, hats, and headbands decorated with jingle bells. Will you be wearing any bells this season?

A. I do not wear bells.
 
9) The website Morning Save included these three items on their list of this season's popular gifts. Would you rather receive: a. cup holder/phone mount for your car; b. sherpa lined clog slippers; c. set of three stainless paring knives with rosemary green plastic handles?

A. I would rather have the knives. I have a hard time keeping sharp knives around the house.

_______________

I encourage you to visit the posts of other participants in Saturday 9 and leave a comment. Because there are no rules, it is your choice. Saturday 9 players hate rules. We love memes, however. 

Thursday, December 11, 2025

Thursday Thirteen



I have decided to start a new business! It's insurance for mythological creatures. Here are some of the coverage plans:

1. Dragon Fire Liability Insurance - For when a sneeze, hiccup, or minor disagreement results in the total loss of a village.

2. Phoenix Rebirth Coverage - Handles nest destruction, wardrobe loss, and scorch‑related inconveniences during the fiery renewal cycle.

3. Unicorn Horn Repair & Replacement Plan - Covers chips, cracks, magical overuse, and unauthorized wizard borrowing.

4. Leprechaun Pot‑of‑Gold Loss Protection - For theft, misplacement, rainbow‑misalignment errors, and human meddling.

5. Mermaid Tail Injury & Scale‑Shedding Insurance - Protects against fin sprains, scale loss, coral abrasions, and unfortunate encounters with boat propellers.

6. Werewolf Transformation Liability Policy - Covers property damage, shredded clothing, and neighbor complaints during full‑moon episodes.

7. Fairy Wing Tear & Glitter Overuse Coverage - For wing rips, dust shortages, and accidental glitter contamination of human dwellings.

8. Giant Structural Damage Umbrella Policy - Handles unintentional stomping, leaning, sitting, or “just resting my elbow” incidents.

9. Vampire Sunlight Exposure & Coffin Replacement Plan - Covers coffin fires, smoke damage, and emergency blackout‑curtain installation.

10. Centaur Orthopedic & Horseshoe Plan - For back strain, hoof cracks, and long‑distance galloping injuries.

11. Troll Bridge‑Collapse Liability Insurance - Protects against structural failures caused by toll‑collecting, stomping, or goats with excessive determination.

12. Kraken Ship‑Entanglement Coverage - For tentacle‑related misunderstandings with maritime traffic.

13. Pegasus Flight Accident Insurance - Covers mid‑air collisions, cloud‑slip injuries, and lightning‑bolt interference.

And just for the holidays, we have a special running on the SANTA PLAN to cover airplane near misses, lost toys, reindeer hiccups, loose reins, bad GPS, cloud cover, and stains on red suits.

Happy Holidays!


*An AI tool helped me with this post.*
_________________


Thursday Thirteen is played by lots of people; there is a list here if you want to read other Thursday Thirteens and/or play along. I've been playing for a while, and this is my 937th time to do a list of 13 on a Thursday. Or so sayth the Blogger counter, anyway.
 

Wednesday, December 10, 2025

Ice and Snow

We've had bad weather now for a while. First, we had an ice storm, followed by two snows. It makes getting in and out rather sketchy. However, the photos are nice.

A small buck in the ice.

The ice coated everything.

I'm probably one of the few people who kept their old paper box and used it for yard art.

Evergreens in the snow.

Deciduous trees and evergreens, all frosty and lovely.

Managed to catch the moon in this one.

The neighbor's house in the snow.

Two does trek across the field.


The Whirl of Modern America

 Heather Cox Richardson on December 9 wrote: 

When G. Elliott Morris of Strength in Numbers asked ChatGPT to fact-check an article for him yesterday, the chatbot couldn’t get its head around modern America. It told him there were “multiple factual impossibilities” in his article, including his statements that “[t]he current Secretary of Defense is a former talk show host for Fox News,” “[t]he Deputy Director of the FBI used to guest-host Sean Hannity’s show,” and “Jeanine Pirro is the U.S. District Attorney for DC.”
“Since none of these statements are true,” it told Morris, “they undermine credibility unless signposted as hyperbole, fiction, or satire.”
But of course, Morris’s statements were not “factual impossibilities.” In the United States of America . . . they are true.

