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Theecarey's Journal

theecarey
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07/14/2009 16:04 #49291

HP and the Half Blood Prince tonight
Category: movies
For those into HP, the new movie comes out tomorrow! finally!

Well, I am going to see Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince tonight at 11:59pm at the Regal theater on Niagara Falls Blvd (right off the 190, Home Depot lot). In case anyone is itching to go and does not have to be up super early, please join! (e:pyrcedgrrl) and I will be there with our wands and long trailing Hogwarts scarves.

"Not!"

(I'm a fan, but not that much a fan!)

I would normally see it at the IMAX, but I believe it isn't going to be there for a couple of more weeks? yes, I know, what is waiting a little while longer after waiting TWO years to see this FINALLY come to the theater? Nothing..

but I want to see it NOW! and I rarely get to the theater..

so, tonight 11:59 :)

hehe

I read the books, and as the characters and story becomes more mature and involved, I am glad to see the movies going along with it. From the few trailers I have seen, this movie should not disappoint. Looks creepy :)

metalpeter - 07/17/09 19:52
Well hearing about that on the news makes it hard to forget, HA.
theecarey - 07/15/09 23:55
hahaha! The vibrating brooms- wow, you remembered that, (e:metalpeter)
metalpeter - 07/15/09 19:40
Yes but the important question is did they let people in with their vibrating Brooms, HA. Hope you both had a great time. I have never been to one of those midnight or late night showings, not sure if I could sit and watch a movie that late.
theecarey - 07/15/09 12:52
(e:dimartiste) the last book, Deathly Hallows will be transferred to audiences in two installments. So two more movies!

I too have read the books (other than the last, which I hope to do very soon). As you know, the Half Blood Prince had a lot going on conceptually. The movie cut out A LOT,(and added a couple of scenes- that worked) but it is understandable and to be expected given the complexity of the sixth book. I loved it and want to see it again. There were a lot of good laughs to be had, too :)

go see it and enjoy!
dimartiste - 07/15/09 12:13
Mom and I are planning on going to see it. We might wait for the IMAX. Not sure if dad will want to go. Larry will wait until its either on DVD or on tv. LAst time he went to the theater Bamabi was first released. Mom, Larry (my next door neighbor) and myself read the books. Yes, I agree that they stayed true to the characters and I am thoroughly enjoying that. I am not looking forward to the end, if it is like the book, but everything comes to an end. Did you read the article in the Buffalo News? Sunday I think gave a recap, but also mentioned 8 movies. There are only 7 books. Do you know why that is? Just curious.
theecarey - 07/15/09 04:55
there were a lot of people there. Five theater rooms undoubtedly completely full. The parking lot was packed and it was crazy to see so many people at one time, at 3:00 am, on a weekday.

07/05/2009 01:04 #49193

Body Worlds at Buffalo Museum of Science
Category: life
The Body Worlds exhibit will be hosted at the Buffalo Museum of Science. It begins July 9th. The exhibit will be available for 13 weeks- through September, early October

Buffalo Museum of Science
1020 Humboldt Pky
Buffalo, New York 14211
Monday - Saturday     9 a.m. - 9 p.m.
Sunday     11 a.m. - 7 p.m.

I believe it is $22.00, however, there are $3.00 coupons available at Wilson Farms (just ask cashier) and in Artvoice, both online and in the paper.

There are deep discounts for Students (with ID) and Seniors 62+
Also, children rates.

Anyone planning on going? You should, it looks amazing!

It is 'Body Worlds 3 and The Story of the Heart'


for an idea of what it is about..




Real bodies!
Preserved with "plastination"

Plastination is a technique used in anatomy to preserve bodies or body parts. The water and fat are replaced by certain plastics, yielding specimens that can be touched, do not smell or decay, and even retain most properties of the original sample



Pics snagged from Google images:
image

image

For anyone thinking about going, there is a discount for groups of 15 or more.
following text boxes contain information taken from the Buffalo Museum of Science website:
[box]
Groups of 15 or more are welcome to purchase tickets to BODY WORLDS at the group rate if purchased in advance. BODY WORLDS & The Story of the Heart are "timed tickets," valid only for a specified admission date and time.It takes an average of 1-2 hours to go through the exhibit; therefore the last ticket will be sold an hour and a half before the exhibit closes. Visitors are encouraged to arrive 15 - 30 minutes prior to the time printed on their ticket, particularly on weekends.Minimum group size of 15 is required to be eligible for group rates.
Adult (Ages 19+)     $17.50
BODY WORLDS HOURS BEGINNING JULY 9
Monday - Saturday     9 a.m. - 9 p.m.
Sunday     11 a.m. - 7 p.m.

