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Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Thursday Theme Song: deep in the...

Cactus flower. All photos by Richard Schear.
Posted for
Hootin' Anni's
Thursday
Theme Song

Here's another one for Anni (with a few little twists from Canada's wild west, plus a vocal from our favorite TV show). I intended to use Gene Autry, I really did, Anni, but sometimes, honestly, a girl's gotta do what a girl's gotta do.
*
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LapXZBkWQSg&feature=related























The moon at night
is big and bright
Deep in the heart of Cactus.
*

The prairie sky
is wide and high
Deep in the heart of Cactus.
*
The coyotes wail
along the trail
Deep in the heart of Cactus.
*
Reminds me of
the one I love
Deep in the heart of Cactus.
*
The rabbits rush
around the brush
Deep in the heart of Cactus.

For Real Toads: magical realism

Kerry has suggested, in that way only Kerry can do, members and visitors at Imaginary Garden with Real Toads might want to write about Magical Realism today. 
Magical Realism, says Kerry, makes the ordinary seem magical and the supernatural seem commonplace.
She did provide photos, and I chose one as a prompt for my little ditty.

Black cats took over
Photo supplied. Unknown origin.
the town one day
when everyone else
was out to play.
They walked around
and sat in the street
and said to each other
“Isn’t this neat?
 We have all the cars
 and the houses, too,
 but we cannot drive
 ourselves to the zoo,
 or the ice cream store
 where we’re unable
 to open the door!”
“That’s right,” said one,
“and the special toys
 I get from my mom
 and dad and the boys—
 how do I manage
 to get in the house?”
“Never mind that, but
 what if a mouse
 gets in the cupboard?
 I’ll feel like a louse
 if ever a mouse
 gets the run of my house.”
They sat in the street
and pondered right there
’til the people came back
from they-didn’t-know-where
and picked up their cats
to take them all home,
and thus put an end
to this Magic Cat Poem.

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

ABC Wednesday: D is for Dominican Republic

Dick tans, but I burn!
© Richard Schear photo

In 2004, I accompanied my husband on his company trip to the Dominican Republic, a Caribbean nation which shares an island with Haiti. I have to admit I did go swimming with the dolphins, and it was a thrill. At the time, I had no idea what some nations (not necessarily the DR) did with dolphins who couldn't be trained. I would still say my contact with these amazing animals was one of the highlights of my life, but I no longer support the idea of captive dolphins.



© Kay Davies photos
Although Dick accompanied me to Ocean World, he did not swim with the dolphins. However, the company provided plenty of opportunities for him to amuse himself. This race (right) somehow involved balloons and running. The limbo (below) involved a bit too much bending backward!











An aging jock who taught grades 5 and 6 for many years, and who still referees high school football and basketball, Dick seldom turns down an opportunity for fun and games.

He visited the Dominican Republic on a company trip again with his daughter Monica, and is returning there this month, accompanied by his daughter Randi. If there are races again, my money is on the Alberta team of Dick and Randi.

Posted for the letter D
at Mrs. Nesbitt's
alphabetical meme
ABC Wednesday


© Photos by Richard Schear and Kay Davies, Dominican Republic, 2004

Monday, February 6, 2012

Our World Tuesday: thoughts of summer


We only think kindly of weeds when they're not around, or when we remember the moths and butterflies of summer. Then we smile at photos of dandelions or of the wild morning-glory, which is known on the prairie as bindweed because it grows up around other plants and chokes them out.
The heat of a prairie summer is too much for me, but summer sounds pretty good when it's cold outside. We've had some above-freezing temperatures lately but right now it is -4 Celsius  (25 degrees Fahrenheit) and the forecast says -17C (1.4 degrees F) for tonight: not very cold by prairie standards but more than chilly for a west coast transplant such as I am.

