Thursday, February 5, 2026

Ms. G on a Tear (Six Sentence Story), Good Fences, Sammy's Poetry Day, and Brian's Thankful Thursday

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"We have our work cut out for us," Ms. G started in the moment i walked through the door, "the cats managed to get up under the boat cover, and if they've been scratching the seats in there I'm going to really be angry, we have to re-secure the cover and stop up any holes so they can't get in there, then Costco has started carrying a different brand of bird seed and it's crap and we have to go to Tractor Supply, and we need to take some snacks to Ms. Fiona, plus the people are coming today to fix the water heater so everything has to come out of the laundry closet that could be in their way."


I put my coat back on and we went outside, climbing into and out of the boat multiple times and then using bungee cords to "batten down the hatches" so to speak; we were out there until my feet and fingers were numb from the cold while Ms. G fussed and fumed and threatened to ship the cats off to another continent she was so very upset (although they had not, in fact, scratched her seats).


Next i did a few things indoors while Ms. G got Ms. Fiona's goodies ready, and we made the run to buy the good kind of birdseed and at Ms. Fiona's, she stayed in the car to rest her back and i went in for a visit, which was a very nice one.


Running back to the house, we unloaded 80 pounds of birdseed, aired up the tires on the green cart so we could haul said bird seed, fed the birds, and came in to unload the laundry closet, moving out almost everything except the washer, dryer, and leaky water heater.


Then it was time to do the usual cleaning, cat room, load drinks in the fridge, vacuum, but mostly where she'd spilled some peanuts and then the places where there were straw and leaves in the house - oh, did i mention checking to make sure the straw was dry in the "cat hotels" where she sets up warm areas for the feral cats and then adding more where the straw back packed down too much?


All this "fun" was crammed into about five hours and as i was leaving, the plumber was on the way to take care of the leaky water heater which is turning her back yard into even more of a swamp than normal.



Linking up with Denise at Girlie On The Edge Blog, where she hosts Six Sentence Stories, and the cue is Brand.      





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While Good Fences Around the World seems to have gone the way of the dodo bird, i still enjoy looking for and posting interesting fences, so i will!





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It's Angel Sammy's Poetry Day This week's image and my poem:    







When the family reunion

gets to be this big,

the table to hold the food

is like a tractor/trailer rig.


And yes, though it's hard to believe

we will eat all of this, every bite,

with this many cousins and kinfolk,

it will all be gone by tonight!



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Angel Brian's Family of Brian's Home - Forever hosts the Thankful Thursday Blog Hop.   It's time to share something for which i am thankful.  


Today i am thankful i got Brother-in-Law's taxes done and filed on TurboTax.






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Today is:


Constitution Day -- Mexico (trad.)


Feast Day of Jacob, Patriarch -- Catholic Christian


Kashmir Day -- Pakistan


Liberation from the Alberoni Occupation -- San Marino (also St. Agatha's Day)


Longest War in History Ends -- The Third Punic War, between Rome and Carthage, was officially ended on this date with a peace treaty signed in 1985, which is 2,131 years after the war began


Move Hollywood & Broadway to Lebanon, PA Day -- sponsored by Wellcat Holidays, and Why would they want it?


National Chocolate Fondue Day


National Weatherperson's Day -- US (mostly, though some other countries now observe it as well; in honor of the first US meteorologist, John Jeffries)


Nones of February -- Ancient Roman Calendar; also

    Fornacalia -- celebration in honor of bread and the ovens used to dry grain; held any day between now and the 17th, one of Rome's few movable feasts)


Runeberg's Birthday -- Finland (National Poet)


Scout Jumuah -- BSA (Boy Scouts are encouraged to wear their uniforms to mosque today or tomorrow and represent scouting to their congregations)


St. Agatha's Day (Patron of bell-founders, fire prevention, jewelers, martyrs, nurses, rape victims, single laywomen, torture victims, wet-nurses; Malta; San Marino; as well as over 50 cities around the world; against breast cancer, breast disease, earthquakes, eruptions of Mt. Etna, fire, natural disasters, sterility, volcanic eruptions)


Unity Day -- Burundi


World Nutella Day



Birthdays Today:


Jeremy Sumpter, 1989

Sara Evans, 1971

Bobby Brown, 1969

Michael Sheen, 1969

Laura Linney, 1964

Jennifer Jason Leigh, 1962

Christopher Guest, 1948

Barbara Hershey, 1948

David Alan Ladd, 1947

Charlotte Rampling, 1946

Roger Staubach, 1942

Jane Bryant Quinn, 1941

David Selby, 1941

H.R. Giger, 1940

Alex Harvey, 1935

Henry "Hank" Aaron, 1934

Andrew Greeley, 1928

Red Buttons, 1919

William Burroughs, 1914

John Carradine, 1906

Adlai E. Stevenson, Jr., 1900

Andre' Citroen, 1878

Belle Starr(Myra Maybelle Shirley), 1848

Dwight Lyman Moody, 1837

Ole Bull, 1810

Robert Peel, 1788

John Witherspoon, 1723

Sanjo, Emperor of Japan, 976



Debuting/Premiering Today:


