Isolated Blurt Thread

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cloudy said:
What kind? *drool*


Raspberry and boysenberry. :) I have enough berries left to do a batch of raspberry-peach, and probably a mixed berry (tomorrow though, I'm too tired today!). I have some marionberries, but not sure if it's enough for a batch all by itself. We'll see.

Wanna trade?
 
McKenna said:
Raspberry and boysenberry. :) I have enough berries left to do a batch of raspberry-peach, and probably a mixed berry (tomorrow though, I'm too tired today!). I have some marionberries, but not sure if it's enough for a batch all by itself. We'll see.

Wanna trade?

ooh, yum! I could probably do blackberries and peach....
 
The most beautiful sunsets I have ever seen occurred when I was a child in Wyoming and Yellowstone burned in '88. Nearly 1.5 million acres went up in flame, literally, which left enough soot, ash, and smoke in the air to facilitate the most brilliant and amazing sunsets I've ever seen. Sunets with colors from blood red to firebrand orange. Now, nearly twenty years later, the ecosystem has recovered in Yellowstone, new forests are growing, and life is prospering.

There have been so many wildfires this season out West, the sunset tonight almost -but not quite- reached that macabre beauty of those I witnessed in 1988. How something can be so breathtakingly beautiful, whose very existence is dependent on vast amounts of destruction, is fascinating, to say the least. What parallels can be drawn from this? I've no idea. I've heard veterans speak of the eerie beauty of shells and rockets witnessed from a distance. How odd. How beautiful the destruction.
 
McKenna said:
The most beautiful sunsets I have ever seen occurred when I was a child in Wyoming and Yellowstone burned in '88. Nearly 1.5 million acres went up in flame, literally, which left enough soot, ash, and smoke in the air to facilitate the most brilliant and amazing sunsets I've ever seen. Sunets with colors from blood red to firebrand orange. Now, nearly twenty years later, the ecosystem has recovered in Yellowstone, new forests are growing, and life is prospering.

There have been so many wildfires this season out West, the sunset tonight almost -but not quite- reached that macabre beauty of those I witnessed in 1988. How something can be so breathtakingly beautiful, whose very existence is dependent on vast amounts of destruction, is fascinating, to say the least. What parallels can be drawn from this? I've no idea. I've heard veterans speak of the eerie beauty of shells and rockets witnessed from a distance. How odd. How beautiful the destruction.
Good one. :) :rose: :kiss:
 
Belegon said:
*sigh* and too far away for me to take advantage of you...

;)

I'm not quite beligerant yet (I know I didn't spell that right), but I'm heading there.
 
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