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As usual, Ms. G's driving was a combination of speed and adventure, as she knew no bounds of the one and paired it with constant phone use, both verbal and textual, making it quite full of the other.
Backing out of a parking space to take us on to our next very important errand, her phone once again gave a loud "ding!" letting her know of yet another text it was imperative she answer right away.
Shifting into park about halfway in and halfway out of the parking space, she began reading, then clicked, then shifted again to pull forward, clicked her phone again, and said, "Oh, they want me to fill out this form. Well, I'm not doing it now, it'll wait until we get home."
Once again she shifted, actually getting all the way out of the parking spot before her phone rang; a call was easier on the nerves while moving since she put it on speaker and she kept both hands on the wheel and both eyes on the road.
Of all the busy people i know, she's the one with the most irons in the fire at any given time (with the possible exception of Grandpa), and whoever sent her that form, good luck.
Linking up with Denise at Girlie On The Edge Blog, where she hosts Six Sentence Stories, and the cue is Form.
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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!
Around here, these very common chain link fences are called "hurricane fences."
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It's Angel Sammy's Poetry Day! This week's image and my poem:
He took a vow
to have and to hold
from this day into
a future untold.
He'll keep that promise
with all of his might
after he gets some
good sleep tonight!
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Brian of Brian's Home hosts the Thankful Thursday Blog Hop. It's time to share something for which i am thankful.
Today i am thankful we've had a couple of dry days, the lawns are finally drying out so they can be mowed (we're all looking a bit shaggy around the edges because of the rain and lack of mowing time).
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Today is:
Bahti Meskerem -- Eritrea (Revolution Day)
Bonnat Pig Fair -- Bonnat, France
Building and Code Staff Appreciation Day
Chicken Boy's Day -- the mascot of the now defunct restaurant by that name, the 22-foot statue of a boy with a chicken's head was saved from destruction and is now a pop icon in L.A. on Route 66
Constitution Day/National Day -- Slovakia
Day of Knowledge -- Estonia (an official Flag Day); Russia
Disaster Prevention Day/Kanto Earthquake Memorial Day -- Japan
Ecclesiastical Year begins -- Orthodox Christian
Festival of Juno Regina and Jupiter Liber -- Ancient Roman Calendar
Hassaku Oshi-tsuki -- Tsuma, Oki Island, Japan (bull sumo, with bulls pushing each
other out of the ring)
International Day of Awareness of the Dolphins of Taiji/Save Japan's Dolphins Day
Mustaqillik Kuni -- Uzbekistan (Independence Day, 1991)
National Cherry Popover Day
National No Rhyme (Nor Reason) Day -- the day to celebrate the amazing words in the English language that do not rhyme with any other words
Nutt Day -- for Emma M. Nutt, the first female telephone operator
Oyster Season begins
Partridge's Day -- partridge hunting season begins in UK
Presidential Message Day -- Mexico
Random Acts of Kindness Day -- New Zealand
Save the Koala Month -- anyone can help by "adopting" one
Sing A Silly Song in Bed Day -- now, this one has no real rhyme or reason
Sneeze-Wobbling Festival -- Fairy Calendar
St. Fiacre's Day -- Ireland and France (the rest of the church celebrates this Patron of gardeners on August 30)
St. Gideon the Judge's Day (Patron of Saint-Gedeon-de-Beauce, Canada)
St. Giles' Day (Patron of the beggars, blacksmiths, breast feeding, cancer patients, disabled/handicapped people, epileptics, forests, hermits, horses, lepers, mentally ill people, noctiphobics, paupers and the poor, rams, spur makers, woods; Edinburgh, Scotland; Toifa, Italy; against breast cancer, epilepsy, fear of the night, insanity, leprosy, mental illness, noctiphobia, sterility)
St. Simeon Stylites' Day -- Eastern Orthodox Christian
Teacher's Day -- Singapore
Wattle Day -- Australia
Anniversary Today:
Benjamin Franklin marries Deborah Read, 1730
Birthdays Today:
Timothy Duane "Tim" Hardaway, 1966
Gloria Estefan, 1957
Dr. Phil McGraw, 1950
Barry Gibb, 1946L
ily Tomlin, 1939
Alan Dershowitz, 1938
Don Stroud, 1937
Seiji Ozawa, 1935
Conway Twitty, 1933
"Boxcar" Willie, 1931
Rocky Marciano, 1923
Yvonne DeCarlo, 1922
Vittorio Gassman, 1922
Walter Philip Reuther, 1907
Edgar Rice Burroughs, 1875
Englebert Humperdinck. 1854 (composer, esp of opera Hansel and Gretel)
Johann Pachelbel, 1653
Debuting/Premiering Today:
"Art Linkletter's House Party"(TV), 1952
"Androcles and the Lion"(Play), 1913
Today in History:
Rabbi Moses Ben Nachman establishes a Jewish community in Jerusalem, 1267
Adi Granth, now known as Guru Granth Sahib, the holy scripture of Sikhs, was first installed at Harmandir Sahib, 1601
The first yacht race is held, between England's King Charles I and his brother James, 1661
