Hi Everyone!
I saw the following headline on a web site today – “An Airport That Even Pilots Don’t Like to Land In.” How many of you besides me wonder who else besides pilots would be landing in an airport?
Have a great day!
Nancy
Hi Everyone!
I saw the following headline on a web site today – “An Airport That Even Pilots Don’t Like to Land In.” How many of you besides me wonder who else besides pilots would be landing in an airport?
Have a great day!
Nancy
Good morning Everyone!
Have a great day!
Nancy
Posted in Humor, Just stuff..., working mom
Tagged clock, daughter, hissy fit, humor, husband, parenting, spouse, time, time management
Good morning Everyone!
“I’d never have been misled; I’d have known Jesus was the Messiah.”
I have to chase that thought away every time I watch a dramatization about the New Testament.
To help myself do that, I pictured Jesus speaking to the priests. Jesus’ accent would have been the accent of a Galilean peasant, fisherman or farmer.
To get some idea of how that would affect the ruling class, imagine you are in a large, prosperous church where the worship services are choreographed to the second (and I’m not being critical here; we all worship in our own way) and broadcast on television for the unchurched and shut-ins. The choir has sung, the offering’s been taken, maybe even communion has been offered, and then, just as the preacher stands up to give the benediction and dismiss the congregation, a man dressed in clean but run down clothes walks down the aisle and whispers to the preacher. Surprised, the preacher looks out at the congregation, who can see the dilemma the preacher is in – should he let this man speak or does he keep the service on schedule ? With a sigh, because he truly is a man of God, the preacher decides to take the high road for reasons even he can’t explain, and steps aside to allow the man to speak into a microphone.
Some in the congregation shift restlessly on their cushioned pews, ready to be gone. Some are curious, trying to figure out what is going on. Some are disgusted – why on earth didn’t that man wear nicer clothes? Didn’t he know he was entering a church? A few are hoping to see the Holy Spirit in action and accept any additional teaching God intends to share through this speaker. The TV crew is tearing their hair out, the broadcast schedule completely shot. Except for the rustle of church programs, a few shuffling feet, and some coughs, the sanctuary is silent.
The man begins to speak – and while his voice is melodious, he has the thickest country accent (stronger than Gomer Pyle) anyone there has ever heard, or an accent that comes straight from the toughest slums in the nearest big city. He isn’t speaking “church lingo” (although he is learned enough that he could) but straightforward stories from every day life to tell his message.
How many of the people in that church would be able to get past the man’s accent to hear what he had to say, let alone understand it? How many that made it past the accent could make it past the everyday, homespun stories? How many would feel that the man, with his shabby appearance and strong accent, was desecrating their sanctuary and making fun of them? How many would be open to anything that man could teach them? Who among them would be brave enough to leave everything they owned and follow Him simply because He asked them to?
Before I judge the people of Jesus’ time, I think I would do well to answer those questions about myself first.
Have a great day!
Nancy
Posted in History, Just stuff..., Past
Tagged accents, believer, Christian, Christianity, church, Jesus, Messiah, nonbeliever, questions