© Photos by Richard Schear, August, 2011

Posted for
Our World Tuesday

Limerick Off: my first try

It is Monday, time for this week's Limerick Off at Mad Kane's Humor Blog, where Madeline writes a limerick and asks writer-bloggers to write one of their own using the same first line. Minor changes to the first line are allowed, as long as the rhyme remains the same.
This is my first submission to this challenge, and I enjoyed it so much my limerick turned into a three-stanza poem. The first line, however, is the same, as per the rule, and the following stanzas follow the same subject, with an almost-repetition of the first line at the beginning of the third stanza.


THE LAMER HALL-OF-FAMER

A fellow was way off his game
And nothing was ever the same
He could not find the ball
It was nowhere at all
So that was the end of his fame.

http://www.people-clipart.com/
His number would not be retired
As a coach he’d never be hired
No, you can’t lead a game
Without talents the same
As those you have always admired.
Oh yes, he was way off his game
To fame he could not lay a claim
He’d not be in the hall
With the winners and all
Enshrined by the shirt with his name.


© Kay Davies, 2012

For Real Toads: Open Link, February 6



"How dreary – to be – Somebody! 
How public – like a Frog – 
To tell one's name – the livelong June – 
To an admiring Bog!” 
― Emily Dickinson



It is Open Link Monday again at Imaginary Garden with Real Toads, and Kerry posted this little poem by Emily Dickinson, whose work I have always admired. I agree with Ms Dickinson in principle and in person, but I have chosen to disagree in verse, just to be perverse.


Disagreeing with Dickinson?

How lovely to be Somebody
http://www.people-clipart.com/
With admirers galore
Who know one’s name one’s livelong life,
And don’t think one a bore.

Pretty flowers brought backstage
From admirers faithful
Who cheer one’s name one’s livelong life
And don’t think fame disgraceful.

Interviews on TV shows
By admirers hosted
Who drop one’s name one’s livelong life
And make sure one is toasted.