I took this to ChatGPT and said, "Comment on this, please." 

ChatGPT said in its own defense:

This is a perfect illustration of the gap between plausibility and actuality in a world where the improbable has become real.

What ChatGPT did in Morris’s example is what many language models tend to do when confronted with statements that fall outside their internal “sense” of how institutions normally operate. 

The model wasn’t checking facts against live data; it was checking them against patterns — and the patterns of the past half-century say: “No, a Fox News host does not become Secretary of Defense. A Hannity guest host does not become Deputy Director of the FBI. Jeanine Pirro is not a U.S. Attorney.” Those things were factual impossibilities for most of modern American history.

But reality in the Trump era hasn’t followed historical norms, and models trained on large amounts of pre-2025 text can get tripped up by that. They sometimes mistake unlikely for untrue, especially when political appointments or institutional roles deviate sharply from precedent.

It’s a bit like asking a model in 1975 whether “a celebrity real-estate developer will become president” and having it flag that as satire. 

The model isn’t being “dumb”; it’s being statistical.

So the real issue here isn’t that ChatGPT can’t handle “modern America” as such — it’s that the guardrails and expectations baked into its training struggle with periods of rapid institutional deformation. When a democracy starts resembling parody, factuality checks become harder for systems that try to balance accuracy, recency, and safety.

And it’s also a reminder: a language model’s confidence does not equal truth. Even when it sounds authoritative, it may be reasoning from “what usually happens,” not “what actually happened yesterday.”

In Morris’s example, the irony is sharp: the AI thought the truth was satire because the truth sounds like satire. That says as much about the moment we’re living in as it does about the model.
_________________

It's hard to get your head around all of the strangeness of today, isn't it?

Tuesday, December 09, 2025

Tuesday 4

This is a new-to-me meme called Tuesday 4. It has been around a while, but I don't normally do it. I decided to do it this week because it deals with the holidays.

1. Do you have a favorite Christmas carol and if so is there a particular version you especially like?

A. I love Do You Hear What I Hear? I think that's such a beautiful carol. I also like Hark! The Herald Angels Sing and Angels We Have Heard on High. Playing that "gloria" part on the guitar is a trip.

2. Do you have a special dinner for the holidays? What foods are included?

A. We generally just have fudge and a cheeseball as special foods at Christmas. Maybe cookies.

3. Holiday movies . . . which do you like to watch?

A. I like It's a Wonderful Life, but my husband doesn't, so unless I catch it while he's out, I don't see it. We have to watch Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer every year, although that's not a movie. There aren't any others that I seek out but I will watch The Santa Clause, Christmas Story, and a few others if they're on. I'm not a big TV watcher.

4. What traditions do you continue to keep year after year for the holidays?

A. Because my husband was a firefighter and frequently worked the holidays, it was difficult for the two of us to have our own traditions. Our traditions were wrapped around our former families. Now that it is the two of us, we are creating our own traditions. Those include a viewing of The Lord of the Rings movies throughout the month of December, old-fashioned tinsel on the tree, making fudge and baking cookies, and just generally enjoying one another's company. We also visit my husband's mother on Christmas Day. I don't want her to spend the day alone.


Monday, December 08, 2025

Five Things

 


Last week, I:

1. had a bad back spasm. Yikes!

2. went with my husband to see one of his doctors.

3. discovered that Mondays apparently mean no eggs at the grocery store now.

4. finished the book, Beautiful Ugly by Alice Feeney. I so dislike unreliable narrators.

5. did some Christmas shopping.

