Monday, June 20, 2011

Subconscious






Had it not been for getting a new phone I would have never known about this gem of a sultry, steamy, scintillating song by Samantha James...absolutely perfect for the Summer Solstice. At the point that a melody or lyrics captures my interest, often times I will listen to it over and over again, taking in all the melodic flavors, layer upon layer...and THIS one is absolutely 'creme de la creme.' Combined with dreamy, soulmate-descriptive lyrics, James resonates the fine-tuned vibrational harmonics that crescendo between two great souls, and places them deep inside one's heart in true poetic form. My gosh, this is all-around one heck of a compelling dance track for your spirit!


This song is rated FIVE 'OUT-OF-THIS-WORLD' STARS

(By the way, the entire album sounds absolutely professionally delicious and is something that is well worth the price...check out 'Waves of Change' for another mesmerizing experience)

Listen to the 'Subconscious' track here:

http://youtu.be/twUEZSgwpOw

'Subconscious' can be found, appropriately, on the OM Records label:

http://www.om-records.com/artists/72-samantha-james

Picture Credit: Samantha James/OM Records

Thursday, June 16, 2011

In plain sight









Look closely and you will find a Killdeer perched discreetly on a nest, in a median, in the middle of a busy strip mall, no less! It amazes me how these clever birds select not only high-traffic areas but ones directly on the ground. At first I wanted to post a sign so that their abode wouldn't be accidentally stepped on, but instead I just drive by every day to see if their little cozy habitat is still intact, and it is. At first I left some grains/seeds, but then with investigation found out that these are gourmet avian types who prefer insects. I decided to leave well enough alone and just observe, which was a better idea altogether. They come up with an ingenious way to divert anyone or anything that violates 'their space', anyway, which you can read about in a previous post from 2005 on this blog. Yes, it took 6 years before I saw another Killdeer! Both the male and female actively participate in the incubation of their young. Miracles of wonder exist all around us all the time, if we would but take the time to look to really see them...


Here's a video of these interesting little guys;


©2011 Debbie Ballard







Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Commencement



As I watched my youngest receive a diploma for a second discipline in college, my memory wafted back to my own high school graduation of 40 years ago. I couldn’t help thinking that ‘commencement’ is, indeed, an appropriate ceremonial label because it can be looked upon as either an ending or as a beginning, depending on one’s personal perspective. All those who have come this far to earn this honor are, at this moment, filled with exhilarating hopes and aspirations for their own respective futures. They have worked diligently to get to this point and they deserve our recognition and heartfelt congratulations for their splendid achievements.
There’s just one thing that’s really bothering me: the challenges this 2011 graduating class faces are nothing short of ENORMOUS.

Brave optimism, nevertheless, has to face this harsh reality of the world we live in head-on. Good, wishful intentions aside, this is going to take a lot of doggone hard work, ingenuity and resourcefulness. Sadly, I don’t think this will be easy as my dear graduate faces:

Unemployment hovering near double digits for the young and inexperienced (as well as, the older and experienced)

The dilemma of quality, affordable health care and the diminishing of needed pharmaceuticals that are produced

Catastrophic and deadly new microbes that are the result of mass production or chemical overuse without any oversight or inspection

Financial instability causing mass foreclosures of home ownership or businesses that fail (if they even had a chance to begin in the first place)

A crumbling, infra-structure in need of maintenance 2 years ago, let alone now

Increased costs for the essentials of daily living such as food and fuel

Severe reductions in necessary and altruistic services such as education, parks and recreation, mass transit, postal delivery, garbage collection, etc., etc., etc.

Catastrophic natural disasters of epidemic proportions: floods, fires, massive storms of destruction causing untold amounts of costs

Wars within our social structures we cannot afford and wars outside of our borders we cannot afford

Can the graduating class of 2011 stand up to all these severe challenges? They have no choice! Despite the current shaky circumstances, I dare predict that by going through these very impositions together, they will be stimulated into a new ‘call to action’…the foundation of which becomes rock-solid. I am undeniably confident in the belief of my graduate’s capability to capture the elusive wind of opportunity, and to pilot the course of life’s sailboat directly onto the much yearned-for and desired shore of success.