Good morning Everyone!
Meet Mr. Belvedere, the latest addition to the growing list of buskeys (and buskey photos) people are kind enough to share with me. Even better, Mr. Belvedere’s friend, Sara, has one of those rarest of photographs – a picture of a buskey as a puppy!
Sara works at a shelter, and is responsible for temperament testing all of the shelter dogs, so she also had more training than many of us on managing a buskey. Belvedere sings, howls and talks, and is very smart. He likes to play a “find-it” game and food games with Sara that use the exceptional sense of smell he received from his basset hound forebears.
Belvedere is the first buskey I have “met” that is not, ummm, shall we say, vertically challenged. Sara says he looks sort of like a basset hound on stilts, being long, tall and thin, with the loose skin around his neck and the long nose of a basset hound. He also has the smelling acumen of a basset hound.
He is full of personality, another trait most buskeys share. In addition to his vocal talents, he likes to play in the sprinkler and in water. (Something I am not at all sure our Mandy would do – although I have seen her step and then sit in a bowl of ice water that we left on the porch once when we had to leave the dogs outdoors in the summer. We did that several times that summer, and it took me forever to figure out how they managed to splash the water everywhere while we were gone!).
Mr. Belvedere also gets along very well with the other dogs in the household. In this picture, he is napping with his brother.
Sara had his DNA tested and it came back as 1/2 basset hound and 1/2 husky, with pure bred parents as far back as the DNA people could go.
Sara has noticed, and been working with, a tendency to “resource” guard, which she believes comes from his husky half. It’s good to know that he does that, because I have often been frustrated watching Mandy take a good 45 minutes to eat the same bowl of dog food that Darwin could scoff down in about 10. She waits until everyone else (people included) are done eating in the morning before she starts.
Sara also wanted to share the following with anybody intending to intentionally create the buskey mix (or, for that matter, those of us who were just lucky enough to match up with one at a shelter somewhere.) This is what she wrote:
He can be a bit of a husky with handling, somewhat sensitive. I have worked on this and resource guarding issues from the time he was a pup, and continue to this day. I mention this because I think it’s important for people to understand that both hounds and huskies are known to have resource guarding issues. Huskies are known to be difficult to handle in general. Crossing these two breeds makes for an amazing, funny, intelligent dog but positive training is essential, and they might not be for the first time dog owner.
As you may recall, one of the readily identifiable characteristics of every buskey I have encountered so far is a strong independence streak, which is why the positive training is needed. We have noticed that streak in Mandy, also. If you tell her “bad dog” about something, she looks at you thoughtfully, as if to say “that’s an interesting point of view,” then goes ahead and does what she wanted to do originally anyhow.
Mr. Belvedere, however, was lucky enough to find someone who knows how to train him – and I think Sara thinks she was pretty lucky, too!
Have a great day!
Nancy
Posted in dogs, Just stuff...
Tagged 1/2 basset hound, 1/2 husky, basset hound, buskey, busky, dogs, Husky, pets, photography
Good morning Everyone!

