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Awww Monday is hosted by Sandee at Comedy Plus.
Join us every Monday for Awww...Mondays. Post a picture that makes you say Awww... and that's it.
Make sure you get the code from Sandee's site, linked above, and leave a link to your post so we can visit you. What better way to start the week than with a smile!
I've been delighted with spying some very small anole lizards lately. The first one was on one of Grandma's plants.
My shoe for comparison to the little speck on the edge of the cement that is the anole. |
A little closer. |
You can see he already lost his tail and is regrowing it. |
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Sparks is the brainchild of Annie of McGuffy's Reader, who wanted us to post something positive and uplifting at the start of the week. While she no longer blogs, i like to post an Inspiring Quote of the Week in her honor.
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Poetry Monday was started by Diane at On The Alberta/Montana Border. Charlotte/Mother Owl participates, and now Karen at Baking in a Tornado is jumping in at least once a month, too. Anyone else is welcome to join in the fun, just let Diane know!
This week the theme is Roses.
I wanted to grow a rose bush
in spite of my black thumb.
I thought if i could grow something,
wouldn't feel like such a bum.
I chose a mini rose bush
that grows in its own pot.
I thought that would make it easy,
it assuredly did not.
First i overwatered it,
then gave it too much sun,
somehow it got a rust and a bug,
this was no longer fun.
I gave it to a gardener friend,
she knew just what to do,
it really loved her treatment
and it grew and grew and grew.
So once more i gave up gardening,
and let me tell ya, cousin,
the easiest way to have roses is
every week, go buy a dozen!
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Today is:
Anniversary Day -- Tristan da Cunha
Assumption Eve -- France; Holy See
Day of Peace between Horus and Set -- Ancient Egyptian Calendar (date approximate)
Faradda di li candareri (Descent of the Candlesticks) -- Sassari, Sardinia (beginning of the celebration of the Assumption)
Festival for Fortuna Equestris -- Ancient Roman Calendar
Heroes Day -- Zimbabwe
Independence Day -- Pakistan(1947)
International Nagging Day -- ignore this one if you have any sense, the founder was smart enough to leave no trace
La Torta dei Fieschi -- Lavagna, Italy (this city on the Italian Riviera comes to life with dance and music every year to commemorate the wedding, on this day in 1230, of Bianca de Bianchi and Count Opizzo Fiechi, as he had invited everyone in town to share the 30ft. high cake he had made for the occasion)
Liberty Tree Day -- Massachusetts, US
Mantoro Lantern Lighting -- Kasuga Taisha, Japan (through tomorrow; 3,000 lanterns light the shrine, and the main hall is open for visitors, with Bugaku and Kagura performed in the apple garden)
National Creamsicle Day
National Financial Awareness Day -- can't find the history on who started this for which country, but it's wise to become financially literate no matter where you live
National Navajo Code Talkers Day -- Navajo Nation; US
Oued Ed-Dahab Day -- Morocco; Western Sahara (celebrating the recovery of this area from Spanish occupation in 1979)
Pramuka Day -- Indonesia (Scouting Day)
St. Maximillian Kolbe's Day (Patron of families, imprisoned people, journalists, political prisoners, prisoners, recovering drug addicts, the pro-life movement; against drug addictions)
St. Werenfrid's Day (Patron of vegetable gardeners; Arnheim, Netherlands; Elst, Netherlands; Westervoort, Netherlands; against gout and stiff joints)
Wiffle Ball Day -- the wiffle ball was introduced this day in 1953
Anniversaries Today:
Jackie Mason marries Jyll Rosenfeld, 1991
V-J Day, 1945
Birthdays Today:
Tim Tebow, 1987
Terin Humphrey, 1986
Mila Kunis, 1983
Spencer Pratt, 1983
Jay Manuel, 1972
Catherine Bell, 1968
Halle Berry, 1966
Earvin "Magic" Johnson, 1959
Marcia Gay Harden, 1959
Gary Larson, 1950
Danielle, Steel, 1947
Antonio Fargas, 1946
Susan Saint James, 1946
Steve Martin, 1945
Lynne Cheney, 1941
David Crosby, 1941
Arthur Betz Laffer, 1940
Alice Ghostley, 1926
Buddy Greco, 1926
Russell Baker, 1925
John Ringling North, 1903
Ernest Everett Just, 1883
Ernest Lawrence Thayer, 1863
Doc Holiday, 1851
H.C. Oersted, 1777
Emperor Hanazono of Japan, 1297
Debuting/Premiering Today:
"The Front Page"(Play), 1928
Today in History
The young Emperor Antoku and three sacred treasures are taken by Taira no Munemori and the Taira clan, fleeing to western Japan to escape pursuit by the Minamoto clan, 1183
Kublai Khan's invading fleet disappears in a a typhoon near Japan, 1281