________________________

In solidarity with federal workers, who were tasked in late February 2025 with listing 5 things they did the prior week in order to keep their jobs, I started listing 5 things I did last week every Monday. On August 5, 2025, the federal government decided this was a waste of employees' time (as if we all didn't know that already). I have decided to keep it up, at least for now. I may stop it at any time.

Sunday, December 07, 2025

Sunday Stealing




1) What was the scariest thing in the world to you when you were a kid? Does it still scare you now?

A. This is a difficult question to answer. The scariest thing "in the world" to me as a child was not something like spiders and snakes, but the adults in my life. They do not scare me now.
 
2) Imagine your 12-year-old daughter (or granddaughter) is hosting a sleepover at your home. A sudden storm knocks out cellphone service, wifi and cable. How would you keep these suddenly unplugged pre-teens entertained?

A. A game of Scrabble, or card games. Maybe I would teach them how to play poker. We could also do sing-a-longs because I can't imagine any child of mine (or grandchild of mine) not knowing how to play a little guitar. We could play "truth or dare" or "never have I ever." Whether or not they'd go along with those suggestions would be another story, but maybe they'd enjoy it.
 
3) What piece of movie or TV memorabilia would you love to own?

A. I would love to own the One Ring from the original Lord of the Rings movie (I have a facsimile of it, but I want the one that Frodo carried). Failing that, someone could get me a signed photo from Lindsay Wagner from the Bionic Woman at her Bionic50 page. She's got things up for sale to celebrate because it's been 50 years since the show aired (damn, I am old). I thought about buying myself one of those Facetime-for-an-hour experiences, but I have no idea what I would say to Lindsay Wagner for an hour. "Gee, I liked your show when I was 12, but I rewatched it recently and thought the writing was inane in the third season" probably is not a good conversation starter.

4) You are gifted with the services of a personal assistant for four hours. What would you ask your assistant to do?

A. Clean up my office or do the bookkeeping. There's not enough time for both, and in four hours she'd just make a little headway.
 
5) If literary characters were real, which one would you like to interview, and what would you ask?

A. I recently reread The Scarlett Letter, by Nathaniel Hawthorne, so let's interview Hester Prynne and find out why she went back to live out her sentence instead of staying in England with her daughter.

Thank you for playing! Please come back next week.

__________

I encourage you to visit other participants in Sunday Stealing posts and leave a comment. Cheers to all us thieves who love memes, however we come by them.

Saturday, December 06, 2025

Saturday 9: Ja-Da




Unfamiliar with this week's tune? Hear it here
 
1) The lyrics tell us the melody is soothing. What calms you when you're upset or anxious?

A. Valium.
 
2) There was a lot going on in 1918 – like WWI and the Spanish flu pandemic – that left people upset and anxious. In those days, radio wasn't yet a staple in American homes, so people received their news through newspapers. Today with podcasts and 24-hour cable news and social media and other news outlets available, do you ever feel like taking a break from current events?

A. I have not read a full edition of the local daily newspaper for several months now. We switched to digital and I don't like it. I read stories from there that relate to my county, but I do not read it cover to cover like I used to. Current events are more like throwing up in a trash can these days than actually learning something helpful, so I think a break occasionally is good for your health. You can't vomit news all of the time.

3) In addition to newspapers, magazines were a big deal in 1918. Women turned to publications like Ladies Home Journal and McCall's for trends and tips about fashion and housekeeping. Do you have any printed magazines in your home now?

A. I have The Atlantic, Reader's Digest, Farm Journal, Drovers Magazine, and Consumer Reports.
 
4) Today schoolchildren often learn "Ja-Da" because it's easy to sing and play. Was music part of your grade school curriculum?

A. We had a lovely music teacher named Mrs. Tingler who came once a week to give us music lessons. She taught us several songs that I still remember, like Senor Don Gato the Cat and Goodbye Ol' Paint. She also brought along different types of instruments, like tambourines, triangles, harmonicas, etc., for kids to try out. Once she received permission to take Ann and I to other schools so I could play flute while Ann sang. Ann and I ended up the Top 40 cover band that I was in during high school. She was the singer and I played guitar. Not all the long ago, I came across Mrs. Tingler on Facebook, and she seemed to remember me. And not long after that, I saw her obituary in the newspaper. God bless the Mrs. Tinglers of the world.
 
5) Composer Bob Carleton published more than 500 songs in his career. He had no songwriting partner, handling the words and lyrics himself. What's your favorite song? Was it written by a single composer or a songwriting team?

A. I don't know that I have a favorite song, but I will say that I am a big fan of Fleetwood Mac and I generally lean towards the songs that Stevie Nicks wrote, especially the strange ones like Rhiannon and Sara
 
6) Bob got his start in his hometown of St. Louis, playing piano in his parents' saloon. When you think of St. Louis, what comes to mind?

A. Missouri. The big golden arch thing.
 
7) In 1918, Americans were buying more cars and Studebakers were a familiar sight on the streets and highways. Today that name is mostly forgotten. Can you think of a brand that used to popular but has disappeared?

A. Pearl Drops Toothpaste. Clearasil. Rainbow Bread (that might've been a local thing). Valley Dale meats. 
 
8) During WWI, Americans were familiar with "Meatless Days." Back then we were encouraged to cut back on the consumption of meat as a patriotic gesture to help the American and Allied troops. Today "Meatless Monday" highlights health and the environment. Think about your diet. Do you try to eat more grains, fruits and vegetables?

A. At the moment, I am supposed to be eating more protein. Apparently, I do not eat enough of that, especially in the mornings.
 
9) Random question: Where did you get the shirt you are wearing right now?

A. I have on a pink Fire-EMS shirt that was a special edition T-shirt put out for women's breast cancer. It says "Fired up for a cure" on the back. My husband purchased several of them when that went around the firehouse, and I wear them a lot.
 
_______________

I encourage you to visit the posts of other participants in Saturday 9 and leave a comment. Because there are no rules, it is your choice. Saturday 9 players hate rules. We love memes, however. 



Thursday, December 04, 2025

Thursday Thirteen



1. A spider built an entire town inside my sneakers that I use for my "outside shoes." When I went to put them on, there was spider web everywhere, inside and out. The spider was still in the shoe. I handed it to my husband. "Eww," I said. He cleaned it out with a paper towel.

2. The spider in my shoe reminded me of that nursery rhyme about the old woman who lived in a shoe and had so many children she didn't know what to do. I think she whipped them all soundly and put them to bed, but it's been a long time since I looked at nursery rhymes.

3. I used to have a book of Mother Goose Nursery Rhymes. It was large with a black and white checked pattern on it, and goose in a bonnet on the front. At one point, I knew all the nursery rhymes, but that was a very long time ago.

4. Was there a nursery rhyme about a spider? I don't recall one, but I remember the song, "Itsy Bitsy Spider." That spider had a Sisyphus complex, always climbing up the water drain only to be washed out and having to start all over again.

5.  Once, I opened a game camera in the kitchen and tiny little yellow spiders went everywhere. It looked like there were hundreds of them in the innards of the game camera. The next fall, we had big spiders - we call them wolf spiders although I don't think that's the right name - were all over the house. I was constantly hauling out the vacuum to suck them up off the floor. They appeared every fall for years after, and I even saw one this year. But hopefully they've about done their due in the house.

6. Now I only open game cameras outside when I want to get the cards out to see what the pictures are. Yes, I buy only cheap game cameras, not the ones with apps that allow you to see in real time that there's a raccoon in the backyard.

7. Speaking of raccoons, I saw a story Wednesday about a raccoon in Hanover County, VA, that invaded an ABC store. It destroyed bottles on the lower shelves, got very drunk, and passed out in the bathroom. The animal was fine after it sobered up.

8. I once had a squirrel find its way into the garage. Its ending was not as good as the raccoon's. This was when my husband had ankle surgery in 2019, and I was caring for him and not going out much. I don't know how the squirrel got in the garage. I heard something once when I was in the laundry room but I thought it was the dryer bumping against the wall. After several days, I had to make a grocery store run. While I was gone, the mail carrier brought something up to the house, and my husband, on his little knee scooter, asked the woman if she could just put the delivery inside the garage door for me to get when I returned. "Do you know there's a dead squirrel in your garage?" the woman asked him after she put the parcel inside. He did not. Being the hero that he is, he wheeled himself outside in the cold, down the patio sidewalk, and into the garage, found a shovel, picked up the dead squirrel, and flung it as far as he could out into the yard so I wouldn't drive home to find a dead squirrel in my path. "I didn't want to freak you out," he said. He later had a friend remove the carcass away from the house. He was probably right that a dead squirrel would have had me in tears. It upset me anyway because I knew the poor thing died of dehydration and lack of food.

9. Completely changing the subject now, I gave ChatGPT all of my health issues, food allergies, food preferences, and what I normally eat, and said, "fix me." We are working on a few things, and I have lost three pounds, even over Thanksgiving. I'll let you know if this continues to prove helpful. So far it seems to be working. I don't know why I thought to do that, but I guess dietitian could be another job that AI takes over.

10. My friend told me she read that the owner of Open AI thinks that one day an AI will be president. I'm not sure I want to live in that world. That's just too weird even for me. Although I think AI is better than believing that all the powerful folks at the top are secretly lizard people.

11. We had a lizard called a skink in the back and it kept trying to get in the house. I didn't want to kill it, I just wanted it to move along, so I sprinkled black pepper all over the patio door and the patio area where I kept seeing it. Black pepper is supposed to be something skinks don't like. The skink moved to the front porch, which is Ok because I don't go out that door as much and there aren't little door guides for it to hide under.

12. I tried using cayenne pepper to keep the deer away from my roses when I grew them, but it didn't stop them. Nothing keeps those things from eating the flowers, although they don't like marigolds much. I even had them eat my mums this year, which was a first.

13. And now we have come to the end of this wayward little wandering Thursday Thirteen. I don't often do these like this but sometimes it's good to just see what comes out of the air when I simply want to write.

Thank you for reading!

_________________


Thursday Thirteen is played by lots of people; there is a list here if you want to read other Thursday Thirteens and/or play along. I've been playing for a while, and this is my 936th time to do a list of 13 on a Thursday. Or so sayth the Blogger counter, anyway. 

Wednesday, December 03, 2025

Prancer

Not the animal discussed in this post.


The other morning, after 35 years of watching deer, I saw something I'd never seen before.

A cold front was heading in; the deer were all over the yard. Every time I looked out the window, there was a doe. On one side of the house, two young bucks butted heads, then stopped and stared at me as I raced outside with the camera.

A little later, I heard my husband coming up the driveway, but he didn't come all the way up. I went to the garage to make sure he was ok.

Through the window, I saw that he had the binoculars out and was looking at the woods. I looked too and saw a doe come running out of the trees. She slipped under the fence and dashed through the front yard, moving fast.

Right after she slipped under the fence, a buck jumped it, taking it like a grown man would step over a child's alphabet block, and then, it happened.

The buck pranced.

He pranced across my front yard as if he were the prince of the land, which I suppose he was at that particular time. His feet lifted much like a horse in a parade might do. He wasn't running after the doe; he was sure he was going to get her.

His stately look made me gasp and wish I had my camera, because of course I did not. He pranced on out of sight, while I stood there, entranced.

And the amazing thing was he pranced right in front of my husband, who watched him, too. And while it was a buck big enough to shoot, my husband let him go, so he could find his lady love.

I'm not sure which was the best to see, the buck prancing so, or my husband's wisdom in letting that buck live another day.