©2011 Debbie Ballard

Sunday, June 12, 2011

It's all about the bean...






When you think about it, it’s all about the proverbial bean. Starting from it’s elegant genetic beginnings, to it’s pure environmental sustenance, to it’s careful curative roasting and finally to the manner in which it is brewed… all these steps encompass the journey that must be traveled in order for coffee to be presented for your mere indulgence.


For an everyday brew, my choice has long been Seattle’s Best Coffee, but this by no means is to say it is ‘ordinary.’ If you should desire supremely smooth flavor coupled with the perfect aromatic experience, then this ‘cup of Joe’ is for you. The marriage of these two sensations creates the sophisticated ambiance, of indeed, the perfect cup. It’s not caffeine that is producing such stimuli, but rather just one darn good cup of java! You could correctly call this the quintessential ‘ nectar of the Gods’ for the common man.


Speaking of the divine, when life calls for the extraordinary, I make a direct bee-line for the 52% Ephemere dark chocolate mocha at my local Dilettante café. If bliss could manifest itself, the point at which this exquisite elixir first contacts your taste buds would be the catalyst. Pure, unadulterated seduction it surely is. Caution: do not imbibe this concoction unless you want to experience uncomparable rapturous perfection that gently swirls your spirit high in to the ethereal realms.


Although I loved the smell of fresh-brewed percolated coffee in the morning when I was young, it wasn’t until I was the ripe old age of 28 that I actually partook of the beverage. A sipping pleasure located somewhere between conversation and inspiration is relatively the norm now. I do like to think that as I have matured and gained wisdom over time, so too, has my aquired taste developed in to the wondrous domain of novice coffee aficionado that I have become today. The genie is now out of the magic lamp. Simple pleasures are, most often times, the very best.



©2011 Debbie Ballard

Wednesday, June 01, 2011

Wow, time flies






Here's a picture of me from 30 years ago...the wind in my hair, salt air in my nostrils, holding on for dear life to the railing during my first ferry ride across the Puget Sound...can you see the seagull gracefully floating behind and the Space Needle and Seattle skyline in the distance?


Even though 3 decades have passed, this plum has not turned in to a dried up old prune...mainly due to my odd sense of humor, I think. When you live the life that I lead it's better to laugh. I recently attended an informative 4-day astrological conference. During one of the lectures from a most beloved sage of a instructor, in order to demonstrate a point he blew bubbles...yep, the kind you were absolutely thrilled about when you were 5. These were special bubbles, though, because they refused to dissipate and lingered all around the room. Liquid plastic air sacs, anyone?



Later, while doing some research on Twitter, sheer providence brought me to a picture of those bubbles that had been taken by another attendee unbeknown to me. Included in the picture was the lower half of my body sitting attentively in a chair. I recognized myself because my feet were dangling in the sitting position because of my shorter stature. That should have been the focus, but unfortunately I was aghast that it was my bubble butt that would make me famous across all of Twitterdom and the world-wide web. Alas, I am now known for my substantial derriere throughout the entire known virtual universe. Nothing is forever? You wanna make a bet? And not even digitally enhanced! Move over Jennifer Lopez. Gives new meaning to that wonderful classical astrological book 'Born On A Rotten Day'...


©2011 Debbie Ballard

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Argh and a half






It's a day after the Scorpionic full moon, 31 years after the Mt. St. Helen's volcanic eruption and the third day in which 4 mini-earthquakes (all less than 3.0) shook Des Moines, WA where I traverse every day. No wonder I'm rattled! I can't write an article that I wish to, because suddenly I don't exist after being a writer for 2 years on another place on the internet. Grrrrr...after 4 emails to them about the problem over the last 3 days with no response I'm starting to feel the heat rise up inside my spirit. Generally, since getting older, I have a long fuse, but this one just got significantly shortened and is just a strike away from a full burn. Can you see my canines starting to peak forth from my grimace? Got any boulders that you need broken up by pure brute force? Yep, I'm feeling a customer service call coming on @%*$&#Z^+!!!!!!=translates in to "I'm not a happy camper!"...ya think? My TV is turning off and on by itself...perfect ending to a perfect day...:)


©2011 Debbie Ballard

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Never forget that....