—Kay Davies, © 2012

Sunday, February 5, 2012

Weekend Writers' Retreat: book-in-progress

Excerpt from my work-in-progress
AN UNFITTIE’S GUIDE TO ADVENTUROUS TRAVEL
*
CHAPTER 8—ONE STEP AT A TIME
*
   I have to check the weather before agreeing to a vacation.
   I don’t like to go to hot places when they’re hot. Even at home, I don’t go out much in the heat of a prairie summer, because I melt. My face gets bright red. Everything, including my hair, perspires. I’m completely miserable, so I like to stay in the house with closed curtains and air conditioning because I’m too old to be running around under the sprinkler in the back yard.
Miami, Florida
   My husband’s employers used to hold a week of business meetings in a sunny climate in February, with spouses invited along for the ride. That was fine with me, but when they decided instead to go to Miami at the end of May, I suggested Dick take one of his daughters with him and leave me home. Andrea had a wonderful time and I didn’t have to suffer from heat exhaustion. Same thing a year later: another hot-weather destination, another daughter. Whew, saved again, thanks to Monica this time, and she loved the laid-back ambience of the Dominican Republic in June.
  A VERY VALUABLE HINT
   When we went to the Galapagos Islands, we had thought we were being quite travel-savvy, allowing a few days in Quito so I could rest before our flight to Guayaquil and from there to the islands, but we were wrong. By the time I got through the first day of the journey—the first long, long, very long day—I was beyond exhausted. We had flown via Houston and found ourselves waiting in the airport for hours before our flight to Quito. Excruciating. We should have stayed overnight in Houston, we realized later.
  BREAK IT UP
   When we went to Costa Rica the following December, with a change of aircraft in Florida, we arranged to spend two days in Miami between planes. I was able to rest, yet we still had time for a Miami Heat basketball game on the way down, plus a tour of the Florida Keys on our trip home.
   Yes, if at all possible, break up your travel into four- or five-hour segments. It really helps. The next time we go to Europe, for instance, I want to fly to the east coast of Canada or the US, stop there for a couple of days, then fly to our destination.
   Unfortunately, however, if you book a guided tour complete with airfare, you don’t get the chance to plan anything yourself. When we went to China, we knew we’d have to get ourselves from Medicine Hat to Seattle, which was then the nearest gateway city, but the "airfare-included" part of our tour involved a short flight to Vancouver the next morning, to wait and wait and wait for (get this) Air Canada’s 9-hour flight to Beijing.
   No amount of pleading “We’re Canadians. We have relatives in Vancouver. Can't we pick up the flight there?” could budge the arrangements, which had, apparently, been carved in stone (probably jade) and therefore could be unset only by the exchange of a considerably large sum of money.
   As it happened, I was already in the Vancouver suburbs visiting my sick father, so I took the Amtrak bus to Seattle to join Dick, who had flown there from Calgary. We spent the night in a hotel and, as part of our tour package, flew to Vancouver early the next morning. There we waited, and waited, and waited for our flight to Beijing, just to keep us on the tour company’s schedule.
   If we return to the Orient, I want to stop in Hawaii for a week first.
   If Dick and I ever go to Australia, though, I want to break the trip into several segments.
© Kay Davies photo, Hawaii, 2010
   I flew Vancouver-Sydney-Brisbane and return, when I was a whole lot younger, and swore I’d never do it again. Now I would want to fly from Calgary to San Francisco, overnight there; from San Francisco to Honolulu, overnight again; from Honolulu to Tonga or maybe the Cook Islands for another night or two, and finally to Sydney, arriving bright-eyed and bushy-tailed, not looking as if I’d been pulled through a prickle-bush backward.
I love to take photos of freighters.
This one is in St. Malo, France.
   To tell the truth, I’d rather get to Oz by sea. One cruise company showed a trip from Vancouver to Honolulu, followed immediately by another from Honolulu to Sydney on the same ship. It would take a month, and would cost a fortune, but I’d sure be well-rested.
   A less expensive alternative would be traveling by freighter, but freight lines have restrictions against unfitties, discriminatory and unfair though that may appear to us. They say we have to prove we’re fit.
This one is Yaroslavl, Russia.
   Too bad, because a freighter voyage sounds like it would be wonderfully restful. There’s nothing to do except show up at mealtimes. Crew members don’t sing or dance or expect passengers to do the same, there are no Las Vegas-style entertainers, no shore excursions on camel-back, nada. I’d love it. Reading, listening to music, watching the ocean, chatting with other passengers every day or two if necessary—my idea of a good time.
   Sigh. It’s not to be.
Another Russian freighter.
Photo by Richard Schear
   Freighters, it seems, have no passenger elevators, and they keep their freight elevators well hidden. I don’t think I could get our doctor to write the necessary letter about my health. “Dear Captain X, this is to certify that my patient, one Kay L. Davies by name, can go up and down four flights of stairs four times per day on a ship with no doctor, chiropractor or massage therapist on board.”
   Nope, not likely. Unless, of course, I go up and down ex-treme-ly slow-ly, stopping to rest, one step at a time.
*
Posted for
Weekend Writers' Retreat

For Real Toads: my husband's photos

Several days ago, Kerry asked us if she might use some of my husband's photos as prompts for the writers' group Imaginary Garden with Real Toads. Dick was very flattered and soon we were both exhausted after going through our many travel photos as well as the pictures he takes when walking our dog Lindy. Much to our surprise, Kerry snaffled a photo from my blog to add to the mix: one of my husband (in which I missed his head) walking a very happy Lindy in the snow.

to resist the Mongol hordes
they built a wall with many a stair
dynasties from Qin to Ming
fortified the very air


a hole in the jungle
looks out to sea
and I look out there, too,
to see


hoar frost, hard frost,
would you kill a tree?
not an easy thing to do
on the lone prair-ie




oh, deer, where can our mamas be?
Lindy so long at us stares
© Photos by Richard Schear in China, Hawaii, and Canada

Mag 103: heart and stone


Each week, a photo comes from Willow Manor, as an inspiration to writer-bloggers everywhere. For some weeks now, no photos from Magpie Tales have spoken to me, but today's prompt produced this little poem in a matter of mere minutes.
It happens that way sometimes, doesn't it?
Today's photo comes from the Novodevichy Cemetery in Moscow, one of the many places we didn't visit when we were in Moscow last year, and I don't know the name of the photographer. Thanks, however, to Tess for posting it.





