Wordless Wednesday – allow your photo(s) to tell the story.
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Linda Schaub
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Linda Schaub
- Mr. & Mrs. Cardinal (and a pal) partake of peanuts at the Park. #Wordless Wednesday #A favorite vintage ornament.
- Lean, mean and green.
- Which way is Santa Claus? #Wordless Wednesday #Remember those days?
- When there’s wicked wind, wildflowers and …
- Before and after a cup of Joe. #Wordless Wednesday #Sadly, we don’t ALL rise and shine!
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Archives
FIFTY FAVORITE PARK PHOTOS
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- Parker noshin’ nuts
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- Fox Squirrel
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- Black Squirrel
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- Parker, my Park cutie!
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- Pekin Duck
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- Mallard Hybrid Duck
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- Midnight munchin’ nuts
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- Mute Swan
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- Goslings
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- Mama Robin
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- Seagulls on ice floe
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- Great Blue Heron
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- Parker chowin’ down
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- Mallard Duck
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- Northern Cardinal
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- Great Blue Heron (“Harry”) fishing for shad
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- Parker: shameless begging
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- Viceroy Butterfly
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- Great Blue Heron
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- American Goldfinch
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- Seagull
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- Robin baby (not fledged yet)
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- Mallard Ducks
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- Robins almost ready to fledge
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- Parker angling for peanuts
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- Robin fledgling
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- Parker making a point that he wants peanuts
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- Parker smells peanuts
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- Parker with a peanut
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- Red-Winged Blackbird
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- Seagull
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- Red-Bellied Woodpecker
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- Pekin Duck
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- Starling
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- Canada Geese family
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- Canada Goose and goslings
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- Red-Winged Blackbird
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- Parker says candy is dandy.
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- Tiger Swallowtail Butterfly
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- American Goldfinch
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- Hunny Bunny
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- Parker looking for peanuts
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- The pier just past sunrise
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- Mute Swan
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- Parker in the snow
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- Parker and a treat
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- Great Blue Heron
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- Me and my shadow (a/k/a Parker)
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- Fox Squirrel
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- Seagull
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- Canada Goose
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- Mallard Ducks
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- Mute Swan
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- Fox Squirrel – Parker
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- Northern Cardinal
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BADGES










I can’t tell! It looks small enough to navigate the terrain safely, though.
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I wasn’t sure either Barbara – the fact that it paused right there made me add that line. My mom got a cactus spine in her forearm from leaning over her cactus garden and that spine embedded into her skin. We tried to get it out with tweezers, but had to go to the doctor to risk infection.
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Perhaps walking between the spikes?
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Kind of tippytoeing through? It was difficult to tell and I was going to poke it to see, but thought better of it. My mom got a cactus spine embedded in her forearm once – she was short and bending over the countertop and sink to water it on the windowsill. We had to go to the doctor to have it removed as tweezers did not work – yikes. It was a cactus like that one.
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If it is impaled, it’s cactus 😂
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I really couldn’t tell Brian – I thought to poke it but might have made it worse. My mom got a cactus spine embedded in her forearm once from a cactus just like this one – she was short and bending over the countertop/sink to water it on the windowsill. We had to go to the doctor to have it removed as tweezers did not work – yikes.
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Being stabbed by a cactus is one of the worst
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Yes, they are just like a needle. It got red and inflamed so we knew she had to get it removed professionally.
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Cooling off inside of the cactus?
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That could be Dave – in the shade of a spine?!
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Ouch!
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Yes! My mom got one of these spines in her forearm from her own cactus and she had to go to the doctor to have it removed. It was too far embedded to remove it with tweezers.
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Hard to tell! Interesting macro shot, regardless. 👌
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I thought to poke it but … I might have made it worse if it was only resting. 🙂 Thank you Debbie.
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This needs background music, like Elvis Presley’s “Stuck On You”. 🙂
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Yes, not as pretty of a sight as Elvis would sing about JP. 🙂 Now that will be an earworm and a lovely earworm at that. Last night I had many earworms from the Bobby Sherman songs that were being played all day as he had passed away yesterday. He was my first bubblegum music “crush” back in the day and he was almost 82 years old … that sure made me feel old.
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Tiptoeing through the cactus!