May 13th marks the 35th anniversary of the sad passing of someone quite near and dear to me. Although it's difficult for me to believe that that much time has gone by, it has also prompted me to take action to write about memories that have been swirling around inside my mind for the last few weeks. I've been trying to analyze why certain cyclic patterns have repeated themselves over and over again in my life. Take, for instance, a simple 5-year interval pattern that left significant lasting impressions imprinted on to my psyche:

I don't remember anything of specific importance at the age of 3 in 1956 that transpired, other than my mother telling me I was knocked out cold by a 2x4 board with a piece of metal on the end by a wild neighbor kid. To those of you who know me, that probably explains everything about my personality right there, correct? Perry Como's smooth voice at Christmastime made everything feel cozy and warm.

In 1961, at the ripe old age of 8, I remember trying to emulate either a Catholic nun or a native American Indian in my lone imaginative play of the time, complete with costuming, scenarios and props. Ah, decisions, decisions. I was inspired by the painting hanging in my bedroom of a bareback-riding Indian chief, adorned in nothing more than an eagle-feathered headdress and loincloth, lifting his arms in prayer to the Great Spirit while sitting on his stallion at the edge of a cliff. Can't get much better than that for inspiration, can ya? At this time I also started getting interested in the newspaper and television news...Huntley & Brinkley deadpan, no less...hence my love of non-fiction started to develop.

By the time I turned 13 in 1966 I had started to bloom a little. My picture was in the local paper because of winning a violin scholarship; oddly enough I wasn't afraid of playing my solo in front of a few judges, let alone the entire population of my school at the time. In my quest to delve deeper into the local college campus library for it's numerous interesting resources (and it's numerous interesting male college students), I also was privileged to attend many concerts there. One that was profound was on July 2nd where college students were lighting fireworks INSIDE the auditorium while the surreal band known as 'Jefferson Airplane' played our ears out...Grace Slick's voice was really something back then. That year was filled with sounds from Cream to the Byrds to East Indian ragas to Yehudi Menuhin which started spurning me to investigate many different musical genres. Also, at this tender age, I started to explore the world of parapsychology in earnest and low-and-behold, my lifelong love affair with astrology was born.

Five years later (1971) having freshly graduated from high school, I procured one of the happiest employment experiences I've ever had as the Assistant Children's Librarian in my local Carnegie-type library building. When we moved in to a new building the signs didn't arrive in time for the grand opening, so I volunteered to make them all, along with some unique artwork that I later got commissions for. The parties we were invited to were nothing short of fabulous in those days. Believe me, librarians are livelier than you think! As if that wasn't enough excitement, I moved in to my own over-priced furnished apartment (I was one of the first in my group of friends to do so); complete with an adopted stray cat. I also proudly owned a father-refurbished, black, 1956 Volkswagon bug with a small rear window, a flywheel for an accelerator pedal and no heater during the middle of winter in Wisconsin. That was an exhilirating experience, to say the least.

In 1976, after the untimely passing of one of the most influential people of my life (the not extremely tall, dark-eyed and very handsome young Capricornian man of Armenian descent), I fled the only area I had ever known to be home. I wouldn't return until 20 years later and that was to visit his gravesite. He had introduced me to Led Zeppelin and like his spirit, some melodies haunt me to this day. With my two blond-haired, blue-eyed children in tow I transplanted in to other states, other dimensions, and ultimately in to a totally different life after a disaster of a first marriage. I had survived domestic violence, Hurricane Belle, seeing Gino Vannelli live in San Antonio, Lovin' Spoonful in Central Park of NYC and the spectacular Bicentennial celebration of our country on the Jersey shore of Barnegat Light.

I disco danced my way right out of the 70s and in to the beginning of 1981 having begun a lifelong medical career with a nationwide laboratory conglomerate as a supervisor, no less. At age 28, I looked and felt my best...and was fortunate to meet husband #2 very early in the year. I had my very first ferry ride across Puget Sound; seeing the skyline of the Seattle waterfront at night with all the lights glimmering was breathtaking. After a short, whirlwind courtship, a famous waterfall with an Indian name witnessed the vows spoken over water between man and wife. This was the year that I finally got to travel to Victoria, Canada (by water, as well), which I absolutely adore to this day. I also stopped smoking in this year shortly after getting married, and it was a good thing because a little over a year later I gave birth to my last child.