Mission San Luis Obispo de Tolosa forms in California, 1772
Juno, one of the largest main belt asteroids, is discovered by German astronomer Karl Ludwig Harding, 1804
Narcissa Whitman, one of the first white women to settle west of the Rocky Mountains, arrives at Walla Walla, Washington, 1836
The first Pullman sleeping car is put into service, 1859
The Solar Superstorm/Carrington Event: a huge solar sunspot and solar flare storm that disrupted telegraphy and allowed the Aurora Borealis to be seen as far south as the Caribbean occurs, 1859
Joseph Lister performs the first antiseptic surgery, 1865
Robert T. Freeman becomes the first African American to graduate from the Harvard Dental School, 1867
The first underground rapid transit system in North America, the Boston Subway, opens, 1897
One of the first science fiction films ever, A Trip To The Moon, opens in France, 1902
Alberta and Saskatchewan become the 8th and 9th Canadian provinces, 1905
Martha, the last passenger pigeon, dies at the Cincinnati Zoo, 1914
The United States, Australia and New Zealand sign a mutual defense pact, called the ANZUS Treaty, 1951
In Reykjavík, Iceland, American Bobby Fischer beats Russian Boris Spassky and becomes the world chess champion, 1972
Canada adopts the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms as part of its Constitution, 1982
A joint French-American expedition locates the wreckage of the RMS Titanic, 1985
Luxembourg becomes the first nation to complete the transition to all digital tv broadcasting, 2006
After four Israeli settlers are shot at the Israeli settlement Beit Hagai, the Palestinian Authority arrested 250 members of Hamas, 2010
To avoid further fighting, Libya's Transitional Council extends the deadline to surrender for tribal leaders in Sirte, 2011
U.S. National Park officials notify 3,100 recent visitors of an outbreak of Hantavirus sourced to tent cabins in Yosemite National Park, 2012
In southwestern China, at least four people are killed by a 5.9-magnitude earthquake, 2013
Stock markets around the world fall after China reports a low value for its purchasing managers' index, suggesting that the nation's economy is slowing, 2015
Hurricane Dorian makes landfall on Elbow Cay in the Abaco Islands, northern Bahamas, as a category five storm with winds of 180mph (285km/h), 2019
Mongolians protest against moves to teach school subjects in Mandarin instead of Mongolian in their schools, 2020
South America's second-longest river, the Paraná, hits its lowest levels in 77 years due to drought, 2021
Record rain is recorded in Central Park, New York (7.13 inches) and Newark, New Jersey (8.41 inches) from remnants of Hurricane Ida, 2021
The image and poem are good ones. Chain link fences used to be popular years ago in housing estates built as rentals for government subsidised housing.
ReplyDeleteSmilling at the image and the poem. And glad I don't travel with Ms. G.
ReplyDeleteI like your poem, Mimi. Thanx.
ReplyDeleteGod bless you.
What a beautiful poem after I get some rest. LOL Thanks Mimi.
ReplyDeleteCruisin Paul
Hilarious poem and I think Mrs G needs a chauffeur!!
ReplyDeleteGreat Six.
ReplyDeleteI love that poem. What a great shot to work with.
I'm glad you're drying out some. We'll take all the water you don't want.
Have a blessed Thankful Thursday, my friend. Big hug. ♥
Amusing story and a really funny poem! We are officially in a drought here, I've forgotten what green lawns used to look like now that ours are all brown!
ReplyDeleteFun story and lol poem ~ yep ~ we could use the water you had ~ Xo
ReplyDeleteWishing you good health, laughter and love in your days,
A ShutterBug Explores,
aka (A Creative Harbor)
I would be quite annoyed with Ms G. I think it is rude to keep answering texts and calls when with someone. XO
ReplyDeleteThat drive sounds scary, I think I'd rather walk! Good poem and a darn good thankful too. Thanks for joining our Thankful Thursday Blog Hop!
ReplyDeleteGood one, Mimi, and that wedding photo is too funny. Remind never to get in a car with Ms. G please 😁
ReplyDeleteChain link fences are called hurricane fences around here, too. I wonder why. Maybe because they don't blow down during the strong winds of a hurricane?
ReplyDeleteThe story was fun. It would be good luck getting me to fill out a form that came to me via text. I probably wouldn't notice it.
ReplyDeleteI wonder why they're called hurricane fences too. They're pretty common around here but I'm in a landlocked state. We don't get hurricanes. We just call them chain-link fences.
I want the rest of that story! It grabbed me immediately. We have snow fences so that it doesn't drift as badly as it wants to. In face, I have one outside the living room window and I hate it. It's a pest in the summer. I'm going to have somebody take it down.
ReplyDeleteWhite knuckle drive? lol
ReplyDeleteThat photo will no doubt be front and center in the album. And sure to bring a smile for years.
Let the mowing begin!
What a perfect poem for Poetry Challenge! I love it.....I'm thinking the chances of this groom to have a quiet night are slim to none though!
ReplyDeleteHugs, Pam and Teddy