Tuesday, September 12, 2023
MEMORIES OF JIMMY
Monday, September 11, 2023
DAY OF REFLECTION
Twenty-two years ago today the United States came under attack on its own soil by terrorists who hijacked four commercial jets.
They flew two of them into the World Trade Towers in New York, one into the Pentagon in Arlington, Virginia, and, during a battle with passengers, crashed the fourth one into a field in Pennsylvania.
Here, far away in Prescott Valley, Arizona, those tragic events are memorialized every year.
Sunday, September 10, 2023
Saturday, September 9, 2023
CLOUDS A-BUILDING
Our normally blue skies were filling with what I call "thunder bumpers" today and we could have a few rainy days ahead of us.
Friday, September 8, 2023
THE FRIDAY FUNNIES
So how was your short week, my friends and Gentle Readers?
Oh yes, I forgot, some of you in foreign lands didn't have a day off on Monday for workers.
Come to think of it, neither did I.
All of my days in my Senior Years are days off.
That sort of makes me smile.
And speaking of smiling . . . it's time for the end of the week tomfoolery!
Thursday, September 7, 2023
BOLD AND BAD
You may remember some time back my telling you about the travails of the BAD (Beautiful Artistic Daughter), who took a tumble coming out of an appointment and broke a bone in her elbow.
She's been living with this thing while waiting for an appointment with a surgeon, now (finally) scheduled for tomorrow.
You may also remember that I told you how the arm that is broken is her left one, which happens to be her dominant arm.
And once again I remind you that she is an artist.
So how does a left-handed artist make her art when her left arm is nearly disabled?
It beats me.
But not her.
Here's a project she just completed.
Wednesday, September 6, 2023
WHO DAT?
So I was out prowling around our side yard, checking on our pretty-much-inactive tomato plant and a couple of vines to see which one was going to die first.
When a leaf caught my eye, apparently stuck to the wall.
Now it's a rough stucco wall so I could imagine a leaf having been blown up there and becoming attached.
But when I looked closer, I saw this leaf was actually a critter so I took a couple of more pictures of it.
When I showed the pictures to Judy and suggested it might be a Praying Mantis, she said "No, it's a Cicada."
Well, I went to the omniscient Google and the Cicadas it showed didn't look anything like this critter.
So I asked Google to show me some bugs that look like leaves and it promptly convinced me this was a member of the Tettigoniidae Family.
More commonly known as Bush Crickets or (especially in North America) Katydids!
And, just to put a fine point on it, the Google said they are nocturnal and that during the day when they're "resting" they assume a posture that causes them to resemble a leaf!
So case solved and thus ends today's lesson in Insect Identification.
I can't wait until nightfall when it may start "singing".
As I said to Judy, "It may be good that we're practically deaf!"