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Very gingerly at that!!
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Miss Linda…………………………………………Hey remember this one for around Halloween!……….Yikes!!!
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Yes, it was a bit scary looking Ann Marie!
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Oh my, don’t stand near that with your enemy!
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Ha ha – yes. Lethal spines! My mom got a cactus spine just like this one embedded in her forearm once many years ago. She was short and bending over the countertop and sink to water the plant on the windowsill and the spine got into her arm. We had to go to the doctor to have it removed as tweezers did not work – yikes.
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Oh wow, that must’ve been so painful!
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It looked painful – it just kind of slid in like a nurse doing a blood draw and there was no way I could get it with tweezers as it was embedded – yikes!
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Is that bug a firefly? I hope he/she is not impaled!
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I thought it was a firefly too Laurie. I did a Google Image search and got two different answers so had to be generic and put “bug”. It looked like it was impaled on that spine. Many years ago my mom got a cactus spine embedded in her forearm. It was a cactus like that one. She was very short and bending over the countertop and sink to water the cactus on the windowsill. We had to go to the doctor to have it removed as tweezers did not work – yikes.
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Oh, your poor mom!
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I know! Just a freak kind of accident really. The cacti were in two long dishes and it was awkward to lift the dishes down as she was so short, so after that, I moved them down to the countertop for her when they needed water.
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Oh my, I hope not! That would hurt.
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Yes, my mom got a cactus spine embedded in her forearm once – she got “stabbed” while watering her cactus garden and she had to go to the doctor to have it removed.
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Ouch Indeed!
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I know – those spines are horrible. My mom got one in her forearm years ago. It was embedded too deep and she had to go get it removed as tweezers did not work.
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I wouldn’t want to run into that! When we were on vacation, I bought prickly pear cactus jelly and honey. The jelly was really good, I haven’t tried the honey yet.
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Wow, I didn’t know they made such a thing with the prickly pear cactus – that is interesting. The hair salon where I used to go was very small and owned by a husband and wife and their salon was done in a western theme. So out front he had prickly pear cactus plants everywhere. I first went in the Summer and figured he just pulled them out and kept them inside over the Winter, but when I visited for an appointment in Winter, the first thing I noticed were those cacti under the snow and I figured they’d die, but they were back in Spring. I later learned they survive Winter without an issue which surprised me. So, if you like the honey too, you could grow them in your garden Diane.
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Haha I have a small cactus that my MIL gave me and it’s been in my flower bed for quite a few years. It has flowered twice since I planted it.
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That’s amazing – I mean since we DO get Winter weather. Did it survive this past brutal Winter weather?
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Looks like it dug a hole into the cactus and lives there!
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It might be living on the juice and cactus plant too. Another blogger said when she was out west, she bought some prickly pear jelly and honey. She liked the jelly (not tasted the honey yet), so it might be living its best life in that tiny spot there Terri!
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Cacti are home to countless critters!
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All probably navigating their way around the spines just fine!
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It does look impaled
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I thought so too Yvette – others think it is just snugged down into the cactus. It’s difficult to imagine it is a comfy place to stay though. 🙂
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🙂
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Perfect micron photography . Wonderful Cactus.
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Thank you Raj, glad you liked the photos.
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Welcome, Linda ☺️
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Sweet pics, Linda!
On a visit to Tucson, Arizona, the poet E.E. Cummings had a mystical experience while walking in the desert where he encountered a strange cactus-like plant: he touched one spine and jumped “spiritually 40 miles.” His journals are full of references to “le bon Dieu” and frequent prayers for help in his creative life (such as “Bon Dieu! may I some day do something truly great. amen.”).
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Thank you Tom! That’s a fun story and yes touching one of those big spines, especially out in the desert where they grow so big and tall, would sure make you jump back while uttering a few choice words. My mom used to have cactus gardens on the kitchen windowsill. She was short and so on tiptoes she would have to reach over the counter and sink to water them and a spine from one of the cacti got embedded in her forearm. She didn’t see it right away as it slid right into her arm like a needle would. She said she felt the little stab. Later that night she asked me to get the tweezers to help her remove it and we couldn’t – it was already embedded in her forearm and we needed to go to the doctor to have it removed before an infection set in.