He holds my heart
in the hands of a sculptor,
my soul reflected therein.
My body lies
beneath the stone
here, in remembrance of him.


Saturday, February 4, 2012

Succinctly yours: speculate


His broker wanted him to speculate in the stock market.
His father told him to get a job before speculating in anything.

Each week, over at the blog Grandma's Goulash, Grandma chooses a photo and her daughter Calico chooses a word of the week before she ever sees the photo.
Then writer-bloggers are given a choice:
1. Write a short story of no more than140 words about the photo
2. Write a short-short story about it, using no more than 140 characters, including spaces and punctuation.
3. Use the word of the week if possible, but there's no penalty if you can't.
Above is my submission of 120 characters, including spaces, punctuation and the word of the week, to this week's SUCCINCTLY YOURS!

Shadow Shot Sunday 2: under the moon

© Photo by Richard Schear

During their walk today, Dick and Lindy saw the moon high in the blue sky, and below it the sunset-shadow of a house on the wall of another house.

Posted for
Shadow Shot Sunday 2
now hosted by the team of Gemma, Rose, and Magical Mystical Teacher

Pet Pride: Lindy and daddy snore with TV

The family that snores together, stays together.
— Lindy Davies-Schear

© Photo by Kay Davies
"TV? Are we supposed to be watching TV? Isn't it a commercial right now?"

Posted for Pet Pride
hosted by Lindy's friend Bozo and his family in Mumbai, India.
Lindy says, "Do you watch television, Bozo? Even when they have dogs on there, I find it puts me to sleep. It does the same thing to my dad, too, and sometimes even my mom."

Camera Critters: Barcelona, 2008


The critter above welcomes visitors to Barcelona's waterfront, while the pigeons, below, aren't afraid this rearing steed will throw them off.

© Photos by Kay Davies and Richard Schear, 2008

Posted for
Camera Critters, hosted by Misty Dawn.
Thanks, Misty.

Friday, February 3, 2012

For Real Toads: temptation or confession

Hmm, my friend Fireblossom has challenged the writers' group Imaginary Garden with Real Toads to write about temptation and/or confession.
This is the real deal, baring our souls for all to read. Dare I bare?



sublimate
sublimate
sublimate the urgings


lurking
in the cupboard
crying
calling
wooing me with their chocolateness
cookies
candies
caramel-centered chocolate-coated cravings


sublimate
sublimate
sublimate the urgings


hiding
in the freezer
luscious
lovely
luring me with their deliciousness
ice creams
creamsicles
frozen fancies filling up my failings

sublimate
sublimate
sublimate the urgings
sitting
there on a plate
carrot
sticks and
celery really do not call
beckon
me not
nor do they lure me at all
sublimate?
I can't wait
to give in to the urgings
© Photos at the Barcelona Night Market,
by Richard Schear, during our 2008 holiday in Spain

Weekend Reflections: ripples on the train


Photograph by Kay Davies from our European vacation, spring, 2011. ©
Posted for
Weekend Reflections, hosted by James in California.
Thanks, James!

Thursday, February 2, 2012

Book Blurb Friday: dead vines on bricks

Photo by Kathy Matthews

Each week, Lisa Ricard Claro, on her blog Writing in the Buff, posts a photo (this week by Oregon's Kathy Matthews, whose photos I always love) and challenges writer-bloggers to see the picture as the cover of a book. We must imagine what the book is about, then write a blurb of up to 150 enticing words to convince browsers to become buyers.

