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Trader Joe's Pumpkin Decorating Contest (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, Alex J. Cavanaugh is providing the prompts which will be posted by Elephant's Child.    


This week's prompts are:


  • Cumquat
  • Blubber
  • Quest
  • Limestone
  • Furry
  • Purple  

And/or 


  • Buttress
  • Mammoth
  • Fedora
  • Harsh
  • Snickerdoodle
  • Overlord 


Charlotte (MotherOwl)  has given us Mint Green as the colour of the month.  If you can also incorporate it into your stories she (and I) will be grateful.



"Watcha doin'?"


"Playin' a game on my game box."


"Is he wearing a FURRY PURPLE FEDORA?"


"You mean the hat?  Yeah, he's wearin' a hat."


"I question his taste in hats, that thing is hideous."


"Don't be so HARSH, he's the OVERLORD."


"What are you trying to do in this game?"


"I'm on a QUEST in the LIMESTONE pit.  I have to get my Mint Green MAMMOTH to stand in the entrance to BUTTRESS it up and train him not to move until I find the 3 things the overlord wants, some whale BLUBBER, a CUMQUAT, and a SNICKERDOODLE, and take them back to him."


"And what do you get if you complete this task?"


"A power up and a new quest."


"I'll never quite understand these games."



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Today is:


Abet and Aid Punsters Day -- promoted by Punsters Unlimited, which seems to know better than to host a website


Cook Something Bold & Pungent Day -- especially for those who have had to close up the house for winter, we need to create a beautiful aroma for the house; sponsored by Wellcat Holidays


Dunce Day -- death anniversary of John Duns Scotus (one of the three most important philosopher-theologians of the Middle Ages, he was called the "Subtle Doctor" but his enemies turned his name into the word we use today for someone who isn't too bright)


Feast of the Four Crowned Martyrs (Patrons of cattle, masons, sculptors, stone cutters; against fever)


Festival of the Mania -- Ancient Roman Calendar (to placate the Manes)


Fuigo Matsuri -- Kyoto City, Japan (Bellows Festival, Shinto festival in honor of Inari, the kitchen hearth goddess)


I Hate to Cook Day -- internet generated, and probably started by someone who wanted an excuse to go out to dinner!


National Cappuccino Day


National Harvey Wallbanger Day


National Parents as Teachers Day -- US


Pohnpei Constitution Day -- Pohnpei, Federated States of Micronesia


Saints, Doctors, Missionaries, and Martyr's Day -- Church of England


Synaxis of the Archangel Michael and the other Bodiless Powers of Heaven -- Eastern Orthodox Church


World Urbanism Day/World Town Planning Day


X-Ray Discovery Day / World Radiography Day -- commemorating the discovery, in 1895, of x-rays



Anniversaries Today:


Montana becomes 41st US State, 1889

Mount Holyoke Seminary for Women is founded, 1837 (considered by many to be the first true college for women in the US)

Opening of the Louvre, 1793



Birthdays Today:


Tara Reid, 1975

Masashi Kishimoto, 1974

Parker Posey, 1968

Courtney Thorne-Smith, 1967

Gordon Ramsay, 1966

Leif Garrett, 1961

Rickie Lee Jones, 1954

Alfre Woodard, 1953

Mary Hart, 1951

Bonnie Raitt, 1949

Virna Lisi, 1937

Morley Safer, 1931

Patti Page, 1927

Christiaan Barnard, 1922

Esther Rolle, 1920

Martha Gellhorn, 1908

Margaret Mitchell, 1900

Hermann Rorschach, 1884

Milton Bradley, 1836

Edmond Halley, 1656



Debuting/Premiering Today:


"Six Degrees of Separation"(Guare drama), 1990

"Night and Day"(Stoppard play), 1978

"Days of our Lives"(TV), 1965

"Life With Father"(Play), 1939

Sister Carrie(Publication date), 1900

"Ruy Blas"(Victor Hugo drama), 1838



Today in History:


Emperor Theodosius declares Christianity to be the state religion, 392

Uprising against Piero de' Medici in Florence, Italy, 1494

First meeting of Montezuma and Hernando Cortez in Tenochtitlan, Mexico, 1519

The Bodleian Library at Oxford University is opened to the public, 1602

Benjamin Franklin opens the first US library, in Philadelphia, PA, 1731

Elijah Craig, of Bourbon, Kentucky, US, first distills Bourbon whiskey from corn, 1789

Sarah Bernhardt makes her US debut at NY's Booth Theater, 1880

The New Orleans general strike begins, uniting black and white American trade unionists in a successful four-day general strike action for the first time, 1892

Wilhelm Roentgen of Germany discovers X-rays, 1895

The New Testament Gospels are translated into Demotic Greek (as opposed to the Koine Greek of ancient texts), resulting in bloody clashes in Athens, 1901

The first Washington state elections in which women could vote take place, 1910

Operation Grapple X, Round C1: Britain conducts its first successful hydrogen bomb test over Kiritimati in the Pacific, 1957

Former Massachusetts Attorney General Edward Brooke becomes the first African American elected to the United States Senate, 1966

Manolis Andronikos discovers the tomb of Philip II of Macedon (Alexander the Great's father), 1977

The UN Security Council demands that Saddam Hussein disarm or face serious consequences, 2002

Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao releases pictures of the moon's Sinus Iridium, or Bay of Rainbows, taken during the Chang e-2 lunar mission, 2010

The potentially hazardous asteroid 2005 YU55 passed 0.85 lunar distances from Earth (about 324,600 kilometres or 201,700 miles), 2011

Mikhail Gorbachev warns that tensions between America and Russia over Ukraine have put the world on the brink of a new Cold War, 2014

Louvre Abu Dhabi is inaugurated, the largest art museum on the Arabian peninsula, 2017

Brazilian surfer Rodrigo Koxa breaks the world record for surfing the biggest-ever wave at 24.4m at Nazaré, Portugal, 2017

Richard Branson's Virgin Hyperloop in Las Vegas, Nevada, US, runs its first test of a high-speed levitating pod system to carry people and cargo, 2020

Archaeologists announce the most significant find of Etruscan and Roman bronze statues in the past 50 years while excavating an ancient spa in San Casciano dei Bagni, Italy, 2022


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