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Poor guy, can’t free himself, needs help!
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Yes, I agree with you Story Times … I almost plucked it out but then it might have done more damage if I snagged him on a spine – more than just “ouch” – likely death!
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The Loggerhead Strike impales its victims on cactus spikes, barb wire etc.
Nasty habit.
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I had to Google that … NOT nice bird behavior at all! Can’t it just bite down hard on it with its beak? Yikes!
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strange but true!
Not a social type I suppose.
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Nope, trying to keep a low profile!
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Hi Linda, me again, and just wanted to say I could not leave a comment on the arctophile post – so I will leave it here.
I loved your bear collection and it seemed to be in excellent condition – the bears have been well cared for. I loved the pillow with the “don’t feed the bears, they’re stuffed already”
And thanks for linking that post on my recent short fiction because it fit so well!!
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It just dawned on me you wouldn’t be able to leave a comment as I closed comments. Both Shelley (Quaint Revival) and Brian (Bushboy) have suggested closing comments to eliminate SPAM and it has helped as I had a lot of SPAM comments, 50-100 daily sometimes. I’m glad to give you a smile about bears. Who could not smile when you see their cute faces? I loved the video of Queen Elizabeth and Paddington Bear at Buckingham Palace during the Queen’s Jubilee festivities. It was so done so cleverly.
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Hi – I have comments close on my posts too – and it does reduce spam!
sometimes I will go in and open up comments to keep a post active, but mostly have them close after 60 days (I think it is 60 days).
and speaking of Paddington Bear – in our holiday ornaments box, we had a cute little Paddington stuffy as an ornament.
I think I still have it even tho we did get rid of 75% of the ornaments.
The other bear ornament I have is one from a college roommate, kara, who I only knew one semester – she got pregnant and dropped out (and we were at a Christian college so it was more of a big deal). I did not know her that much but she was classy and very nice – and I still have her bear – with some kind of glue that looks like honey dripping on it – so cute
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They both sound very cute Yvette. I thought the Paddington video was very cute. I didn’t realize you could open comments on a specific post. That is interesting to know. I got a ton of SPAM and would do it a couple of times a day because there was so much and I was concerned I’d miss a legitimate comment in the pages and pages of SPAM! After I was writing a a reply or comment to you Friday, I lost my internet. We had a substation where an animal chewed on wires on a circuit board, the main wire broke earlier in the day and there was a tiny blip in the power, but the back-up circuit which powers a large area, not just my city, but neighboring cities, was affected. Then the backup wire gave out as it was so hot and the grid was already taxed. So, no power for internet either.
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wow – that animal caused a lot of a rippling effect with their chewing!
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Isn’t that amazing Yvette? This has happened before, so they should really put something there to deter them. I still have an AT&T landline and I’ve had to have AT&T come out three times to repair the outside sheath of the phone cable; this is the cable strung from pole to pole like the electrical lines are, not just the lines that connect to your house. The squirrels like something in the material so they chew it. My boss and also a fellow blogger both had squirrels get into their vehicle engine compartment and chew the wires because those wires have a soy-based coating and the squirrels like the taste. The squirrels did not get electrocuted but in each case, the vehicle had to be towed and it cost several thousand dollars to be repaired!
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ouch – that is terrible about the squirrels causing all that damge – and it sure must have been annoying and so costly
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I hope they come up with a fix before another poor critter wanders into a substation hungry.
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yes – I hope so too – and maybe fiber optic (below ground) will come soon
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I’ve been hearing good things about fiber optics as to high speed internet connections. Um, I was around when we had dial-up. I never had a computer at home until after Y2K as I didn’t want problems as they predicted loads of problems as we rolled over to 2000 and nothing happened in the end.
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🙂🙂
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I think it is smart enough to have figured out a way to get a free drink.
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I’ll bet you are right Barbara. It was probably an optical illusion that made it appear like the cactus “got it” … my mom had a cactus like this one with the long spines and she was very short and leaning over the countertop and sink at an awkward angle to water the plants on the windowsill and she got a cactus spine in her forearm and had to go to the doctor as it slid right under her skin and I couldn’t remove it with tweezers! We knew it would get infected if we didn’t get it removed soon. File that tale under “weird and wacky” for sure!
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