Cartoon Credit: http://www.clickartonline.com
All rights reserved
I use fast food drive-thrus far more than I should. Here are some of the things that irritate me the most:
1) The failure to follow simple rules of etiquette. The words “please”, “thank you” and “you’re welcome” shouldn’t be considered archaic and outdated!

Cartoon Credit: http://www.clickartonline.com
2) Giving me a regular Coke when I ordered a Diet Coke.
3) Worse, giving me a Dr. Pepper or Diet Dr. Pepper when I have ordered a Diet Coke.
4) Those drive-thrus that deliberately plot against me by giving me the correct drink 20 times in a row than failing to give me the right drink the one time in 21 trips that I do not check the drink before I pull out of the drive thru. (How do they know?)

Photo Credit: http://www.clickartonline.com
All rights reserved.
5) When did ketchup and napkins become luxury items doled out in dribbles?
6) Getting my order wrong. Especially when I don’t realize it until after I have left the drive thru window.
7) Putting a sign up ordering me to turn off my windshield wipers when I pull up to the window. I do it anyhow, of course, just to be polite, but I don’t appreciate being ordered to do so.
8) Being called “sweetie”, “honey” or “darling” by people half my age.

Graphic Credit: http://www.clickartonline.com
All rights reserved.
9) Receiving a deluxe hamburger with only cheese and pickles on it when I asked for a deluxe hamburger with everything on it except cheese and pickles. I think the cook who did that not only bore a grudge but a sense of humor.
10) Asking me for my order, then only entering the first thing I say after I give you the entire order. Then asking me again, only to enter the second thing I say while I give you the entire order. Repeat ad nauseam.
Have a great day!
Nancy
Posted in Food, Humor, Just stuff..., working mom
Tagged diet coke, drive-thru, drive-thrus, etiquette, fast food, food, hamburger, hamburgers, humor, please, thank you and you're welcome
Good morning Everyone!
My Easter Sunday plans did not include spending the afternoon staring with concern at my daughter writhing on the floor, rubbing her back on a towel and crying. We had just returned from a five-day trip to the beach that morning. While we were there, Kayla spent one glorious five-hour stint in the water playing with some friends she had made that morning and wound up with an equally splendid sunburn on her back. Until Easter afternoon, it had been pretty much like any other sunburn, but what Kayla was experiencing then was a whole different order of magnitude. There was no doubt in my mind that she was sincere but I couldn’t figure out what was going on.
Mark woke up just as I was getting ready to take her somewhere for help, and suggested instead that I first give her Benadryl and some Tylenol. I did, and it seemed to help for about an hour and a half, then everything started all over again. While Kayla was calm, we asked her what it felt like, and she said when the itch got bad and she started crying, she felt like she had a thousand knives stabbing deep into her back, causing great pain and a deep, burning itch. When the itch started to come back after an hour and a half, we gave her two Advil and I took her to our local Doc-In-The-Box.
Apparently, arriving at 5:30 p.m. on Easter Sunday when the clinic closes at 6 ensures swift service. Kayla was their only patient. I was a little annoyed at the doctor because I didn’t think she really was taking Kayla and me seriously, but she did consent to give Kayla a shot of Benadryl and prescribe a stronger antihistamine in case the Benadryl didn’t work. She also told me to get some Cortisone cream and Benadryl cream to put on Kayla’s back.
I called Mark at 5:55 – the prescription had been called into our local pharmacy, which closed at 6, and Kayla and I were about 30 minutes away – and he won Father-of-the-Year award for making it to CVS in less than four minutes to pick up the prescription.
We were fortunate that he was able to do so, because about 10:00 p.m., by the time the Benadryl shot had worn off, Kayla came into our bedroom and woke me up to tell me that her back had started itching again and she wanted me to put the cortisone cream and Benadryl cream on her. I carefully applied the lotions, but by the time I finished, she was back to writhing in agony again and begging me to take the lotions back off. Mark woke up because he heard us. After I wiped the creams back off as best I could, we had Kayla take an Aveeno oatmeal bath. (Another remedy suggested by the doctor.)
After she got out of the bath, her back had calmed down a little again, so the three of us sat up for a while. While we sat, I did what any stumped parent would do – I googled “intense sunburn itch.” The results surprised me.