PLEASE NOTE: The last BODY WORLDS ticket is sold from the BMS Box Office an hour and a half before the exhibit closes for the day. Due to anticipated crowds, we highly recommend that tickets are purchased online in advance. Visitors are encouraged to arrive 30 minutes prior to the time printed on their ticket.[/box]

About Dr. Gunther von Hagens- inventor of Plastination and creator of Body Worlds:
[box]
Gunther von Hagens' life reads like an archetypal scientist's resume-distinguished by early precocity, scholarship, discovery, experimentation, and invention. It is also the profile of a man shaped by extraordinary events, and marked by defiance and daring.

Von Hagens' two year imprisonment by East German authorities for political reasons, his release after a $20,000 payment by the West German government, his pioneering invention that halts decomposition of the body after death and preserves it for didactic eternity, his collaboration with donors including his best friend, who willed and entrusted their bodies to him for dissection and public display, and his role as a teacher carrying on the tradition of Renaissance anatomists, make his a remarkable life in science.

Anatomist, inventor of Plastination, and creator of BODY WORLDS-The Original Exhibitions of Real Human Bodies-von Hagens (christened Gunther Gerhard Liebchen) was born in 1945, in Alt-Skalden, Posen, Poland-then part of Germany. To escape the imminent and eventual Russian occupation of their homeland, his parents placed the five-day-old infant in a laundry basket and began a six-month trek west by horse wagon. The family lived briefly in Berlin and its vicinity, before finally settling in Greiz, a small town where von Hagens remained until the age of 19.

As a child, he was diagnosed with a rare bleeding disorder that restricted his activities and required long bouts of hospitalization that he says, fostered in him a sense of alienation and nonconformity. At age 6, von Hagens nearly died and was in intensive care for many months. His daily encounters there with doctors and nurses left an indelible impression on him, and ignited in him a desire to become a physician. He also showed an interest in science from an early age, reportedly "freaking out" at the age of twelve during the Russian launch of Sputnik into space. "I was the school authority and archivist on Sputnik," he said.

In 1965, von Hagens entered medical school at the University of Jena, south of Leipzig, and the birthplace of writers Schiller and Goethe. His unorthodox methods and flamboyant personality were remarkable enough to be noted on academic reports from the university. "Gunther Liebchen is a personality who does not approach tasks systematically. This characteristic and his imaginativeness, that sometimes let him forget about reality, occasionally led to the development of very willful and unusual ways of working-but never in a manner that would have harmed the collective of his seminary group. On the contrary, his ways often encouraged his fellow students to critically review their own work."

While at the university, von Hagens began to question Communism and Socialism, and widened his knowledge of politics by gathering information from Western news sources. He later participated in student protests against the invasion of Czechoslovakia by Warsaw Pact troops. In January, 1969, in the guise of a vacationing student, von Hagens made his way across Bulgaria and Hungary, and on January 7th, attempted to cross the Czechoslovakian border into Austria and freedom. He failed, but made a second attempt the very next day, at another location along the border. This time the authorities detained him. "While I was in detention, a sympathetic guard left a window open for me so that I could escape. I hesitated and couldn't make up my mind, and that decision cost me a great deal," he says. Gunther von Hagens was arrested, extradited to East Germany, and imprisoned for two years. Only 23 years old at the time, the iconoclastic von Hagens was viewed as a threat to the socialist way of life, and therefore in need of rehabilitation and citizenship education. According to the prison records for Gunther Liebchen, "The prisoner is to be trained to develop an appropriate class consciousness so that in his future life, he will follow the standards and regulations of our society. The prisoner is to be made aware of the dangerousness of his way of behaving, and in doing so, the prisoner's conclusions of his future behavior as a citizen of the social state need to be established."

Thirty-six years after his incarceration, Gunther von Hagens finds meaning and even redemption in his lost years. "The deep friendships I formed there with other prisoners, and the terrible aspects of captivity that I was forced to overcome through my fantasy life, helped shape my sense of solidarity with others, my reliance on my own mind and body when denied freedom, and my capacity for endurance. All that I learned in prison helped me later in my life as a scientist."