Stepping forward in time, by 1986 I again felt the impetus of motivational change. This time it centered around being able to raise and nurture my very talented child in combination with seizing the opportunity of getting a higher education for myself. This is nothing unusual as I'm usually always juggling many things at the same time. I started out by thinking that I'd use this education as a stepping stone to further my clinical career for future potential, but ended up finding out I was happier and my talents actually were best utilized as a 'glorified paper pusher' and consequently, I have been in the administrative end of the medical field ever since. It's good to find your career niche at some point in your life, even if it's later! This is the year when camping in Washington, travel to the Oregon Coast and staying in B&Bs became a steady passion.

By 1991 I had slowly climbed the mountain of entrepreneurial success, with all its rich experiences, in learning how to be in business for myself for many years. I had never looked back after that. By this time I was contracting my skills out and tutoring others (a pre-cursor to being an instructor, later). That part of me that sought to be independent was equally at ease enough to pat myself on the back when there was success, as well as, pull myself up by my bootstraps when there was not. I wouldn't trade that feeling of freedom for anything.

No doubt about it, 1996 was the pinnacle year of destiny for me. My auditory senses were ablaze with the melodic genius of Yanni and Enigma, both of which spurned new realms of imagination. Just as one chapter of my life up until that point was once again turned upside down; a whole, entirely new, exciting chapter emerged from my soul almost simultaneously. All these things were made possible almost entirely by connection to the internet (and by no connection to the internet, as well). It was my year to reach out and touch the rest of the world. Already knowing Spanish and French, I added a few words of Japanese and Dutch to my repetoire by sheer association, alone. This was the third year of hosting a Japanese exchange student. I also "met" a most profoundly intelligent Maltese mentor and was very fortunate to have learned what I could from him regarding psychic telepathy before his untimely death that took him before the new millenium dawned. Exuding forth from the ashes of yet another marriage funeral pyre, I transformed in to the little white dove within the beholding eye of the one who knows from another country, the Netherlands. All things miraculous, magical, magnificent and momentous happened that year...as in 'soulmate'...some of which I'm still holding my breath about because it's all too precious to release out as an exhale; the experience will remain as part of my spirit, forever. I would live my entire life over again for a mere minute encounter with that person again...beyond, beyond...

After the horrific 9-1-1 experience of 2001, (and being through 4 earthquakes by this time) I took a good, hard look at not waiting for the perfect time for anything to occur, as we never know when or if we will be granted another tomorrow in which to do so. I was becomming increasingly tech savy and had my own business website for at least a year by now. I was a featured speaker here and was included in psychic fairs there. After deliberately making wait for 3 years, near the end of the year I finally consented to marry the man with 6 planets in Taurus who was amazed by me. He was a Major in the Civil War. Now that may sound odd, but I believe in reincarnation and by that definition alone he definitely is/was/will be his quintessential self which is highly compatible to yours truly. 'Three' became the charm.

The path of 2006 was strewn with medical obstacles, but also with nuggets of new wisdom. As each stone was carefully overturned, new pathways of tapping in to the infinite were revealed unto me in the realm of parapsychology and remote viewing. It was a year of set-backs, of learning new protocols and technology and of receiving/imparting sweet forgiveness. It was a year after a 6-month trek across 7 states and 2 provinces; feeling free as the flora and fauna I had discovered around me, therein. Travel is absolutely delicious and addicting. So much so, that flying to Las Vegas for a week of fun just couldn't be resisted. It was a year in which merely hearing someone's particular voice was worth more to me than gold and to be a voice with my own internet radio program was an honor in and of itself. It was the year of dance/trance/techno/house music once again filling my spirit with new and wondrous sounds.