Apparently, there are a number of people out there – adults as well as children – that have experienced the same thing. The people who have had this happen to them called it either “Hell’s Itch” or ICI – short for “insanity causing itch.” The medical sites didn’t have a description of it or a name for it, but I know from our experience with Kayla that it exists. All of the stories I found on the internet described the same symptoms that Kayla had experienced. One sufferer was a former marine who admitted that he was embarrassed that this – whatever it is – had brought him to his knees. Another was a former paratrooper who said the same thing. The adults who described it said that it felt like fire ants were crawling underneath your skin, constantly biting you.
A very important point to remember if you encounter this is that all of the normal sunburn remedies – aloe vera, cortisone and antihistamine creams – only make the itch worse.
There were only three things that seemed to help the people who experienced this – and two of them were the opposite of what you would do for a normal sunburn. The first remedy that gave most people relief was to take a scalding hot shower for at least 15 to 20 minutes. The second remedy was peppermint oil, which is not something I keep on hand. The third remedy that helped was the prescription antihistamine. The brand name for it is Aderax and the generic is something like hydroxidine HCL. With Kayla, basic pain relievers like Tylenol and Advil also helped, although without the antihistamines the most they did was take the edge off.
Hell’s Itch only happens to someone who has acquired a decent sunburn to some area of the body. For reasons no one was certain of, about 48 hours later, each sufferer experienced an unbearable sensation that ran in waves over the places that were sunburnt. Even if you are one of the 5 – 10% of people who ever experience this, it doesn’t happen every time you get sunburned. Some people will experience it once and then not have it happen again for 20 years, even if they get sunburned in the meantime. In almost everyone, the symptoms subside on their own after 8 to 48 hours.
All’s well that end’s well, of course, and by Tuesday, Kayla was back to normal. Still, I wanted to share this with you in case you ever end up on the floor yourself writhing with this unbearable sensation, or, even worse, someone you love does. As for me, I think I’m going to buy some peppermint oil and keep it on hand, just in case.
Have a great day!
Nancy
UPDATE: 7/8/2016 – Thank you to each of the over 11,000 people who have viewed this post since it was first published. Please if you have time, look at some of my other posts. I write about all kinds of things, with entertaining results.
I also need to remind everyone that I am not a doctor, and this blog post is not meant to give medical advice. It is meant to let people who are experiencing this terrible condition that they are not alone, they are not crazy and there are some things that some people have found helpful.
A special thank you to the people who take the time to share their own experiences. I know when Kayla went through this, I was infinitely relieved when I read about other people experiencing the same thing.
Finally, use your own judgment about when to see a physician. In my opinion, if you don’t earlier, you DEFINITELY need to see a physician if you experience these symptoms more than 2 or 3 days at the latest. (If it were me, I’m not sure I could make it as far as day 3). Regular Hell’s Itch doesn’t seem to normally last that long.
Posted in Child's Play, Children, Just stuff..., On the Home Front, working mom
Tagged child, children, Hell's Itch, ICI, intense sunburn itch, Medicine, remedy, sunburn
Good morning Everyone!
Today we are going to take a walk into improbable reality: the lichen. While we tend to think of and treat lichen as one organism, it actually is composed of two (or more) organisms living together for each other’s benefit: a fungus and an alga. The fungus provides structure, support and water for the lichen, while the alga produces food through photosynthesis. Because of this symbiosis, lichen are not considered to be plants. (They aren’t animals either, nor minerals – so how do you answer the question “Is it animal, vegetable or mineral?” when it comes to lichen?)
I became curious about lichen while we were living in our rental house. The house owner had cut up a tree on the property, and placed the logs by the house. Over time, rows and rows of fan-like shapes began to grow on the ends of the logs. I took a picture of them, above. As best I could determine, they were a kind of lichen.
Lichen are ancient survivors. The oldest known fossil showing both symbiotic components of a lichen is 400 million years old, FN, so it stands to reason that lichens are even older – it is highly unlikely that the first ever lichen was also the first lichen fossilized! The variety and distribution of lichen is astounding. There are over 20,000 known forms. There are lichen that can colonize the most inhospitable of places, such as bare rock in the arctic, lichen that process and help break down inorganic matter such as wood, and lichen that seem to drift airily down in strands off of bushes and live off of the air.