In 1970, after West Germany's purchase of his freedom, von Hagens enrolled at the University of Lubeck to complete his medical studies. Upon graduation in 1973, he took up residency at a hospital on Heligoland-a duty free island where the access to cheap liquor resulted in a substantial population of alcoholics. A year later, after obtaining his medical degree, he joined the Department of Anesthesiology and Emergency Medicine at Heidelberg University, where he came to a realization that his pensive mind was unsuitable for the tedious routines demanded of an anesthesiologist. In June 1975, he married Dr. Cornelia von Hagens, a former classmate, and adopted her last name. The couple had three children, Rurik, Bera, and Tona.

In 1975, while serving as a resident and lecturer-the start of an eighteen year career at the university's Institute of Pathology and Anatomy-von Hagens invented Plastination, his groundbreaking technology for preserving anatomical specimens with the use of reactive polymers. "I was looking at a collection of specimens embedded in plastic. It was the most advanced preservation technique then, where the specimens rested deep inside a transparent plastic block. I wondered why the plastic was poured and then cured around the specimens rather than pushed into the cells, which would stabilize the specimens from within and literally allow you to grasp it."

He patented the method and over the next six years, von Hagens spent all his energies refining his invention. In Plastination, the first step is to halt decomposition. "The deceased body is embalmed with a formalin injection to the arteries, while smaller specimens are immersed in formalin. After dissection, all bodily fluids and soluble fat in the specimens are then extracted and replaced through vacuum-forced impregnation with reactive resins and elastomers such as silicon rubber and epoxy," he says. After posing of the specimens for optimal teaching value, they are cured with light, heat, or certain gases. The resulting specimens or plastinates assume rigidity and permanence. "I am still developing my invention further, even today, as it is not yet perfect," he says.

During this time, von Hagens started his own company, BIODUR Products, to distribute the special polymers, equipment, and technology used for Plastination to medical institutions around the globe. Currently, more than 400 institutions in 40 countries worldwide use Gunther von Hagens' invention to preserve anatomical specimens for medical instruction. In 1983, Catholic Church figures asked Dr. von Hagens to plastinate the heel bone of St. Hildegard of Bingen, (1090-1179), a beatified mystic, theologian, and writer revered in Germany. His later offer to perform Plastination on Pope John Paul II foundered before serious discussions.

In 1992, von Hagens married Dr. Angelina Whalley, a physician who serves as his Business Manager as well as the designer of the BODY WORLDS exhibitions. A year later, Dr. von Hagens founded the Heidelberg-based Institute for Plastination, which offers plastinated specimens for educational use and for BODY WORLDS, which premiered in Japan in 1995. To date, the exhibitions have been viewed by more than 27 million people, in cities countries across Europe, Asia, and North America. His continued efforts to present the exhibitions, even in the face of opposition and often blistering attacks are, he says, the burden he must bear as a public anatomist and teacher. "The anatomist alone is assigned a specific role-he is forced in his daily work to reject the taboos and convictions that people have about death and the dead. I myself am not controversial, but my exhibitions are, because I am asking viewers to transcend their fundamental beliefs and convictions about our joint and inescapable fate." Apparently determined to exhaust the limits of living in freedom, Dr. von Hagens has made a concerted effort to travel and propagate his interests around the globe. He accepted a visiting professorship at Dalian Medical University in China in 1996, and became director of the Plastination research center at the State Medical Academy in Bishkek/Kyrgyzstan. In 2001, he founded a private company, the Von Hagens Dalian Plastination Ltd., in Dalian, China, which currently employs a staff of 250. In 2004, Dr. von Hagens began a visiting professorship at the New York University College of Dentistry. He is currently in the process of designing the first anatomy curriculum in the United States that will use plastinated specimens in lieu of dissection.

Gunther von Hagens' BODY WORLDS exhibitions are currently showing in North America. "The human body is the last remaining nature in a man made environment," he says. "I hope for the exhibitions to be places of enlightenment and contemplation, even of philosophical and religious self recognition, and open to interpretation regardless of the background and philosophy of life of the viewer." [/box]

I've been intrigued for some time, and it is exciting that Body Worlds is here. Some people find it controversial and disturbing. I'm simply curious..

you?




theecarey - 07/15/09 13:16
it looks fascinating! It runs through Monday September 7th- much longer than I initially heard from others. yay!

I must stop listening to others :)
rory - 07/15/09 00:19
Went to see this in London - absolutely fascinating and so worth going to see if you can.

