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> Happy Passover And Easter

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post Apr 9 2009, 12:36 PM
It's a beautiful time of year, no matter where you are or what you believe in.

I love the re-birth signs in nature. It gives me hope that I can do better and "Come Back" from whatever "dead" parts are holding me back.

I wish you all could know how much your presence here is appreciated.

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post Apr 9 2009, 01:06 PM
Here on the wet coast we've had several frosty nights but tee-shirt days so the daffodils are blooming and the trees are budding or flowering. Spring is definitely sprung. smile.gif

My son is fifteen but still demands an Easter egg hunt. So I'm building a hunt map and hints for the weekend. Each year it gets harder as so many places have been 'used'. It starts with an empty basket containing a 'hint' which sends him off to locate a treat and another hint. My goal is make the hunt last past an hour. Goals are important. smile.gif

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post Apr 9 2009, 03:51 PM
Best wishes to all people of all faiths with a deep love of ancestors and Earth!

Nice logo, Risa.
Miriam
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From: Langley, British Columbia, Canada
post Apr 9 2009, 04:58 PM
Happy times and good wishes to all at this festive time. Great logo, Risa.

.. I misread what iamlost had written since I had a spot on my glasses and thought he ended up with
QUOTE
Goats are important.

That seemed a great idea and I could quite understand why the egg hunt might last over an hour. I wonder if you can get chocolate goats for Easter. Do you then eat the horns first. The mind boggles at the possibilities.
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post Apr 9 2009, 05:52 PM
Barry...lol... I think goats are important too! smile.gif But I sense the spot on your glasses might also have been obscured by reading your monitor through the bottom of a pint glass! For you: The Chocolate Goat

And from a purely non-religious point of view.... I'm sure some of us, (at least in the UK), are glad for the extra break from work due to the Bank Holidays tomorrow and Monday - hurrah! infinite-banana.gif infinite-banana.gif infinite-banana.gif
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post Apr 11 2009, 02:03 PM
There are tons and tons of goats where I live. Really - tons. And people put a llama in amongst them to scare off coyotes and mountain lions. But, the other day, I saw something totally different. Rather than a llama guarding the goats, there was a wooly bactrian camel (two humps). My eyes couldn't take it in at first. So, goats are important, Barry, but camels are unexpected.

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post Apr 11 2009, 03:00 PM
While I have goals so I don't simply read my life away smile.gif a neighbour does have goats that like to stand on his fence and eat on either side. They rarely come to visit unfortunately.

A wooly bactrian camel...strange but there are no camels on the island...sheep, goats, llamas, cows, pigs, emus, chickens, ostriches, horses...but no camels of either hump. We do have one female cougar with two offspring and one black bear...yes we count our wildlife, including annual bird counts and flower counts...

The past week has seen an incredible amount of herring roe left high and dry by the tides and literally thousands of gulls and hundreds of crows feeding all along the shore. Talk about noise...

Speaking further of the season - saw my first fawn of the year yesterday on the way into town and this morning the car was coated with pollen. Fertility rampant and life reborn. Spring...
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From: Langley, British Columbia, Canada
post Apr 11 2009, 03:07 PM
If you want to watch something intriguing, there were two bald eaglets born during the night in Sydney, British Columbia. You can see them via this live-cam:

http://www.hancockwildlifechannel.org/stat...090302200021473
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post Apr 12 2009, 02:07 PM
Hooray for Bald Eagles!!!

Strangely, bald eagles have been sighted in my region of the world over the past few years, where they have seldom been known to occur. Likely they are just passing through. We do get golden eagles here, but I have never seen a bald eagle in person. Amazing creatures.

Iamlost - we, too, are participating in the car pollen phenomenon, due to parking under pine trees.

Our squash and peas, spinach and lettuces are all up on the farm. kicking.gif Today we may plant cucumbers. Pickles-to-be.

This post has been edited by SEOigloo: Apr 12 2009, 02:08 PM
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