Feathery Lichen. Photo Credit: Letharia vulpina JHollinger crop” by Jason Hollinger – Mushroom Observer. Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons
Lichen can live for astoundingly long periods of time; in fact, one lichen from the arctic circle is estimated to be 9000 years old! I keep looking for a picture of this ancient lichen, but I haven’t located one yet. I do know that the ancient arctic lichen is a member of what are commonly called “map lichen.” As you can see, they get their name from the shapes they form on rocks, which resemble maps. Their growth rate is incredibly slow, yet predictable, so they can be useful tools in dating other objects. The use of lichen to date objects is called “lichenometry.”

Map Lichen Photo Credit: Rhizocarpon geographicum on quartz” by User:Tigerente – Self-photographed. Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons
Lichen also provide scientists with helpful information about air pollution; most lichen are highly sensitive to air pollution, so if there is an area that normally would host lichen, yet has none, the air quality around the area is likely poor.

Lichen, Acrylic on Duralar, By Aaliyah Gupta, Copied with Permission from the Artist
I have a friend in Seattle who is an artist, Aaliyah Gupta, and she worked on a series a few years ago exploring the symbiosis that creates lichen. Her work is stunningly beautiful, delicate and unique, capturing the intricacies of a symbiotic dance that has persisted through the ages.

Lichen, by Aaliyah Gupta, Acrylic on Duralar, All Rights Reserved, Copied with Permission from the Artist
God’s handiwork is astounding. Nature’s variety and inventiveness is unparalleled. Taking the time to learn about other organisms on this planet always pays dividends – if only to make us realize how privileged we are to be part of the complex web of life traveling on Spaceship Earth!
Have a great day everyone!
Nancy
FN. 400 million years ago was the “Early Devonian Period.” During the Early Devonian, plants and animals began to colonize land, while aquatic life was farther along and more diverse. In other words, lichen pre-date dinosaurs, flowers, trees and grass!
Posted in Art, Just stuff..., Science, working mom
Tagged Aaliyah Gupta, art, Lichen, Map Lichen, photography, Science, symbiotic relationships
Good morning Everyone!
Have you ever looked at one of the objects that we use without thinking every day, and wondered who came up with the invention? I do, and yesterday as I was putting the empty coat hangers from my clothes for the day into my closet (yes, Mark, I do remember to do that occasionally!) I suddenly wondered where coat hangers come from.
Several websites (all of whom, I think, were copying Wikipedia’s entry) say that Thomas Jefferson was believed to have invented a forerunner of the wooden clothes hanger. However, the foremost authority on all things Thomas Jefferson, the Monticello website, disagrees. According to the Monticello web site, there is no evidence that Thomas Jefferson invented the individual clothes hangers similar to what we use today, but he did invent the most ingenious closet gadget which allowed him to hang and access over 48 sets of coats, waist coats and other clothing easily. While the device did not survive the ravages of time, the researchers at Monticello, relying on help from The Thomas Jefferson Encyclopedia have come up with a conjectural drawing of what this revolving closet might have looked like.

Thomas Jefferson’s Revolving Closet Rack
From http://www.monticello.org
Apparently, one of the first patents for a device similar to today’s coat hangers was issued in 1869 to O.A. North, from New Britain Connecticut. unfortunately, I haven’t been able to locate that patent or the drawing that should be with the patent – records that old at the United States Patent Office are listed by year, classification and patent number only rather than by key word. Over 13,000 patents were issued in 1869 alone!
Until 1903, coat hangers were made of wood supported by other materials. The ubiquitous wire coat hanger was apparently first designed by Albert J. Parkhouse in 1903. Parkhouse was an employee of the Timberlake Wire and Novelty Company in Jackson, Michigan. His co-employees were unhappy because the company did not have enough coat hooks, so many of their heavy winter coats would fall to the floor during their work shift. Mr. Parkhouse grabbed a length of wire, twisted it so that one end had a hook on it, there were two ovals below that, and then the other end of the wire was twisted around the stem of the hook.
In keeping with the custom of the day, Parkhouse’s employer, Timberlake, patented the idea and reaped the profits. After a few years, Albert Parkhouse (perhaps realizing that it is cold in Michigan in winter and not that cold somewhere else) moved his family to Los Angeles where he started his own wire novelty company. He died at the age of 48 from a ruptured ulcer.
Over the years, many other patents have been issued for designs that improved the original one, to where today the variety of coat hangers is overwhelming. However, the wire coat hanger is the champion of them all, beloved by dry cleaners everywhere and collecting in our closets in prolific amounts.

Many Hangers
Photograph by:
“Grucce” by A7N8X – Own work. Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons
Have a great day!
Nancy
Posted in History, Just stuff..., working mom
Tagged coat hangers, Connecticut, history, humor, inventions, inventors, New Britain, North, Parkhouse, Timberlake Wire, working mom
From the Boston Area:
From Huntsville, Alabama
From the Las Vegas Area: