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Not My Department (Wordless Wednesday) and Words for Wednesday

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Linking up with Wordless Wednesday, BeThere2Day, and Sandee at Comedy Plus.     






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Words for Wednesday was begun by Delores and has become a moveable feast of word or picture or music prompts to encourage us to write stories, poems, or whatever strikes our fancy.    


This month, the prompts are being provided by yours truly.      


Please feel free to use some of the prompts, none of them, or all of them as you see fit.  The point is to get the creative juices flowing in whatever manner your muse leads you.



This week's prompts are


employee

chaos

decide

water

immune

buffet


and / or the following archaic or seldom used words


prepence (premeditated or planned in advance)

pelf (wealth, often dishonestly acquired; rubbish or trash)

coxcomb (a dandy; a vain or conceited man)



Charlotte/Mother Owl has chosen luminous bright red as the color/colour of the month, which may also be used as a prompt.



In later years, upon telling the story she would say it was "malice PREPENCE," and then laugh.


He'd just shake his head and say, "I'm not in charge of the weather."


Their annual camping trip was left up to his boss to DECIDE when was the right time in the autumn for his week off.  


(He also got a week off in spring, and then it was her turn to decide where they were going this time.  It worked for them.)


It had to be before the holidays started but after the weather was more likely to be cool, so generally landed in late October or early November.


That was the year it landed wrong.


The place was perfect.  It had WATER, so there could be fishing and boating he loved.  It had hiking trails, so she could go exploring.


That particular week, it also had CHAOS, definitely not in the original specs.


There aren't many bad storms in the area he'd chosen at that particular time of year, but no place where you go camping, except perhaps the Sahara Desert, is IMMUNE from the occasional storm.


They arrived and got set up, and within 24 hours the warnings had come in.  A storm was brewing, everyone leave, the park was being closed.


With everyone else who lived too far away to get home before the weather broke, they descended upon the nearest small town to seek shelter.


Two of the 3 local guesthouses (a term they always used when telling the story, tongues planted firmly in cheek) already had "No Vacancy" signs, and they hied themselves to the third.


Upon driving into the parking lot, they were singularly unimpressed with the general PELF and air of unkemptness.


Upon opening the lobby door and seeing the Luminous Bright Red carpet in the lobby which made it look like a house of ill repute as they were wont to say, and the desk EMPLOYEE, an obvious COXCOMB with his nose much higher in the air over the influx of business than it had any right to be, they came close to making the decision to sleep in their car.  


When they saw their room, they almost wished they had made the decision to sleep in the car, but the storm was really too bad for that.  In for a penny, in for a pound and they instead brought in some of their camping gear, setting their tent ground cover over the bed and sleeping in their sleeping bags, leaving everything else they owned in the vehicle.  They didn't want to touch anything in the place.


Yes, they would tell you, it was that bad.


This establishment boasted a BUFFET breakfast which consisted of several cheap boxes of cold cereal and almost room temperature milk, with vintage bowls of unknown cleanliness, and they passed, instead dashing to the car between the heavier downpours to grab some of the food they'd brought, mostly the trail mix and anything else they could eat without heating or utensils.


The moment the storm slacked enough, they headed home, choosing to spend the rest of the week on a "staycation."


Camping in their own back yard, they later decided, was the best thing about the whole week.  And you don't even have to use a camp toilet.



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Today is:


Black Ribbon Day -- Estonia; Latvia; Lithuania


European Day of Remembrance for Victims of Stalinism and Nazism -- European Union


Flag Day -- Ukraine


Great Feast of the Netjeru (all gods and goddesses) -- Ancient Egyptian Calendar (date approximate)


Health Unit Coordinator Day -- US National Association of Health Unit Coordinators, Inc.www.nahuc.org


International Day for the Remembrance of the Slave Trade and Its Abolition


National Spongecake Day


Nemeseia -- Ancient Greek Calendar (local festival to the goddess Nemesis, date approximate)


Ride the Wind Day -- internet generated, a day to get out and ride with the wind in your hair, in whatever transport you choose, or fly a kite