So now, I've come to the most recent point in time in which I can look back over these specific 5-year cycles and see how they have shaped me in to who I am today in 2011. Five years ago I attended my first astrological conference and will do so again this year (after 45 years of perpetual study of the subject). I have now lived enough decades to be able to see many things clearly, in hindsight. It allows me to reminisce (and yes pine for) those days of the past that we'd all like to relive over and over again if given half the chance. It also encourages me to prepare for whatever the future holds. All those who have graced my life, if only for a moment in time, shall not go unnoticed or unloved. I shall not merely be a silent, stoic, sassy sage in my twilight years...rather..."rage, rage against the dying of the light"...

http://www.poets.org/viewmedia.php/prmMID/15377

©2011 Debbie Ballard

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Look out below!



I wait with bated breath as dawn breaks over Italia...what say you Jim Berkland and Cal Orey? Has the famed late predictor of earthquakes, one Signore Raffaele Bendandi, been able to reach out from beyond the grave to once again, shake up humanity? Or shall we all be hearing a faint 'mea culpa' in our ears as his spirit passes by on May 12th? One thing is certain; he absolutely knew how to rattle the cage of the press more than 30 years after his death.

http://astrologyofatrainwreck.astrologydetective.com/

http://theendtimesarehere.com/tag/raffaele-bendandi/

Chow for now, bambino piccolino...

©2011 Debbie Ballard

Friday, April 29, 2011

Congratulations Wills & Kate


Ah, I remember 30 years ago arising very early in the morning only to be trans-fixed by the glowing television screen for hours watching the nuptials of Prince Charles and his lovely, young bride, Diana. Heck, I was a relatively young bride myself, having only been married since March of that year (to #2). My eyes were barely open at times to watch this event unfold because of the beckoning of slumber, but I did behold a true celebration wedding that was visually stunning.

Their ill-fated relationship I often likened to my own marriage. In that same year I had known my groom for only 6 weeks before we wed, had a child almost a year later to the day, and we similarly grew apart around the same time that the royals' marriage started to crumble. I guess when Diana died, the life I had once known perished, as well. But in my case I was lucky enough to have a metamorphosis in to a new & exciting chapter of my existence. Diana's new love with Dodi, from another country, had just been abruptly cut short by a cruel fate...whereas mine was just beginning to blossom with the one first known to me as 'D.D.', from another country.

I'm very hopeful for the future of this young, vibrant, yet mature couple...the Duke & Duchess. I'm also impressed with how Wills has incorporated the memory of his beloved Mother to be intertwined with what this modern-day couple wanted for their own special day. I'm sure many Brits are also very hopeful that the legacy of the 'people's princess' Diana, will once again grace their country in the personage of her first born. Kate is a beautiful, sweetheart of a lady and I think she really brings out the best in Wills from what I can discern (and he seems to genuinely love her as well)...VIVA L'AMOR!

A toast to their future as man and wife! The most magnificent remembrance I will take away from this historic experience is the pealing of the cathedral bells that once enthralled me for hours when I visited England, myself. Bliss, pure bliss.

An interesting article on the Royal wedding:

http://www.cosmicchronicle.com/2011/04/lifting-veil-on-royal-wedding-nothing.html

©2011 Debbie Ballard

Tuesday, April 05, 2011

Coming to a town near you...

You might want to find out where your local fallout shelters are and keep a bag packed with important stuff for your survival. April 6th is when the jetstream is supposed to carry radioactive particulates over the Western half of N. America...at the speed of a jet, mind you. Some of these chemical particles will dissipate within 8 days, but others have a shelf life that is longer than the lifespan of a human being. These particulates may be carried via rain or snow up to approximately 7500 feet (this time); that's half way up Mt. Rainier. I don't think you can necessarily 'outrun' this threat if it does materialize; it all has to do with 'where the wind will blow.' Mother nature at her best or worst, as the case may be. Of course, it's supposed to rain in the Seattle area on April 6th...lucky, eh? Might be a good idea to stay indoors! Invest in duct tape! Neptune (who just traversed in to Pisces on April 4th) happens to rule poisons. The Japanese Albacore are swimming our way. Great, huh? Pluto? Well, I don't even want to go there, right now. And to think, as a supervisor back in 1981 I was worried about a radioactive isotope spill in the laboratory I was employed in. A simple 'wipe test' indicated I wasn't going to glow in the dark, thank goodness. But, now, 30 years later, I'm not so confident. This spill is just a wee bit larger. It was nice knowing you. http://www.civildefensemuseum.com/shelsupp.html Hey, I wonder if the lady in this picture is included with the shelter supply kit. I have an idea! Just make a radiation suit out of 'Peeps'...they, like cockroaches, can survive anything! http://youtu.be/-Cj3hGpCHYQ