"Where On Earth Is Carmen San Diego"(TV), 1994

"Hagar The Horrible"(Comic strip), 1973

"Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour"(TV), 1967

"Peter Pan"(Disney cartoon film), 1953

"Otello"(Verdi Opera), 1887



Today in History:


Earthquake in Pompeii, Italy, 62

King Alfonso V orders Sicily's Jews to attend conversion sermons, 1428

A group of early Japanese Christians are killed by the new government of Japan for being seen as a threat to Japanese society, 1597

The first US livestock branding law is passed, in Connecticut, 1644

Georgia becomes the first state to abolish both entail and primogeniture, 1777

Sweden recognizes US independence, 1783

Hannah Lord Montague of New York creates the first detachable shirt collar, 1825

The "Oregon Spectator" is the first newspaper published on the American West Coast, 1846

An adding machine employing depressible keys is patented in New Paltz, NY, 1850

Two innovations which helped pave the way for motion pictures are patented, a hand turned stereoscope by Samuel Goodale of Cincinnati, and the Kinematoscope by Coleman Sellers of Philadelphia, 1861

Four inches of snow falls in San Francisco, 1887

The loop-the-loop centrifugal railroad (a/k/a the roller coaster) is patented by Ed Prescot, 1901

Greek military aviators, Michael Moutoussis and Aristeidis Moraitinis performed the first naval air mission in history, with a Farman MF.7 hydroplane, 1913

Charlie Chaplin, Mary Pickford, Douglas Fairbanks, and D.W. Griffith launch United Artists, 1919

Reader's Digest magazine is first published, 1922

The Royal Greenwich Observatory begins broadcasting the hourly time signals known as the Greenwich Time Signal, 1924

A hydrogen bomb known as the Tybee Bomb is lost by the US Air Force off the coast of Savannah, Georgia, never to be recovered, 1958

The so-called Big Three banks in Switzerland announce the creation of a $71 million fund to aid Holocaust survivors and their families, 1997

Danish special forces storm a ship captured by Somali pirates, freeing 25 crewmembers on board, 2010

Archaeologist and runologist K. Jonas Nordby publishes his suggestions for how to decrypt the 13th C Viking jötunvillur runic code, 2014

Computer hackers try to steal 1 billion from Federal Reserve Bank of New York, but a typo in their codes alerts authorities before they can finish, 2016

Six days before his 50th birthday, 11-time world surfing champion Kelly Slater wins his 8th Pipeline title beating 22-year-old Hawaiian Seth Moniz in the final, 2022

US President Donald Trump signs an executive order banning transgender women from competing in female sports, 2025

Wednesday, February 4, 2026

How to Keep the Pipes Warm When Your Faucet Is Broken (Wordless Wednesday) and Words for Wednesday

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Linking up with Wordless Wednesday, Keith, Catsynth, and Sandee at Comedy Plus.     





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Words for Wednesday was begun by Delores and has become a moveable feast of word or picture or music prompts to encourage us to write stories, poems, or whatever strikes our fancy.    


This month the words/prompts are supplied by lissa on her blog.


This week's prompts are: 


1. black eye

2. car wash

3. mud bath

4. jelly bean

5. duct tape


Charlotte's colour of the month is Electric Rose.




Our #2 Son, he of the BLACK EYE (slightly) after a run-in with a tool, was ready to fix our car.


It needed VVT solenoids, a valve cover gasket, new spark plugs and a fuel injector cleaning.


It's not something you can fix with DUCT TAPE, which is my favorite tool, so i wasn't much help, but Daughter-in-Law did help him a lot and i watched our little Annie in her Electric Rose shirt and brown pants with the horses on them.  She and i took a walk up the street, then back, then sat and played with the rocks in the gravel part of the driveway.  Some of the rocks almost look like JELLY BEANS, and you have to watch closely or she'll put them in her mouth.


Under the hood of the car, it looked like it had taken a MUD BATH and needed to go through the CAR WASH by itself.  A leaky gasket means oil getting out to where it shouldn't be, and it was everywhere.


Of course, you can't do that, wash it, that is.  It had to be cleaned with a wire brush after he took the cover off and got the spark plugs and solenoids out.  The remaining chunks of the bad gasket were especially hard to remove.


He did it, though.  Slow-Moe has new spark plugs, solenoids, and the gasket is holding firm.  He put a special treatment in the gas tank to clean the fuel injectors and there's no more sign of an oil leak.