THE PERP'S PEEPS
by Minnie Cooper
*
Almost all the ivy had died off early that autumn, which was just the way Cat Ralgrub liked it. She could see just where the pipes were, see which vines were the strongest, decide on a strategy, and then she could strike.
The building might look disreputable with its bricks covered in dead vines, but Cat knew the residents came from old money, and old money meant plenty of old silver, gold, and jewels.
Author Minnie Cooper is first off the mark with a book chronicling The Great Diamond Heist of ’09, as the papers called it, and she has created a perpetrator of such great skill, and such great charm, readers will forget it’s an unsolved case, and will be rooting for the perp.
125 words not including title and author


SkyWatch Friday + Saturday Photo Hunting

Well, I'm fresh out of groundhog photos, so I thought I'd see what I had...and I found one of Lindy last year on Groundhog Day. She can see her shadow, and a bit of sky above the greenhouses near our house. (Our little town in southeastern Alberta is known as The Greenhouse Capital of the Prairies.)


This winter has been the opposite of last year. As seen above and below, we had a lot of snow last winter. Now we've had so many above-freezing days in January, and the beginning of February, we're afraid some of our trees and shrubs will start leafing out, only to be hit later with the area's normal -20 to -30 Celsius temperatures (4 below and 22 below zero Fahrenheit). Of course, if that happens, we could be losing some of our greenery, which is a serious matter in the desert part of the prairie.


Below, there is still plenty of fruit on our ornamental crabapple tree because we've had so little snow the deer haven't had to come to our yard to eat very often. The larger deer can reach the fruit quite high up the tree when they stand on their hind legs. It's amazing to watch.

© Photos by Kay Davies and Richard Schear    
Posted for
SkyWatch Friday
To see other skies from around the world, please click  HERE!
Oh, and Groundhog Day? According to what I've read so far, opinions seem to be split amongst Canada's and the USA's most popular underground predictors. So, it will either be an early spring, or another six weeks of winter. Time will tell.
*
Last photo also posted for the theme "twigs" at Gattina's meme
Saturday Photo Hunting

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Thursday Theme Song: there is nothing...



I had a different song all set to post for this week's
Thursday Theme Song
but for Wednesday's challenge I posted about my all-time favorite movie for the writers' group Imaginary Garden with Real Toads, and decided to feature a song from that movie instead.



The lyrics of this song I chose for TTS reminded me that my husband plans to watch the Super Bowl this weekend. So, guys, this one's for you:
*

*

There is nothing like a game
Nothing in this world—
There is nothing you can name
That is anything like a game.
Now suppose the game ain't great
Or completely free from flaws,
Or exciting as a sky-dive
Or a gift from Santy Claus,
It's a waste of time to worry
Over things that they have not,
Be thankful for the things they've got!
There are no books like a game
And nothing looks like a game
There is no drink like a game
Or makes you think like a game—
There ain't a thing that's wrong with any man here
That can't be cured by putting him near
An exciting football end-of-the-season game!

Ella's Edge for Real Toads: movies

Okay, I'm going to give you a few hints, and some of you may be old enough to guess my all-time lifetime favorite movie.
There's even a prize. I'll send you a ticket just like the ones in the photo Ella posted for her movie challenge today at Imaginary Garden with Real Toads.
She asked members of the writers' group, and anyone who has a favorite movie, to write a poem, either about the movie, or using the title of the movie, or quoting lines from it. I did some of those things, but I didn't use the title.
*

younger than springtime,
I was just a cockeyed optimist
in love with a wonderful guy,
and this nearly was mine.
*
some enchanted morning
without any warning
you will meet a stranger:
you will be in danger
despite the crowded room.
*
two hundred and one
pounds of fun
was my great big honey-bun
but a load of honey-bun
broke my ribs
one by one.
*
when I washed that man
right out of my hair,
who knew I’d be fined
for polluting?
it wasn’t the creme rinse
or the shampoo solution...
the environmental officer
said my voice was noise pollution.