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Brackish Original Feather Bow Ties, Charleston, S.C. |
“It was many and many a year ago, in a kingdom by the sea..." Edgar Allan Poe
01 December 2013
Originalitie!
30 November 2013
Raining Yellow Leaves
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Ginkgo Biloba tree, Charles Town Landing, S.C. |
We did a quick walk around Charles Town Landing this morning and I happened to catch the Ginkgo trees in full glory.
I hope everyone is having a good holiday weekend. I think I hear some cold turkey sandwiches calling my name.
29 November 2013
Thanksgivings past
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Thanksgiving Day picnic - 2011 |
27 November 2013
Black Friday 2008
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Black Friday, King St., Charleston, S.C. 2008 |
On what should be the busiest shopping day of the year, Black Friday
in 2008 I went for my usual morning walk marching briskly down King
St. There was more activity than usual and a line of locksmith vans
from all over the tri-county. Vandals had
gone up and down the main shopping street squirting superglue into the
door locks of over seventy stores and businesses.
Shop workers were on
the sidewalk calling business owners and managers and doing their best
to get in to get business started. What a mess.
To my knowledge they never solved the crime.
I almost forgot about it until I got an email from a
former Charleston Police Department officer turned author. He had been
here when it happened and let his imagination run with the story.His book is Outspoken and is available on Amazon and covers a lot of familiar territory.
Abraham Lincoln Jenkins is a teenage vandal, social activist, and aspiring revolutionary, but with only four months left until his graduation from high school, Abraham’s lifelong dream of attending Harvard College is put in jeopardy when he learns that he is still in need of two core credit hours in Physical Education. Unfortunately for Abraham, the only available spaces in a P.E. class are as a cadet in the Army’s JROTC program! Told almost exclusively through Abraham’s one-sided complaint letters, OUTSPOKEN is the natural result when the War on Terror collides with the War on Christmas.
OUTSPOKEN was inspired by the 2008 “Black Friday” vandalism on lower King Street, where the suspect remains at large!
Author: James Vachowski
26 November 2013
Rare Mermaid Breeding Grounds
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Mt. Pleasant Antique Mall, 708 Johnnie Dodds Blvd., Mt. Pleasant, S.C. |
Holy cow, they had some great stuff. It is called the Mt
Pleasant Mall and is where the old Sofa Super Store was. I walked around
and almost
escaped without doing further damage to my wallet until I spotted a hand
carved wooden mermaid in the far back corner. My baby.
When I downsized to a smaller house to my current rancher I got rid of almost everything. I needed to add some character to my nest and I had found my character. With her tail fin at my shoulders I crammed her into my little car and got her safely home. I've found a stone to set her on and secured her to my wall. I grin every time I see her.
When I downsized to a smaller house to my current rancher I got rid of almost everything. I needed to add some character to my nest and I had found my character. With her tail fin at my shoulders I crammed her into my little car and got her safely home. I've found a stone to set her on and secured her to my wall. I grin every time I see her.
Last Saturday I went back to check on a little serving tray I had resisted. I wandered back to see what they put in my mermaid's spot and low and behold her original hand carved wooden twin was there! How amazing is that?
Then I saw another one! Identical mermaid triplets. How often can that happen? Alert the marine biologists.
Luckily I still like my gal although I am not hosting a sibling reunion. I do think MY triplet is the most attractive, don't you?
25 November 2013
Being Thankful
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Thanksgiving, Charleston, S.C. |
I've been a bit of a blogging slacker lately folks. Feel free to join me on Facebook if you are on it. Sometimes I tend to toss up a quick photo there.
24 November 2013
Best Friend Homecoming
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Best Friend, Charleston, S.C. |
CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) — Charleston's second best friend is coming home.
An 85-year-old replica of the Best Friend of Charleston, the first train in the nation to offer regularly scheduled passenger service, returns to Charleston this weekend. The replica of the engine, tender and two passenger cars, based on the original plans, will be installed in a new free city museum in one of five old railroad sheds dating to the 1800s. The new museum is the last of the buildings to be refurbished during the past two decades; the first was the nearby city Visitor Center that opened back in 1991.
