On 4 Feb 2005 12:49:15 -0800, "basskisser" wrote:
JohnH wrote:
On 4 Feb 2005 04:56:07 -0800, "basskisser"
wrote:
JohnH wrote:
On 3 Feb 2005 12:33:00 -0800, "basskisser"
wrote:
JohnH wrote:
On 2 Feb 2005 06:54:11 -0800, "basskisser"
wrote:
JohnH wrote:
On 1 Feb 2005 21:03:49 -0800, wrote:
February 2.
Halfway between the winter solstice and the spring equinox.
Celebrated for thousands of years by most advanced
religious
traditions.
Has been westernized as St. Brigid's Day: St Brigid was
supposedly
the
daughter or employee of the inkeeper in Bethlehem.
When Mary and Joseph arrived, the hotel was full and the
well
had
gone
dry. The innkeeper left Brigid in charge, with strict
instructions
not
to sell any portion of the meager food and water reserves
to
anybody.
According to legend, Brigid obeyed the innkeeper and did
not
sell
them
any food or drink-- but she gave freely of her own personal
loaf
of
bread and flask of drinking water. The legend says that
after
the
holy
family left to go to the stable, Brigid noticed that her
loaf
of
bread,
which had been almost entirely consumed by Mary and Joseph
was
fully
restored, and her water flask was brimming with cool, clear
water.
Charming tale.
Also previously known as Candlemass, marking the end of
Mary's
ritual
purification period following the birth of Jesus.
Also previously known as a heck of an excuse to party,
while
recognizing any number of polytheistic dieties. :-)
Now popularly known as "Groundhog Day." Any of the old
stories
are
more
interesting than some tradition about a burrowing animal
and a
shadow.
Ought to be a boating holiday. It's halfway between
solstice
and
equinox, boating weather and longer daylight hours are
returning
to
the
northern latitudes.
Today would be a beautiful day to be on the Chesapeake Bay.
There
isn't a cloud in the sky, the winds are calm, and the
temperature
is
a
brisk 30 F.
But, Punxsutawney Bill, our local groundhog, says, "Six more
weeks!"
John H
Hehe...would you mean PHIL???
Could be Phil. Hearing loss makes the distinguishing of 'ph'
and
'b'
sounds difficult sometimes.
John H
He's been around for years and years, you've never READ about
him?
No. I've never really gotten interested in reading a whole lot
about
a
ground hog. I did shoot one once. We had it for dinner. Roasted
it.
I suppose there are a lot of people who do a lot of reading about
ground hogs. It's unfortunate that I've never been interested in
them.
I did collect stamps though. Have you ever done that. There are a
lot
of stamps with ships on them. I guess that'd be boating related,
huh?
You *are* a wealth of information.
You have never, ever read anything in the newspaper concerning Phil?
Do
you READ the newspaper? Hell, I've heard of him and have never lived
even remotely close to Punxatauny. He's even mentioned in the
newspapers in FL every year.
Is this *really* all that important to you? Don't you think the
publication of erroneous, biased, scare-tactics articles by the
Washington Post, especially those that are supposedly 'well
researched
and verified' is a more serious topic?
Do you ever read the newspaper? Do you believe everything you read?
John H
I know simple things are hard for you to grasp, perhaps a result of
your heavy alcohol use, but just because (if) something is retracted,
has NO bearing on whether the article and it's contents were researched
and verified.
Oh. So if something that has been 'verified' is found to be untrue,
it's still 'verified'.
I suppose I *did* miss out in my education. Or, maybe it is a result
of heavy alcohol use. Oh, wait a minute...you don't engage in childish
insults.
John H
On the 'PocoLoco' out of Deale, MD,
on the beautiful Chesapeake Bay!
"Divide each difficulty into as many parts as is feasible and necessary to resolve it."
Rene Descartes