©2011 Debbie Ballard

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Scratchy Sweater



Ever since the Super and Full Moon of a few days ago, it seems that the air has been absolutely thick with aggravation, something akin to wearing a 'scratchy sweater.' This seems to be happening not only on a global scale (unrest in many countries in the Middle East/bomb in Jerusalem), but on a personal level, as well. I literally wanted to jump out of my skin, today! Realizing that, I took a detour after work and enjoyed some sunshine (with 60-degree weather that we haven't had in 139 days) by a saltwater seashore while talking to my Rock-of-Gibraltor sister on the phone. Water always calms me down (as does she) and brings balance back in to my life. What a sweet Piscean she is.







Another famous Pisces checked out today, though: actress Elizabeth Taylor. When she was younger, she was the most stunningly beautiful and iconic brunette of her generation...with unique violet eyes. Had she been paired with Tony Curtis when he was in his prime...OMG what a visually stunning couple they would have made! Not to mention the attractive beauty of Liz & Montgomery Clift...be still my heart. I guess on this 34th anniversary of my first divorce I can no longer joke that I'm competing with Liz in the marriage category...that would honestly be disrespectful, now. I'll never forget seeing the huge playbill memory book my brother got from the movie 'Cleopatra' in which she played the lead role. While filming this very EXPENSIVE film of the time, she met and had an affair with her future 2-time husband, Richard Burton, a larger-than-life Welsh Scorpio (what a volatile combination right there!)







No doubt that the recent conjunction between the Sun and Uranus, 4 planets in Aries and the intense Scorpio Moon until this afternoon (Pacific time) played a part in my 'scratchy sweater' discomfort. This early in Springtime it's too breezy and chilly to be without it, but at the same time it was a source of extreme irritation and drove me absolutely bonkers! And that is even though I wasn't actually wearing a 'scratchy sweater'...it was rather the current mood of the last several days. Thank goodness the Moon has finally moved in to a-happy-go-lucky, the-glass-is-half-full, all-things-are-possible Sagittarian attitude! Vive la difference!





If I had a glass of champagne (as my brother had waiting for me after my intimidating divorce court experience ) I'd toast Liz to a life well-lived. Having read her biography of many years ago, I remain amazed at the multitude of medical problems she personally endured . Today, I'll settle for saluting her contribution to the big screen with a cup of coffee, remembering she hated to be called 'Liz.' May you find your place in the sun.


©2011 Debbie Ballard

Saturday, March 19, 2011

Extreme Super Moon



March 19, 2011 (approximately 11:10 am PDT)...date of the 'super moon'...one this bright or this large not having been seen since March of 1993! The typical NW rain kept the clouds in place to obscure the view of this shiny orb the night before. Therefore, I climbed out of bed at 5 am today to behold a beautiful pre-super moon. There she was in all her glory: scattered clouds adoring her from afar, a golden-reddish orb encircling her circumfrence, farther away from her shimmering and permeated within the deep blue abyss, twinkling stars dotted the early morning...it was an absolute perfect feast for the eyes.

At almost the same time on this date 30 years ago (the last day of winter on a Thursday morning) the weather was not much different than today. It was still pretty brisk for March, giving you 'goosebumps' if you were without a jacket in a slight breeze...but seeing the pink ornamental plum trees and bright, golden daffodils in all their glory warms you up very fast. That day, 30 years ago, I was feeling on top of the world because I was lucky enough to be married to my second husband overlooking incredible Snoqualmie Falls. Nevermind that the wedding ring fell off the pillow and bounced to the very edge of the Falls overlook, and thankfully suddenly stopped. You can hear the gasp of my matron of honor in the audio tape when that happened. Signing the marriage license on the huge outdoor sundial, throwing 3 coins in to the fountain and a bus full of seniors clapping as we walked away as man and wife are etched in to my memory. The picture I remember most, though, is of a triumphant husband lifting his new bride in to his arms with a perfect wall of green ivy in the background. Even though the marriage started falling apart years later, I have always said that "I married in a beautiful place and I divorced in a beautiful place"...trying to extract the positive out of any given situation.