The replica "is an important part of Charleston history," Mayor Joseph P. Riley Jr. said Tuesday. "We're very proud to install it in a historically appropriate and a very accessible place."
The steam-powered Best Friend of Charleston made its inaugural trip along a 6-mile stretch of track reaching northwest from Charleston on Christmas Day, 1830. The Charleston Courier reported at the time that "the one hundred and forty-one persons flew on the wings of wind at the speed of fifteen to twenty-five miles per hour, annihilating time and space."The "Wings of Wind". How lovely that sounds.Welcome home!
22 November 2013
Health Care Heroes Banquet - 2013
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Health Care Heroes Banquet, Charleston, S.C. |
Normally I am the one who writes nominations for these events and this time my friend Colleen Cooney surprised me. Thanks folks! I felt very fortunate.
20 November 2013
Reflections of - Colonial Lake
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Colonial Lake, Charleston, S.C. |
Don't let me forget that I need to be at a meeting in town at 8:30 a.m. I'm afraid my car will head West Ashley on auto pilot.
19 November 2013
Sharing the Lowcountry Link Love
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Charleston, S.C. |
An article on Why Charleston is America's Favorite City by Christian L. Wright for Conde Naste Traveler.
Gorgeous photography at Lowcounty Scenes by Photographer Mic Smith available for purchase directly from his web site. We know it is beautiful here but Mic sure knows how to capture a mood in a photo. Wow.
Keep up with what is going on in the Lowcounty at Holy City Sinner - We're Good Guys but we can't be Good Every Night.
Charleston Grit. Bold. Smart. Local. Now. Charleston Magazine's blogging neighborhood! Check it out. They even use some of my photos. What incredible taste :)!
Now, I got home too late to walk so I need to get on my rowing machine and row across the lake in my living room. I'll soon be able to challenge you all to arm wrestling matches. Behave, kids!
17 November 2013
Things are looking up in Charleston
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Charleston, S.C. |
Lazy morning so far so I'll need to leap into action shortly to make up for it. I've been catching up on old Sunday editions of the New York Times and watching recorded Daily Show and Stephen Colbert programs with my tea and toast. Have a good weekend kids!
16 November 2013
Seeing Yellow - Charleston
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Meeting St., Charleston, S.C. |
Poison ivy has left me afraid to garden so the leaves are piling up in my own yard. I have a very wooded lot and may soon need to claw my way out of a leaf pile :). Have a good weekend, kids!
Edit: Cassia Tree
14 November 2013
From the files - Chasing the Black Cabs of Charleston
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Chalmers St., Charleston, S.C. |
I took so many pictures of them that the owners at that time gave me use of a cab for a morning and let me instruct the driver where to park while I jumped out to get a picture. I steered him all the way out to Folly Beach to get my favorite shots.
I don't see the cabs as much anymore. The company was sold and I believe they are primarily used for weddings and events now. Too bad.
12 November 2013
Photography and the American Civil War
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Charleston, S.C. |
I was pleased to get a last minute invitation to the Art of Healing lecture at the Gibbes Museum this evening. The current show is Photography and the American Civil War. Cardiologist Dr. Jeb Hallet led the talk and the panel included Dr. Walter Edgar and a current combat surgeon. It was fascinating.
There is another talk on Thursday with Lieutenant Governor Glenn McConnell and the photography show continues and is well worth a visit. I got to town a little early and it was fitting to take this evening's photo of the battery where the war began. I was a good girl and didn't take any pictures during the talk.
Photography and the American Civil War
Tuesday, November 12, 6pm
- A conversation with combat surgeon Dr. Darrin Clouse (Colonel, United States Air Force and Professor of Surgery, Univ California, Davis) and South Carolina historian Dr. Walter Edgar, moderated by Dr. Jeb Hallett, Roper St. Francis surgeon. Panelist will explore the connection between art and healing as it relates to the impact of war captured through the camera's lens.
11 November 2013
Cards for Heroes
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Cards for Heroes, Charleston, S.C. |
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