(Let’s set aside the pedantree.)

A few of you dendrological-type people might notice that there are actually two trees in this picture.  (People on Facebook have pointed out that the one on the left looks like a maple or Bradford pear, while the one on the right is a crape myrtle.)  So the meme is based on a falsehood.

But I wouldn’t have known.  And the point remains important anyway.



Source: Other Perspectives on Facebook

“The Sin (Woman with Red Hair and Green Eyes),” Edvard Munch, 1902

Lithograph printed in yellow, red and green.

Hershberger Road, Roanoke, Virginia, March 2025

I took this shot because it shows how mountains encircle Roanoke.  (From this one particular place on Hershberger Road, you can see them in the distance in the west, north and east.)

For newcomers hailing from a very flat place like Long Island, this can actually mess with your sense of direction — because your mind might unconsciously use the nearest mountain as a frame of reference.  (It should be noted here, however, that I have always had a lousy sense of direction.  I was legendary in New York for easily becoming lost.)



“Jeremiah Lamenting the Destruction of Jerusalem,” Rembrandt, 1630

Oil on panel.

The paragon of Southern culture and the crown jewel of Hershberger Road.

Krispy Kreme.

Roanoke, Virginia.

Detail from “The Entombment of Christ,” 1672

In Saint-Martin Church in Arc-en-Barrois (Haute-Marne, France).

“Dust of Snow,” by Robert Frost

I *ALWAYS* forget this.

Source: Homemaking.com via Facebook

Spillwords Press publishes “Like White Plumeria Petal”

I am so happy to see Spillwords Press today feature my poem “Like White Plumeria Petal.”  You can find it right here.

Thanks, as always, to Chief Editor Dagmara K. and the staff of Spillwords Press!



Photo of Princess Anne Street in Fredericksburg, Virginia, 2009

Seen from the Fredericksburg train station.

Photo credit: Bsteckler, CC BY-SA 3.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0&gt;, via Wikimedia Commons

Nurse Your Favorite Heresies in Whispers