Miscellaneous Tid-bits & Update for March 11, 2015

March 11, 2015

 

Update: March 12 5:52 p.m.: They are definitely spraying again late this afternoon in the East Valley. Those clouds resembling shark gills are all over.  ~ BP

As I watch REAL clouds drift over the morning sun, I realize how much I missed them. I believe today is day 11, give or take, as I didn’t write down the first chemtrail-free day. I have been watching the few puffy, white clouds in our otherwise deep blue Arizona skies lately and wondering if we are really aerosol-free or if they are using the “invisible” spray now, but I doubt it. It’s wonderful to see the real clouds again, and the weather has been heavenly.

Sunday was my birthday and I enjoyed a whole day with my boys, breakfast made just for me, the dog park, lunch on a favourite dappled-shade patio, an iced mocha coffee, the vet to get Mica’s glands expressed—and a shock!  He’s now 96 pounds of boisterousness.

A nap followed, then a BBQ… and hubby broke down and bought me a new multimedia keyboard because when he handed down his old PC, my keyboard wouldn’t fit the new USB connection. Doesn’t take much to make me happy.

We have a few submissions for the new flat earth banner on Starship Earth (thank you!), and I look forward to narrowing down the entries. Lightworker29501 will be a judge, too, and do the tailoring necessary so the new image fits seamlessly with the theme. The contest for new flat earth images ends at midnight tonight, March 11th.

The current theme in my life seems to be about ‘behindedness’. I just don’t have much time for reading emails, websites and blogs, keeping up with the news and posting these days. The next art exhibition looms this weekend and Hubby came back from Iceland with some great new images and needs help.

The Northern Lights

Sadly, the helicopter flight over the volcano was too late to yield anything much. Eyjafjallajokull was dozing off with just a couple of red, lava eyes remaining and the geologists declared it “asleep” again directly afterward. The auroras, on the other hand, were spectacular!

BTW, the expert opinion on that bizarre snapshot I took with the bird-like shadow and the orb is, as I knew it would be, “lens flare”. But is that analysis similar to the natives of the south Pacific islands overlooking Captain Cook’s ships? Their presence didn’t register in the tribe members’ brains because ships had never been part of their experience. Maybe the anomalies were caused by sun on dust on the iPad lens… or not.

As voluminous lists get longer rather than shorter, I must get back to activities that allow me to strike a few things off. I also have a list of articles I want to post—just as soon as I get the chance. It’s time to prepare for the next load of Canadian visitors and the weeds show no mercy. Maybe a goat rather than a dog would have been a good idea. Rent-A-Goat?  ~ BP