The only exhibit that was a little disconcerting was a set of embryos that they had plastinised(sp?) at different stages of development. Some of them were in the original mothers womb still too, which was really weird to see.

Amazing to see though, and I 100% agree with you (e:tinypliny) - the inner workings of the human body are the most stunning thing.

tinypliny - 07/06/09 08:30
Yikes. (e:paul), I didn't consider that possibility. It seems rather extreme. Body-snatching and other shady modes of procuring bodies are one thing but killing people to put them in an exhibition is entirely another...

Sometimes, the families of the poor sell the bodies of their dear ones so that they can survive from the money they get out of that sale. :( Being poor is very painful.

PS: Regardless of the controversies, I am still interested in going.
theecarey - 07/06/09 00:20
Ok, now I can see the NYTimes article. It is talking about the 'Bodies.. The Exhibition'. (so far)

theecarey - 07/06/09 00:18
yeh, the Premier Exhibitions Inc. is that "Body..The Exhibition" one, right? and not BodyWorks (the one coming here?) At this point, I am not sure what I think. So far, as long as people weren't killed off strictly for this purpose (were they??!!), I'd wouldn't be opposed to having the unclaimed & unidentified ("poor" would not be acceptable excuse for not giving burial if family wants it) dead used for medical/community exhibition.

So, you think you might want to go, (e:paul)? :)

If enough people seem interested, I can see what I can do about organizing something. If not for the discount, then to at least all go together for those that want to? let me see what more information I can get. Anyone who loves to organize stuff, by all means go for it :)

paul - 07/05/09 21:55
Arnie Geller, the president of Premier Exhibitions Inc., the company that spent $25 million to obtain the specimens from a Chinese university, insists that the human remains, all but two of them male, are those of the poor, the unclaimed or the unidentified. :::link:::

I love how "poor" ranks with unclaimed or unidentified. Notice the lack of an AND. Aren't they kind of different?
paul - 07/05/09 21:51
They way I understood it was the bodies wouldn't have been dead bodies if they didn't need them for a show.
tinypliny - 07/05/09 18:58
(e:theecarey), I am super-interested in going. Are you getting together a group of 15 people? If you are, I am 100% in.

(e:paul), I am not sure those claims can be verified. We dissected bodies of cadavers from people who had willingly donated them to our med school. At least, that's what they told us. Who knows...

Even if they were from dead prisoners, a body is just a body without life. I agree that it seems awful to not bury/cremate it etc. but sometimes, the beauty of a human body needs to be witnessed to be believed and preserving it is a mark of deep respect.

I think the human body from inside is perhaps the most beautiful thing I have ever seen.
dimartiste - 07/05/09 14:12
Yes I am interested. Thanks for the great info. My friends went in NY and said it was a strange yet amazing experience to intellectual realize how our body works and yet see what is just beneath the skin. I haven't decided when to go yet.
theecarey - 07/05/09 13:53
hahaha, (e:paul) at "Jenks, isn't that everyday like your own personal bodyworld"

I too has heard about the controversy surrounding the origins of bodies used in the exhibits.From my understanding, "BodyWorld" apparently has consenting donors/people who pay to have their bodies used for this exhibit and other medical needs. Also medical universities donate.

However there is a similar, but unrelated exhibit called, "The Bodies...The Exhibition" which seems to have an unofficial track record for using non-consenting prisoner bodies/questionable sources. They use unclaimed bodies but the sources are undocumented?

wiki on "Bodies...The Exhibition":
:::link:::

NPR discussing both exhibits in an article titled, "Origins of Exhibited Cadavers Questioned"
:::link:::
paul - 07/05/09 12:54
Jenks, isn't that everyday like your own personal bodyworld.

On a more serious note when we went the las Vegas showing of it everyone said it was horrible of us to go because they shut down the show for using non-consenting prisoner bodies form china? I heard it even got shut down in SF and New York because of that. Maybe its all rumors as I honestly have no substantiated any of it.
jenks - 07/05/09 09:13
dammit! It comes to buffalo as soon as I leave?! I've been wanting to see it for years now.
mrmike - 07/05/09 08:47
yep, got a ticket already

07/02/2009 03:26 #49172

sushi...summer plans..pending adventures
Category: adventure
Just thinking over some summer plans.. such as which events, activities, foods, drinks, and so on that I feel more motivated to pursue. My schedule has changed a bit, and I feel like I am reacquainting myself among the living. Over nights.. sucked (for lack of better word). Anyway, it is now July and the time can slow way down.