Having not traversed very much of Washington state, even though I had resided there for 2.5 years by the time of this event...I was driven by my new groom to a suprise honeymoon destination. I had absolutely no idea where we were going; I was merely instructed to pack both for cold and warm weather. In the dark of night he asked me to roll down the window when we arrived. I heard a 'rushing water' sound and instantly thought he had brought me to another waterfall. He replied, "well, it's the Pacific waterfall." He had brought me to a secluded & rustic ocean destination named Kalaloch in western Washington, perfect for honeymooners. Three days later I was almost killed by standing on one of the huge coastal logs moving amidst an undertow. However, during the honeymoon I also found a four-leaf clover for every year the marriage lasted. From the fantastic ocean vistas, smelling the enticing aroma of wood fire smoke from the fireplace, to discovering treasures from the sea deposited onto the shore; the moral of the story is: whether your life contain wax or wane, enjoy the beauty of the moment while it is happening...and as the famous poem goes:




Gather ye rosebuds while ye may,
Old Time is still a-flying:
And this same flower that smiles to-day
To-morrow will be dying.
The glorious lamp of heaven, the sun,
The higher he's a-getting,
The sooner will his race be run,
And nearer he's to setting.
That age is best which is the first,
When youth and blood are warmer;
But being spent, the worse, and worst
Times still succeed the former.
Then be not coy, but use your time,
And while ye may, go marry:
For having lost but once your prime,
You may for ever tarry.




Carpe diem


©2011 Debbie Ballard

Sunday, June 26, 2005

Destination Three


Pair-A-Dice RV Park Creston, BC, Canada June 24-26, 2005 Site 25

very nice, well- kept campground right in creston, population of about 5,000...wireless internet only $2/day (which is better than the $5 or $9.95 a day that has been available where we've been thus far)...cable, phone, 50 amps, 24 hour laundry and FREE firewood for campfires...crossing into the canadian border from nighthawk which is in the middle of nowhere and is only open 9am to 5 pm!...you immediately see the sense of pride bc canadians have no matter their financial stature with their use of flowers to enhance their properties...friendliness abounds (spent last nite around the campfire with two couples from calgary)...the view from above osoyoos and castlegar are grandiose to say the least...oliver, bc
has 40 wineries within 20 minutes...i really like how the canadians have standard bed and breakfast, as well as, artisan road signs on the highways pointing the way...kootenay pass has really fantastic scenery (all 5,407 feet in elevation)...north of creston is a burg called boswell on kootenay lake in which there is a house of glass...we, however, did not tour this attraction made of over 1/2 million discarded embalming fluid bottles, hehehe...most memorable experience:
walking the dog i came upon two killdeer birds that did an elaborate "dance" complete with a full repetoire of screeching in front of me that i thought had something to do with their mating...after reading about them online i realized that they were protecting their nest...yep, sure enough right in the gravel underneath a picnic table in site 6 there were 4 speckled eggs camoflaged very well...when you come near the adults do a "look i've got a broken wing" scenario that diverts the attention you make towards helping the poor bird as they scurry off further away from their nest, ad infinitum...very ingenious...here are urls for more info...you learn something every day...