As for the brakes, we have a couple of thousand more miles before they will have to be changed, so for right now, it's nice to have the car running again.




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Today is:


Biezputras Diena (Porrige Day) -- Ancient Latvian Calendar (date unconfirmed, some sites suggest it's always on a Sunday before Feb. 23 instead)


Create-A-Vacuum Day -- an internet generated celebration of the nothingness of vacuums


General Thaddeus Kosciuszko Day -- Poland (birth anniversary)


Homemade Soup Day


Independence Day -- Sri Lanka


King Frost Day -- London (Celebrated yearly until WWI, in remembrance of the frozen River Thames on this day in 1814.)


Liberation Day -- Angola


National Girls and Women in Sports Day -- US      


National Stuffed Mushroom Day


Quacker Day -- for those who love Quacker Factory clothes


Spoiled Cats' Day -- internet generated, and isn't this every day?


St. Andrew Corsini's Day (Patron of Carmelites; against civil disorder and riots)


St. John de Brito's Day (Patron of Portugal; Sivagangai, India)


Thank A Mailperson/Postal Worker Day -- because someone decided it would be a good day to do that, and put it on the internet


USO Day -- US (founded this date in 1941)


World Cancer Day -- International   



Anniversaries Today:


United Service Organizations (USO) founded, 1941

The University of Wisconsin is established, with one classroom and 20 students, 1849



Birthdays Today:


Natalie Imbruglia, 1975

Oscar De La Hoya, 1973

Gabrielle Anwar, 1971

Michael Goorjian, 1971

Rod Corddry, 1971

Clint Black, 1962

Lawrence Taylor, 1959

Lisa Eichhorn, 1952

Alice Cooper, 1948

Dan Quayle, 1947

George A. Romero, 1940

John Schuck, 1940

David Brenner, 1936

Gary Conway, 1936

Betty Friedan, 1921

Ida Lupino, 1918

Rosa Parks, 1913

Clyde W. Tombaugh, 1906

Dietrich Bonhoeffer, 1906

Charles Lindbergh, 1902

Tadeusz Kosciuszko, 1746



Debuting/Premiering Today:


Fleetwood Mac's "Rumours"(Album), 1977



Today in History:


The Roman Emperor Septimius Severus dies, leaving the Roman Empire in the hands of his two quarrelsome sons, Caracalla and Geta, 211

The coronation of Zhao Kuangyin as Emperor Taizu of Song, initiating the Song Dynasty period of China that would last more than three centuries, 960

Maximilian I assumes the title Holy Roman Emperor without being crowned, 1508

Tycho Brahe and Johannes Kepler meet for the first time near Prague 1600

In Edo (now Tokyo), The 47 Ronin commit seppuku (ritual suicide) after avenging the death of their master, 1703

The worst earthquake in 8 years in Calabria, Italy, leaves 50,000 dead, 1783

The first Anglican bishops of New York and Pennsylvania are consecrated in London, 1787

George Washington is unanimously elected as the first President of the United States by the U.S. Electoral College, 1789

The French National Convention proclaims the abolishment of slavery, 1794

An earthquake in Quito, Ecuador, kills 41,000, 1797

J.W. Goodrich introduces his rubber galoshes to the public, 1824

The Mormons of Nauvoo, Missouri, leave to go west, eventually settling in Utah, 1846

The Codex Sinaiticus is found at the Greek Monastery of Mount Sinai, 1859

The first rolling lift bridge opens, in Chicago, 1895

The first Winter Olympics games close at Chamonix, France, 1924

The first tieless, soundless, shockless streetcar tracks open, in New Orleans, 1930

Radium E is the first radioactive substance to be produced synthetically, 1936

The United Service Organization (USO) is created to entertain American troops, 1941

Lunar Orbiter 3 lifts off from Cape Canaveral's Launch Complex 13 on its mission to identify possible landing sites for the Surveyor and Apollo spacecraft, 1967

After at first contesting the results, Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic recognizes opposition victories in the November 1996 elections, 1997

Facebook, a mainstream online social network is founded by Mark Zuckerberg, 2004

The Federal Court of Australia's ruling in Roadshow Films v iiNet sets a precedent that Internet service providers (ISPs) are not responsible for what their users do with the services the ISPs provide them, 2010

The remains found the previous year in a dig at Leicester are confirmed to be those of King Richard III of England, 2013

Morocco's Mohammed VI switches on the world's largest solar plant near Ouarzazate, 2016

Denmark approves plans for world's first energy island in the North Sea to provide power to 3 million Europeans, 2021

President Nayib Bukele of El Salvador, whose crackdown on violent crime has taken El Salvador from being one of the most dangerous countries in Central America to one of the safest, wins re-election in a landslide, 2024

Zara Lachlan becomes the first woman and youngest person to slow row from Europe to South America, covering 3,600 nautical miles in 97 days, 2025