Speaking of down.. I'm down for some sushi.

almost anywhere..

but have any of you been to Ichiban?

It is on Sheridan, I believe.

I rarely remember the name as it is supposed to be said as I usually call it, "itchy bum" whenever I hear it.

I was there once, sort of recently. (e:pyrcedgrrl) took me there at the conclusion of a long thought out decision. 'Sushi Therapy'' is always a welcome gesture. Of course, I would like to go back under more relaxed conditions.

I used to go to Kunis (of course) and some others whose names allude me. Oh, and Koi, at the Casino (good friends, good times, damn, so much time has passed). Havent been there in a few years though.

Last several months had left me grabbing food when and where I could. Not a whole lot of dining out at interesting and yummy places. Overall, I prefer to cook or cook with someone, or have someone have me over for dinner.. but finding somewhere to eat is always welcome too.

ok, enough about food!

So summer stuff planned so far:

  • I've got a camp out that I am attending at the end of the month at a friends country property. I need to double check my camping supplies!

  • There are some TAT concerts I'd like to go to, along with ones at Art Park and Molsen Canal Series (is that the name?), that is now in Lockport. I think Our Lady Peace is this Friday. I need to write this stuff down.

  • There are a few movies.. not a fan of going to the theater, but heading to the drive-in once or twice will be fun, along with a couple if IMAX flicks (Harry Potter- finally!) (NOT Transformers!) I have an Ice Age movie ticket that I hope to use soon.

  • Dali &, Bodyworld.. and getting reacquainted with area museums and galleries. Especially free ones :)

  • swimming, hiking, biking, long walks, the usual active fare- preferably a few planned outings with friends, but I often head out solo due to my spontaneous & adventurous nature.

  • photography jaunts

  • chilled out good times with friends, old and new.

  • camping again.. but somewhere such as Green Lake out in Syracuse (and maybe Allegany, Letchworth, or Stoney Brook come late summer, early fall- love camping in the fall, but lets not think that far ahead!).

  • visit my families country home in Esopus then head to the city home for a couple of days. Need some H&H bagels!

  • maybe a spontaneous jaunt for bagels (or whatever-i'm not bagel obsessed, just fun to go some distance for something kind of random- doesn't have to be food, either. mmm) before then. I enjoy destination-less drives more than a pre determined one, but I am open to anything.

  • might have a garage sale.. but only one day, two at the most. I keep saying this, but it is not something I am enthusiastic to organize.

What else should be on my list?

der.. (e:ladycroft) and (e:rory) shindig! WOOOO can't wait!


theecarey - 07/04/09 01:42
Ooh that is funny, after I wrote my comment, I saw in a search for H&H that they went up on in Manhattan on Broadway and 80th in 1972, and I thought, well, that doesn't fit for your dads time line. Either way, I'm still jealous, haha. Especially now that we determined that he grew up next to the 'original' :D
jenks - 07/03/09 22:36
What town, in the city? Dad grew up in Lake Ronkonkoma (on long island)- I guess they've expanded?! :)

Or better yet, I can just say he grew up next to the ORIGINAL H&H. ;)
theecarey - 07/03/09 16:55
That is the same and only one, (e:jenks). On Broadway (and 80th?). I'm insanely jealous of your dad now :) My fam lives a couple blocks down, so between a cute little diner and H&H, that is all I really want to head to for food. Ok, and whatever looks really good at Zabar's grocery.

oh yeh, and there is a plant somewhere that is used for shipping H&H bagels. A nice (and pricey) option, but really, fresh at any time of the day or night is just amazing.
jenks - 07/03/09 09:01
H&H bagels?! My dad grew up literally NEXT DOOR to H&H. Or is there more than one?
metalpeter - 07/02/09 19:54
Where to start:

The Sushi thing I kinda feel like I read about that on facebook, not sure I read so much both here and there and on other sites.

The Drive in, from what I have heard if you want to see an entire movie it isn't a good place to go, HA, or maybe that is the point.

Our Lady Peace should be amazing hope you have a great time when ever it is, I think Queensryche is playing some place for free also. I can't get to either place so I'm not going but hope you have a lot of fun out and about this summer.