www.crestonvalley.com

www.birdwatching.com/stories/killdeer.html

©2005 Debbie Ballard

Destination Two


Chopaka Lodge, Palmer Lake, Near Loomis, WA June 21-23, 2005 Site 4

definitely in the Washington "outback" here...the campground has water/electric and has very quaint log cabins with fireplaces...there are walnut, pecan and hazelnut trees the owners harvest...campground is right on the lakeside...internet and cell phone don't work out here but tv satellite does!...the lake is very calm, with mountainous terrain on either side...thought I heard a woman screaming but it was only the resident peacock...never actually saw the bird but heard it often...walt and brother-in-law mike caught 6 kokanee (salmon) one day and 4 the next...(always getting that word kokanee mixed up with kootenay, which are mountains in canada)...lots of sage-colored sage bushes, hehehe...walt's sister bev cooked up some fantastic fried chicken...impressions left with me as we traveled to this area:

washington has a multitude of fruit orchards...much more than I ever conceived

there is enough vacant land in washington alone for every person in the united states to have a "lot"

the harvesting of round bales of hay instead of rectangles

silver and red tin foil streamers in the cherry trees shimmering in the wind as they catch the light of the sun to scare away birds-mesmerizing to see

huge piles of weathered sticks that hold up branches laden with fruit were a picturesque testament of what abundance can mean

the occasional yet consistent distant "booms" of the propane out in the orchards

learned about the open range area with cattle guards built in to the roads to keep the herds in the area where they belong

abandoned gold and silver mines

north of pateros the conglomerate of white military satellite dishes (what are we listening for exactly?)

wild white daisies, black eyed susans, french bearded irises, california poppies and every color rose imaginable

what kind of festival does apple country have? why apple pie, of course

Molson, WA-population 35 but with an interesting school museum and outdoor (life in other times) museum

seeing about 4-5 majestic california big horn sheep (awesome!)...the ones that have horns much bigger than what it looks like their heads can withstand

albino jackass-now that certainly was a horse of a different color

for your amusement: late one evening i got to videotape 3 mule deer munching on tender grape leaves right across from our campsite...much later in to the nite i was up watching an old movie from 1946 (the razor's edge) with a small window open...i started hearing branches cracking and breaking in the distance from out of that window in an otherwise silent nite thus far...now it was pitch dark out there...and there had been a black bear attack up the road involving a resident and his dog...so i'm thinking is it mule deer walking thru these dryed branches or a BEAR?...i turn on the amber porch light which was totally useless...but i'm too afraid to shine a flashlight out there in case the "bear" happened to be right outside my window by now...after all, i had eaten bacon that morning!...listening intently with my finger on the mute button of the remote control, i can just start to somewhat discern something... soft laughter between two male homo sapiens!...not long after, i started to witness the nice campfire they built because of their midnight hunt for seasoned wood...boy did i feel dumb!...ah, adventure

©2005 Debbie Ballard

Sunday, June 19, 2005

Destination One


Leisure Time Crescent Bar Resort, near Quincy, WA June 7-20, 2005 Site 35

well what can i say? after sitting in the sun for about 15 minutes and having a banana split with breyer's cherry vanilla ice cream and hershey's chocolate syrup drizzled all over it who wouldn't feel ready to write in their blog, huh?...freedom of expression, right? if you take a look at the url you'll see where we are currently until i can figure out how to download pics...don't the basalt cliffs look like the ones in egypt before they made the dam back in the 70s?...we (the gypsy woman, my baseball-happy hubby and the RV pekingese (Rosa Victoria or Rosie for short) have been parked here for 2 weeks and last night was the first time it rained...we are right on the columbia river 7 miles away from quincy, washington usa...lot's of sun...300 days a year...some wind...crickets sing even in the daytime...lots of stars at night...very cute quail, hungarian partridges, pheasants, black billed magpies (listen to it's call on the website below) and chukars about...and every so often the air force fly boys use this area to practice manuevers...man do those jets go fast!...latino country in which i had my first barbacoa in 27 years!...barbacoa with fresh flour tortillas and chopped up onions, cilantro and salsa verde (green tomatillo sauce)...and it was absolutely delicioso! for those of you who want to know barbacoa is made from the facial muscles of a specially-cooked beef head...it is like the most tender roast beef you've ever eaten...hmmmmmmm...anyway, enough about food...this is our first trek as full-time RVers (living all year round in a motorhome) outside of being near our once former home...modern-day gypsies...with much yet to experience and discover...i'm in my element...

http://www.crescentbarresort.com/

www.percevia.com/explorer/db/birds_of_north_america_western/obj/74/target.aspx

©2005 Debbie Ballard