Sento Kuyo -- Nenbutsu-Ji Temple, Adashino, Kyoto, Japan (memorial service for graves that no longer have families to tend them; through tomorrow)


St. Eoghan's Day (Patron of Derry, Ireland)


St. Rose of Lima's Day (Patron of embroiderers, florists, gardeners, needle workers, people ridiculed for piety; The Americas/The New World, especially Central and South America, Latin America, Peru, and the West Indies; Lima, Peru; Philippines, Santa Rosa, CA, US; Villareal Samar, Philippines; against vanity)


Valentino Memorial Service -- Hollywood Cathedral Museum, Hollywood Forever Cemetary, Los Angeles, CA, US (annually since 1927, a memorial service celebrating Rudolph Valentino on the anniversary of his death)


Vertumnalia -- Ancient Roman Calendar (in honor of Vertumnus and Pomona)


Vulcanalia -- Ancient Roman Calendar (festival to the god of fire)



Birthdays Today:


Kobe Bryant, 1978

Jay Mohr, 1970

River Phoenix, 1970

Queen Noor of Jordan, 1951

Rick Springfield, 1949

Shelley Long, 1949

Antonia Novello, 1944

Patricia McBride, 1942

Richard Sanders, 1940

Tony Bill, 1940

Barbara Eden, 1934

Sonny Jurgensen, 1934

Mark Russel, 1932

Vera Miles, 1930

Gene Kelly, 1912

Edgar Lee Masters, 1868

Navy Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry, 1785

Louis XVI, 1754



Debuting/Premiering Today:


"She Loves You"(Beatles single release date), 1963

"The Bat"(Mystery play), 1930

"Gasoline Alley"(as a daily comic strip), 1919



Today in History:


On the feast of Vulcan, Roman god of fire, Mt. Vesuvius begins to rumble, 79

Visigoths storm Rome, 410

Edward I executes William Wallace, Scottish patriot, for high treason, 1305

French explorer Jacques Cartier lands near Quebec City in his third voyage to Canada, 1541

Rabbi Joseph Caro completes his commentary of Tur Code, 1542

The St. Bartholomew's Day massacre of Huguenots in Paris begins, 1572

The first one-way streets open in London, 1617

Steamship service begins on the Great Lakes, 1818

Great Britain abolishes slavery in the colonies, 700,000 slaves are freed, 1833

Automobile tire chain is patented, 1904

The World Council of Churches is formed, 1948

Lunar Orbiter I takes the first picture of Earth from the Moon's orbit, 1966

Bryan Allan, in a Gossamer Condor, completes the first man-powered flight of one mile, 1977

Soviet dancer Alexander Godunov defects to the US, 1979

Hans Tiedge, top counter-spy of West Germany, defects to East Germany, 1985

Hungary opens the Iron Curtain and allows thousands of East Germans through to West Germany, 1989

West Germany and East Germany announce that they will unite on Oct. 3, 1990

The remains of Anastasia and Alexei, rumored to have survived the 1917 assassination of the Russian Czar and his family, are found, 2007

Heavy winds knock down the Anne Frank tree in Amsterdam, breaking off approximately one meter above the ground, 2010

Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi is overthrown, 2011

Lance Armstrong, the seven-time Tour de France winner, announces he will not contest the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency charges of doping, a result of which will include being stripped of all of his tour de France victories, 2012

Libya's ruins of Cyrene, a World Heritage Site near Shahhat, is damaged by real estate developers, 2013

Destruction by ISIS of the first century AD temple of Baalshamin in the ancient ruins of Palmyra is confirmed by Syrian officials, 2015

The world's driest place, the Atacama desert in Chile, blooms after an unexpected rainfall, 2017

Russia launches the first floating nuclear power station, the Akademik Lomonosov, from the port of Murmansk, 2019

Video evidence shows a Seychelles giant tortoise hunting and eating a bird, a new behavioral observation, as tortoises were previously thought to be herbivores, 2021


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