I hope you have a great time at (e:ladycroft)'s and (e:rory)'s (maybe I will see you there, still working on that).
mrmike - 07/02/09 09:55
It all sounds great. I should make plans a little better, but I think I'm in a making it up as I go mojo.

06/25/2009 19:04 #49083

In Threes.. RIP
Ed McMahon 6-23-09

Farrah Fawcet 6-25-09

Michael Jackson 6-25-09


metalpeter - 06/25/09 19:33
I just want to say that, the in 3's has all ways bothered me. Here is the reason why. Not that I read the death notices but if you pick up a paper you see all the people who died. Here is another example some of those award shows will have a part where they have a tribute to people who died during the year or since the last show, and there are all ways people who I have never heard of and some that I never herd they died. What that tells me is that it isn't that 3 people died, it is that 3 famous people who are big enough names to report died. I don't know what that says about how the News reports things but I think it says something.
tinypliny - 06/25/09 19:28
86, 62, 50. None of them made it to 100... At least two had cancer.

06/24/2009 18:27 #49068

Happy fourth day of summer
isn't is nice?!!


My garden/yard is a mess, having been fully neglected last year..

My aim is to keep it simple, otherwise it can become a huge project. Although I love gardening, landscaping and getting all sorts of dirty, I'm just way behind and don't want to start all that now. Just clean up the area of weeds, do some edging, trim the bushes and fuss a little with my porch planter box, and that is about it. Create a little nice spot to relax-read-eat-drinks-have friends over- in the evening. Time can slow way down now..

Since I had to/have to/want to do something, I finally got my tomatoes, green peppers, basil, mint and parsley planted. Basil smells so insanely good to me. I put them all in containers. That is a very small fraction of what I originally wanted to plant, but at least I will have that, right? I entered this season rather disorganized, with so many changes that have taken place over the past few months. I suppose it wouldn't take much to get everything I want, even if not how I want (I had some grand over enthusiastic planting plans) and just spend some time getting up to speed, so to speak. Either way, I hope everything takes- being a little behind on planting and all.

I usually have dill regrowth each year, I have to poke through the weeds to see if there are any stragglers. Hope so.. if not, maybe I can still find some to plant, if it isn't too late to do so?

Where can I still find some big/fat headed marigolds?
image

I poked my head into Lowes and Home Depot, but didn't see any. I just want a simple low maintenance flower for my porch window box this year. And as low on the desirable totem pole these flowers tend to be, I love them. And I love how easy they are to reseed and start new growth.

I aim to use the mint in some fabulous drink I concoct. I don't know what it will be yet, but it needs to be something I can make a pitcher of and enjoy immensely during these hot days. Maybe something with green tea? add some lavender syrup? I don't know! any ideas?
As always, much of the mint will be used at some point for mojitos- mMmmmmm. I planted catnip too, hopefully I wont mistakenly use that again, haha. woops!

and if anyone is desiring some spearmint, I have a jungle of it. Seriously, the stuff is insane. I HIGHLY recommend growing it in a container, to keep it, well.. contained.


I've also been obsessed with the color orange. Ever obsess over a color? I used to be that way with purple, many years ago but have gotten away from it a lot. Red (blue based- like cranberry) is a constant. I think this orange obsession is fairly new. Maybe orange is the new red? I don't know what it is, but I am very attracted to it lately- like I have to have it. Does that make sense?
It doesn't seem to matter what it is --not clothing, though- at least not yet. Or hair. Or make up. Or fake tans. haha. No..more like in other little ways. A recent pedicure nail color selection lead me to orange-y toes. I'm actively looking for a perfect bright orange bag/purse- seen a couple that I have liked, but don't want to lay down much money on one as I tend to get bored of my bags very very quickly. And flowers.. I had seen a gorgeous selection of orange dahlias at Niagara Produce a month ago or so, and I was tempted to buy some- but didn't as I was spending my money on Moms day flowers and such. I still think about them, and might need to see where I can find some again.

see? so pretty!
image

image

Now it is time for a walk! enjoy the evening, peeps! :)


(all pics snagged from google images)
pyrcedgrrl - 06/25/09 09:15
Don't trust Carey's "mint", you're bound to end up with a catnip mojito. >:(
heidi - 06/24/09 22:01
I love mint... mint leaves in fresh lemonade is one of my favs. I had a Thai curry last weekend with lots of mint that was really yummy. Mint juleps are on the top of my "drinks to try" list after the Lake Effect ice cream we had at Allentown West.

:::link:::