12 years ago
Wednesday, June 30, 2010
Tuesday, June 29, 2010
Monday, June 28, 2010
Monday's Memory ~Mother
Tomorrow, June 29, marks the 9 year anniversary of Mother's death.
I believe a woman does not truly grow up until she loses her mother, her primary role model for womanhood.
Please join me as I remember the life of a very special lady, my mother.
Sunday, June 27, 2010
Sunday is for Family
Daddy (on back) and Lewis (Marine Buddy)
Korea
~1960
Daddy was sent to Korea in 1960 for a 13 month tour of duty.
As always, he found a way to have a good time.
He wrote on the back on this photo:
"Git up horsey! Lewis is from Texas and was showing me how to ride!"
Saturday, June 26, 2010
Taking It Easy
The Weather Dude says it's gonna be another HOT weekend!
This is all I plan to do this weekend...
I hope I don't over do it and hurt myself.
Friday, June 25, 2010
Sassy Says
It's a beautiful day in this neighborhood,
A beautiful day for a neighbor,
Would you be mine?
Could you be mine?
It's a neighborly day in this beautywood,
A neighborly day for a beauty,
Would you be mine?
Could you be mine?
I have always wanted to have a neighbor just like you,
I've always wanted to live in a neighborhood with you.
So let's make the most of this beautiful day,
Since we're together, we might as well say,
Would you be mine?
Could you be mine?
Won't you be my neighbor?
Won't you please,
Won't you please,
Please won't you be my neighbor?
~Fred McFeely Rogers
Let's all sing together, now...
Thursday, June 24, 2010
Free Food
Guess what I've discovered?
We have free food,
growing in our yard!!!
Yummy, yellow squash
and red, sweet 'maters.
I can't wait until the hotdog tree blooms.
Wednesday, June 23, 2010
Wordless Wednesday
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Don't you LOVE the header photo?
Hubby took it and he has graciously offered to keep me supplied with new header photos. I think he was tired of the old one! This should be fun!
Tuesday, June 22, 2010
Monday, June 21, 2010
Monday's Memory Mosaic ~Spunky
She was the sweetest, most gentle dog I have ever known.
Spunky "mothered" everything she could, including our Lab, Comet, and our lop-eared rabbits.
Spunky passed away, in the backseat of the car, with her head in my lap, as we sped to the emergency vet. She was 13 years old and we believe she had a stroke. She did not suffer.
We did.
Sunday, June 20, 2010
Saturday, June 19, 2010
Abstract by Zack
Getting Inspired
Becoming One with the Canvas
Artist at Work
Ta-Da!
Another Masterpiece!
Self Portrait on Cement
Friday, June 18, 2010
Thursday, June 17, 2010
Carrots and Peanut Butter
Do you like carrots and peanut butter snacks?
How about you, Buddy?
Yes, please!
Thanks, Rama!
Nom, nom, nom...
More, please!
Zack, would you like a peanut butter carrot?
Yummers!
Your turn, Sassy.
Blech!!!
More peanut butter and less carrot, please.
Wednesday, June 16, 2010
On the Driveway
I spied this Black Ratsnake while on my morning walk yesterday. Fortunately, the dogs were in the house, out of the heat.
Black snakes are not harmful and this poor thing was scared to death.
Notice how when startled, it freezes and wrinkles itself into a series of kinks. This snake has only one thing on its mind-retreat!
Given enough space, time, and reassuring words it does exactly that.
Doesn't everyone talk to snakes?
Yes, I know they're deaf.
Are you grossed out yet?
No?
Well, I also saw this scat on the driveway.
Yes, this is a collage of poop!
I thought it might be fox poop, but I've been told it looks more like bear.
It contains blackberry and blueberry seeds.
Click to enlarge.
Any poop experts out there?
Remember, just because you eat it,
doesn't make you an expert!
Tuesday, June 15, 2010
Monday, June 14, 2010
Japanese World Cup Soccer Team
Thanks to MaxMom, we have Soccer World Cup fever.
I have agreed to highlight the SWC team from Japan to help celebrate Unity in Diversity.
I know very little about soccer and even less about the Japanese team, but I have traveled to Japan so I consider myself somewhat of an expert, chuckle!
Do you enjoy cheering for the underdogs?
I have agreed to highlight the SWC team from Japan to help celebrate Unity in Diversity.
I know very little about soccer and even less about the Japanese team, but I have traveled to Japan so I consider myself somewhat of an expert, chuckle!
Do you enjoy cheering for the underdogs?
If so, The Sumarai Blue, as affectionately called in Japan, is definitely the team for you! Japan is the lowest ranked team in their group.
Former team captain, Hidetoshi Nakata said, "The team has not had the best of years but it can only go up.”
Midfielder, Keisuke Honda said that persistent criticism from the national press has convinced the defiant Japanese squad they have "nothing to lose at the World Cup finals."
I have to admit, I lost interest quickly, but thank goodness, MaxMom said our post doesn't have to be solely about the team.
Soooo, guess what I'm going to discuss?
You betcha',
dogs in Japan.
But not just any dog. I want to share the story of a very special dog named Hachiko.
Perhaps the most well known animal in Japan is Hachiko, an Akita that died in 1935 and is now stuffed and displayed at Japan's National Science Museum. "Chu-ken Hachinko, or "faithful dog Hachiko,"was the pet of a Tokyo University professor, Hidesaburo Ueno. Every morning the professor and Hachinko would walk together to the Shibuya station, where the professor would take the train to work and each afternoon at 3:00pm when the professor came home his dog was waiting at the platform to meet him.
Then one day in 1925 the professor suddenly died from a stroke at work. Hachinko waited at the station that afternoon but her master didn't return. She waited again the next afternoon. And the next and the next and kept coming back to the station, every afternoon for the next 10 years.
Efforts to give Hachiko to adopted owners failed. He continued to go to the station and spend his nights sleeping on the steps of the late professor’s house. Even when he was old and lame he continued to show up at 3:00pm at the station. He was cared for by the professor’s gardener and a stationmaster at the station, often begging for food from the numerous street vendors in the area.
Hachiko's devotion caught the imagination of the world. Articles were written about him inside and outside Japan. The Los Angeles Friends of Animals was so moved it raised money for a statue of the faithful dog that was erected in Shibuya Station in 1934, a year before Hachiko died. Replicas of the statue were given to schools all over Japan. Though his body was put on display at the National Science Museum near Ueno Station in Tokyo his bones were interred with those if hit master in Aoyama cemetery.
Hachiko Legacy
Everyone in Japan knows Hachiko. Children are read bedtime stories about the faithful dog and teenagers in Tokyo often say "Hachiko mae de!" ("Let's meet at Hachiko"), a reference to the teenage hangout and entertainment district of Shibuya, where the dog used to meet his master.
In 1936 the Hachiko story was included in the moral education textbooks for primary school as an illustration of loyalty and fealty to a master, encouraging loyalty to Emperor Hirohito. During World War II, Japan's military dictators made Hachiko's story mandatory reading in school even though they ordered her statues melted down so the metal could be used in shipbuilding.
Jesse Glass, a professor at Meikai University in Chiba, told the Daily Yomiuri: “The story of Hachiko is particularly appealing to the Japanese because the high value that Japanese culture traditionally places on fealty to the group, boss or master—eve if the mast master is absent in death.” Cynics speculate that maybe it was handouts from yakitori vendors not loyalty to his master that may have kept of Hachiko coming back—a number of wooden skewers were found in his stomach after he died.
Today Japanese can choose from hundreds of books, movies, compact discs, statues and plaques honoring Hachiko. He has been commemorated on a postage stamp. Department stores sell a $50 Hachiko necktie with "Wan Wan" printed on it and a $58 wristwatch with the English message on the dial: "The most heartful and Japanese, a dog. He goes to station to meet” In 1994, the Year of the Dog on the Chinese lunar calendar, the Culture Broadcasting Network broadcast a newly discovered recording of Hachinko's bark. (Source: Factsanddetails.com)
But not just any dog. I want to share the story of a very special dog named Hachiko.
Perhaps the most well known animal in Japan is Hachiko, an Akita that died in 1935 and is now stuffed and displayed at Japan's National Science Museum. "Chu-ken Hachinko, or "faithful dog Hachiko,"was the pet of a Tokyo University professor, Hidesaburo Ueno. Every morning the professor and Hachinko would walk together to the Shibuya station, where the professor would take the train to work and each afternoon at 3:00pm when the professor came home his dog was waiting at the platform to meet him.
Then one day in 1925 the professor suddenly died from a stroke at work. Hachinko waited at the station that afternoon but her master didn't return. She waited again the next afternoon. And the next and the next and kept coming back to the station, every afternoon for the next 10 years.
Efforts to give Hachiko to adopted owners failed. He continued to go to the station and spend his nights sleeping on the steps of the late professor’s house. Even when he was old and lame he continued to show up at 3:00pm at the station. He was cared for by the professor’s gardener and a stationmaster at the station, often begging for food from the numerous street vendors in the area.
Hachiko's devotion caught the imagination of the world. Articles were written about him inside and outside Japan. The Los Angeles Friends of Animals was so moved it raised money for a statue of the faithful dog that was erected in Shibuya Station in 1934, a year before Hachiko died. Replicas of the statue were given to schools all over Japan. Though his body was put on display at the National Science Museum near Ueno Station in Tokyo his bones were interred with those if hit master in Aoyama cemetery.
Hachiko Legacy
Everyone in Japan knows Hachiko. Children are read bedtime stories about the faithful dog and teenagers in Tokyo often say "Hachiko mae de!" ("Let's meet at Hachiko"), a reference to the teenage hangout and entertainment district of Shibuya, where the dog used to meet his master.
In 1936 the Hachiko story was included in the moral education textbooks for primary school as an illustration of loyalty and fealty to a master, encouraging loyalty to Emperor Hirohito. During World War II, Japan's military dictators made Hachiko's story mandatory reading in school even though they ordered her statues melted down so the metal could be used in shipbuilding.
Jesse Glass, a professor at Meikai University in Chiba, told the Daily Yomiuri: “The story of Hachiko is particularly appealing to the Japanese because the high value that Japanese culture traditionally places on fealty to the group, boss or master—eve if the mast master is absent in death.” Cynics speculate that maybe it was handouts from yakitori vendors not loyalty to his master that may have kept of Hachiko coming back—a number of wooden skewers were found in his stomach after he died.
Today Japanese can choose from hundreds of books, movies, compact discs, statues and plaques honoring Hachiko. He has been commemorated on a postage stamp. Department stores sell a $50 Hachiko necktie with "Wan Wan" printed on it and a $58 wristwatch with the English message on the dial: "The most heartful and Japanese, a dog. He goes to station to meet” In 1994, the Year of the Dog on the Chinese lunar calendar, the Culture Broadcasting Network broadcast a newly discovered recording of Hachinko's bark. (Source: Factsanddetails.com)
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Updated 2:53 EST:
Japan won the game with a score of 1:0!
Congrats, Sumarai Blue!
Sunday, June 13, 2010
Saturday, June 12, 2010
Bafana Bafana
No, it's not a new Blizzard flavor at Dairy Queen.
Bafana Bafana, meaning "the boys", is the nickname given to South Africa's National Soccer Team. South Africa, the host team of the games, settled for a tie in its Soccer World Cup opener against Mexico on Friday.
Our dear friend, MaxMom, who lives in Johannesburg, is providing first hand accounts of all the excitement.
Please join MaxMom as she hosts:
Happy Weekend!
Friday, June 11, 2010
Sassy Says
They call me Mellow Yellow,
Quite rightly.
~Donovan
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Becca's mom and I thank you for the positive thoughts and prayers for Becca.
Becca's mom and I worked in the same classroom together for two years. I found Becca on Petfinder.com and knew that she would be the perfect pup for Ms. L.
We believe Becca was approximately two years old at that time, which was eight years ago.
Becca is under the care of an excellent alternative medicine vet.
Thursday, June 10, 2010
Positive Thoughts and Prayers, Please
Our sweet, little friend, Becca, is not feeling well.
She has been diagnosed with a very nasty disease, stomach cancer.
Please remember Becca and her mom in your thoughts and prayers.
Thank you,
~K
Wednesday, June 9, 2010
Hot Diggity Dog
We received more happy mail and guess what?!?
It was for US!!!
Rama and Sas walked down the driveway and found a huge package in our delivery box!
Who would send us a package?!?
JACK and TG!!!
If you've never visited Jack's blog, please check him out. He's a handsome, young Lab, living the good life with TG (Tall Guy) in Tucson.
Wanna know a secret? Jack's blog is the first one Rama checks every day.
Rama had agreed to play Paw it Forward with Jack and JackDaddy.
OMD, we've never had so many cool pressies. Jack and TG certainly know how to make pups happy. We each got a Wubba (we've dreamed of these), and we got a cool Teaser Ball, which we think is possessed. But our favorite toy (paws down) is the flying duck!
Dad shot that duck all over the front yard.
Dad says, "Very cool!"
We all enjoyed our toys...
Zack
"Squeaking Wubbas! Way to go, Jack!"
Sassy
"Rama, Buddy isn't sharing the duck!"
Buddy
"This wrapping paper makes a nice blanket."
We spent the evening in the front yard playing with our new toys.
Thank you, Jack and TG!
~~~~~~~~
Kit here: At the bottom of the box, under all the fun dog toys, was one of the most amazing gifts anyone has ever given me.
TG used photos from my blog to create an absolutely beautiful book, which includes photos of the pups, Hubby, and even Mother.
I wish I could show you the entire book, but take my word for it, I will cherish it forever.
Thank you, TG!
~~~~~~~~
Instead of asking 3 people to volunteer to Paw it Forward, I have decided to surprise 3 of my favorite bloggers with PIF packages...
Don't you love surprises?
Tuesday, June 8, 2010
I'm Juz Sayin' ~Change
There is nothing wrong with change, if it is in the right direction.
~Winston Churchill
I ordered a new bowl for Buddy, in an attempt to prevent him from inhaling his dog food and developing bloat. He isn't very happy about this change, but look at the difference in the time it takes him to eat his food.
I'm not sure if he's eating slower or just eating longer.
Monday, June 7, 2010
Monday's Memory Mosaic ~The Alaskan Wall
While in Alaska for the Iditarod last March, I spent an afternoon at G.B. Jones' Kennel on the Historic Iditarod Trail.
As I walked the trail with my friends, I was overcome with emotion.
Of course, that was partly due to the fact that we spread the ashes of a long-time Iditarod supporter who had never visited the trail.
(Shhh, don't tell anyone.)
My thoughts were also on the original serum run of 1925, and names like Seppala, Togo, Kaasen, and Balto. For more years than I can remember, I had shared the story of the Iditarod Trail with my students and to be there on a beautiful, cold, winter's day was an amazing experience.
Of course, that was partly due to the fact that we spread the ashes of a long-time Iditarod supporter who had never visited the trail.
(Shhh, don't tell anyone.)
My thoughts were also on the original serum run of 1925, and names like Seppala, Togo, Kaasen, and Balto. For more years than I can remember, I had shared the story of the Iditarod Trail with my students and to be there on a beautiful, cold, winter's day was an amazing experience.
After the walk, I visited G.B.'s great pack of pups, and I had my first mushing experience!
This was a special day, which I will never forget.
I received an email this week informing me that my name has been added to the Alaskan Wall, located next to the trail.
Very special, indeed...
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