Three years after Gutenberg, the oldest known exactly dated printed book is published, 1457
Queen Elizabeth I refuses sovereignty of the Netherlands, 1585
Great Britain annexes Tristan da Cunha (remotest occupied island), 1816
Second Seminole War ends, with the Seminoles forced from Florida to Oklahoma, 1842
Oregon Territory created, 1848
Magazine "Field and Stream" begins publication, 1873
Construction of Cologne Cathedral in Cologne, Germany, is completed, 1880
Japan issues its first patent, for rust-proof paint, 1885
A recording of English composer Arthur Sullivan's The Lost Chord, one of the first recordings of music ever made, is played during a press conference introducing Thomas Edison's phonograph in London, 1888
France begins requiring motor vehicle registration, 1893
The first claimed powered flight, by Gustave Whitehead in his Number 21, 1901
Mt. Rushmore project first proposed, 1925
United States Social Security Act passes, creating a government pension system for the retired, 1935
British troops are deployed in Northern Ireland, 1969
Longest game in softball history begins, as The Gager's Diner team takes on the Bend'n Elbow Tavern; the game was played to raise money for a new softball field in Monticello, NY, went to 365 innings over two days, and the Gagers won 491-467, 1976
Lech Walesa leads strikes at the Gdansk, Poland shipyards, 1980
Widescale power blackout in the northeast United States and Canada, 2003
More than 2,000 people found in Poland's largest mass grave during World War II are reburied in a military cemetery, 2009
As a sponsored event of the IOC, the 2010 Summer Youth Olympic Games, first ever Youth Olympics for athletes ages 14-18, officially starts in Singapore, 2010
North and South Korea agree to reopen the jointly-operated Kaesong Industrial Region, 2013
Jamaican sprint star Usain Bolt becomes the first man to win the coveted 100m Olympic gold medal three times, with a win at the Rio Olympics, 2016
According to a survey published by the US Department of the Interior and the US Geological Survey, 90% of rain samples taken in Colorado have plastic in them, 2019
Stephanie Frappart of France becomes the first woman to referee a major men's football/soccer match in a European men's tournament, 2019
Spain records its highest ever temperature of 47.2C (117F) in Montoro, Córdoba, 2021
Love your anole - which looks much like the Australian skink.
ReplyDeleteRoses can be pernickity about where and how they grow. Loved your poem though.
Amazing how lizards can stick to a wall.
ReplyDeleteGod bless.
What a great quote about roses and hearts, just love that. Mom is terrified of lizards. She says they are creepy and move way too fast. If she sees one she screams. Thankfully, we don't have any here.
ReplyDeleteWe have skinks that run around here. Sometimes, I get startled when I go outside and see why scurrying nearby. It scares them, too. lol Your poem is cute and I can totally relate to a "black thumb". It's best to just buy flowers instead of trying to grow them. :)
ReplyDeleteI love lizards, we have in my opinion way too few of them. It sure is a small one, I hope it survives to grow as big as the last one.
ReplyDeleteRoses for me only grew where I do not want them - with the exception of one really pretty yellow rose some years ago. I really like your poem.
We have them here too and they are ever so cute. Every now and then we get one inside and hubby gently takes them back outside.
ReplyDeleteLove the Spark. So true. The poem rocks. It's hard to kill roses though.
Thank you for joining the Awww Mondays Blog Hop.
Have a fabulous Awww Monday and week. Love and hugs, my friend. ♥
I love seeing those lizzies. We have some kinds here in Ohio but I see them rarely.
ReplyDeleteCute littly lizzie and wonderful spark ~ Xo
ReplyDeleteWishing you good health, laughter and love in your days,
A ShutterBug Explores,
aka (A Creative Harbor)
The little one is cute, but the big one is a bit scary. Nice poem and spark.
ReplyDeleteLove your little visitor. They are such cute little creatures. I can relate to your rose poem. I'm trying to turn the garden at my new home into "my" garden - without a lot of success.
ReplyDeleteSorry. I thought I was getting better at remembering to add my details.
DeleteWOW, cool lizards, we don't have any around here. That was a really good poem too. That Spark makes so much sense!
ReplyDeleteI wonder if the anole is the same as our skink which we used to call "drop-tails". Nice poem. I can't grow roses either.
ReplyDeleteWhat a cute little lizard! I love them. They eat bugs!
ReplyDeleteYeah, that's how I get roses, too. Great job on the poem!
Love the meme!