I love Thomas Dambo’s art and hope you do, too.

Fishing for Answers! for Fibbing Friday

Fishing with dad and my sisters, 1951 or ’52

For Fibbing Friday this week, the task at hand was:

Mish mash this week, so your suggestions please!

1. What is a cannery? An attitude readjustment retreat for pessimists.
2. What is a rookery? The part of a zoo with kangaroos in it.
3. What is hooky? A very small fish hook.
4. What is pinochle?  A fist held against private parts when you need to urinate so badly that you need help in not doing so.
5. What is a ricochet? A very small portion of rice.
6. What is hubbub? The primary bubble in the middle of a cluster of bubbles.
7. What is a podcast? A baited hook cast into the exact center of a group of fish.
8. What is a wingnut? An acrobat that performs on the outside of a plane while it is flying!!!!
9. What is a switchback? Someone who has had two sex-change operations.
10. What is a cacophony? A small child who pretends he hasn’t pooped his pants.

“Tools and the Man” for CFFC

No one loved tools more than my husband Bob, but I must admit that I have a love of them as well. Included in these photos is my most treasured object from my father–his hand-forged hammer with leather-ringed handle. It was the only one of his possessions I asked for when he died and I still use it. So, her it is along with other tools used by either Bob, my husband, or me.  And after the tools, the man himself, applying paper to fishing basket to use as a lampshade for one of his homemade lamps.  (I must admit that I don’t remember where I took the first photo. It was not in any of our studios, but I love it and the ingenuity of the tool storage.

For CFFC, the prompt is “Tools and Equipment.”

“Story Time at the Library,” for RDP

When I saw the prompt word was magnanimous,
I couldn’t resist repeating this old poem I wrote long ago:

Story Time at the Library

Cluster here around me. Cross Your legs. Open your mind.
I’m going to tell you stories of a slightly silly kind.

Or lie back on the carpet, close your eyes and try to see
all the varied images that are going to be.

We’ll be crossing to another land where we can be whatever
each of us may want to be: beautiful, brave or clever.

Light the bulbs above your head. Imagine what you hear.
For the next half hour, you’l be “there” not “here.”

In imagination’s magic land, all your dreams come true.
Climb aboard my story train and I’ll share it with you.

And now as then, the crowd, being both clever and magnanimous,
decided they’d all come along. The voting was unanimous.

And so the children climbed aboard to hear a tale or two—
precisely the same stories in the past I heard from you.

(For my first storytellers, Mom & Dad.)

The Prompt for RDP is Magnanimous

My Father in Me for dVerse Poets

My Father in Me

After those first two dreams, you never returned again, Dad. So now, more than 50 years after your death, I am instead looking for you within myself. I find you every time I retell an often-told tale adding embellishments as you did, or in my obsession with other people’s babies and that yearning to hold every one I see. I remember your holding the babies of tourists in Mack’s Cafe or Ferns “so their folks could finish their meals.” You loved the tiny ones most. As you explained it, “I like them mewling and puking in my arms!”

I recall all the abandoned baby animals you brought into our lives: a mole, a magpie, numerous baby rabbits, once a puppy held up in a cattle sales ring and tossed up to you in the third row, tiny yellow kittens and the best of all–Zippy, the tiny raccoon found in its nest after hunters killed its mother.

So it is you I see in me as I remember the wild cat from the redwoods shyly watching, then lured by food, who moved into my jewelry studio and gave birth, leaving us with three tiny blue Burmese kittens. And I count on my fingers eleven different puppies and six kittens  adopted in the past 25 years since moving to Mexico–found in the street, by the lake, dumped in a cardboard box beside my garage.  Is it you, father, delivering these tiny lost ones to me, knowing the you in me that has as much need of them as they have of me?

It was my father
guiding the wild cat to me,
three kittens within.

Click on photos to enlarge and read captions.

For dVerse Poets

The Numbers Game #114. Please Play Along. Mar 2, 2026

Welcome to “The Numbers Game #114. Today’s number is 236. To play along, go to your  photos file folder and type the number 236 into the search bar. Then post a selection of the photos you find that include that number and post a link to your blog in my Numbers Game blog of the day. If instead of numbers, you have changed the identifiers of all your photos into words, pick a word or words to use instead, and show us a variety of photos that contain that word in the titleThis prompt will repeat each Monday with a new number. If you want to play along, please put a link to your blog in comments below. 

Click on photos to enlarge.

 

A Chill Wind

A Chill Wind

The ghosts of leaves take shelter in the edges of my garden,
scraps settling in hidden piles, as if asking the pardon
of roses trembling on the vine, left to face the frost
that is surely coming, and they know at what a cost.
Stepping around rocks that have encroached upon the path,
I pick one last remaining rose to save it from the wrath
of winter that approaches day by day by day
to ice the flesh of growing things and crumble them away.

 

For the Sunday Whirl Wordle the prompt words are: shelter settle rose rocks edge step messy flesh left ghost tremble scrap. (Yes.. I admit I left “messy” out. You can take 8.3333 points off my score!)

If you are defining Mexico by last week’s events, please watch this!!!

Wyo Theater, Sheridan Wyoming, for Cellpic Sunday

For Cellpic Sunday, Johnbo showed us a wonderful old movie theater and relayed his memories of it. Here is a photo of another  beloved old movie theater transformed into a performance and events halls in Sheridan, Wyoming, and below is the  comment I left on Johnbo’s post:

A finely captured photo that roused great memories of back when movies and radios were the only entertainment offered media-wise. Our little far-less-grand theater in Murdo, South Dakora, showed the same movie twice a week on Saturday and Sunday. 25 cents a seat. White River, 23 miles away, charged 10 cents a seat and had movies on Wednesdays, as well. Draper, 7 miles away, a different same movie on Saturdays and Sundays, offering indulgent parents or teens over 16 who had their license and folks willing to lend a car the chance to see three different movies a week. Not often done, but the only entertainment offered other than church, ballgames and “Uing Main Street.” Sound familiar?

P.S. I never lived in Sheridan, Wyoming, but had three best college friends who lived there and a sister who married a guy from there and lived there for 30 years or more, so I’ve visited it often.

 

“Santiago” for Last on the Card, February, 2026

Santiago (4 years old) came to my house to help his folks deliver an invitation for their church wedding. They had a civil marriage 4 or 5 years ago and have been saving up ever since for a church wedding and big reception. He was having lots of fun taking photos of my house. Notice the tongue!

And here is more of the story, added the next day:

Here are photos taken by budding photographer Santiago, sent to me this morning by his dad, along with a photo of him taken by his dad after they left my house : https://photos.app.goo.gl/zPH8FMpYFgL668sXA

And here is a photo I took of the happy family. Emilia is holding the beautiful invitation to their wedding.

For Brian’s Last on the Card prompt