Celebrate Life · Fun · Men & Womens Health · Travel

My Bucket List In 2021

As teen I wanted to travel the world even though I hadn’t been out of the state where I was born. Reading National Geographic Magazine opened me to other worlds and I wanted to see it all.

As I grew older it was easier to narrow the list down although it’s still grows each year. I’ve been fortunate to mark many things off my list over the years and have had great adventures.

There are so many places to see and new adventures to have. I’m overdue in updated my list to accomodate my health conditions.

My Bucket List as of 2020

Watch artist handcraft a Turkish rug

Learn to double jump rope

Roller Derby

See a grown Hela Monster

Watch baby turtles hatch and return to the sea

Drive Hover Craft

Tango Lessons

Drive Monster Truck

Drive 18 Wheeler

Train and Volunteer to rescue wild animals

Finish Family Tree

Visit the worlds Wineries, extra long stay in France

Volunteer for RAINN as Advocate Speaker for Child Abuse and Sexual Abuse

Watch the Caribou migrate in Canada

Go to the country of Jordan, see the city of Petra.

Handstand

Walk a mile

Hold a Koala Bear

See Tasmania Devil

Become a Bee Keeper

Walk in Jesus’s Foot Steps

Hear a mass by the Pope, at the Vatican.

Ride in Helicopter over Grand Canyon

What’s on your list? Where is life taking you? 

Melinda

Celebrate Life · Travel

Happy 18th Wedding Anniversary with Random Montage

We met at a New Year’s Eve party that neither of us wanted to be at, we were the oldest people in the crowd. We gravitated towards each other, talking about our travels, even went outside to smoke a cigar. When we came back in, you were a gentleman and hung my coat in the closet. We shared many laughs as witnessed by the photos of the night. You almost left without asking for my number, I had to chase you down.

Eleven months later we married in Reno, Nevada, just the two of us. A great place to spend our honeymoon. Snow on the mountains and fresh crips air.

You’ve always allowed me the space to be myself, have my space, and my own life outside of our marriage. The support you’ve given me during the late nights of writing or months away from home taking care of gramps is not forgotten.

You had no way of know the for better or worse, in health and sickness would come so soon in our marriage. You nurse me to health, taking care of me when I could not walk or feed myself. Most important you’ve never complained.

We were not new to the rodeo, we both had been married before and knew what was important the second time around. I think we got it right. Below are a few reminders of the years we’ve spent together. Some good, some not so good.

Jet and Griffy
Griffy
Jet
Broke wrist falling down stairs
Fell down stairs
First time shaved head
Port Inserted
State of Living Seven days of IV’s
Shaggy
Banjo with blanket and toy
Truffles on my desk
Sydney, Australia
Yosemite Falls
Happy Birthday Honey!
Sunset Gulf Shores Alabama
WW ii Memorial Washington, D.C.
Alabama
Thoughtful Surprise
Surprise

Thank you for being my best friend and biggest supporter. I look forward to the next 18 years, all the good and the bad. We’ll be there for each other and growing slightly older each year.

Your Beautiful Wife

Melinda

Fun · Travel

#Wordless Wednesday Fountain

Hi, it’s Wednesday! I’m thrilled you’re here! My interpretation of a beautiful fountain scene in Washington, D.C. from 2015. It’s not very colorful but I like the way the water feels coming off the fountain. What do you think? Did I capture the motion of water?

Fountain

In Health,

Melinda

Fun · Travel

#Wordless Wednesday Washington D.C. Monuments

Hi, it’s Wednesday! I’m so glad you’re here! These are three very important monuments in Washington, D.C., I hope you enjoy them. Pardon the date stamp, my husband forgot to turn it off.

WWII Memorial Washington D.C.
Korean War Memorial Washington D.C.
Vietnam Memorial Wall

In Health,

Melinda

Fun · Travel

#Wordless Wednesday Washington D.C.

Hi, it’s Wednesday! I’m so glad you’re here! This is my artistic interpretation of photos my husband took in Washinton D.C. in 2015. We were traveling to D.C. every month to see my Lyme doctor. He got to know the area well while I stayed in the hotel room resting over an 18 month period.

In Health,

Melinda

Fun · Travel

#Wordless Wednesday Gothic Architecture

Hi, it’s Wednesday! I’m so glad you stopped by today. This is an apartment in St. Petersburg, Russia with great Gothic architecture. It’s a shame I can’t blow the photo up. The original is not on my new computer. The apartment building sits next to the beautiful Kazan Cathedral.

Kazan Cathedral-Russia

In Health,

Melinda

Fun · Travel

#Wordless Wednesday Gothic Architecture

Hi, it’s Wednesday! I’m so glad you stopped by today. This is an apartment in St. Petersburg, Russia with great Gothic architecture. It’s a shame I can’t blow the photo up. The original is not on my new computer. The apartment building sits next to the beautiful Kazan Cathedral.

Kazan Cathedral-Russia

In Health,

Melinda

Fun · Travel

#Wordless Wednesday Fall In Alabama

Hi, it’s Wednesday! I’m so glad you stopped by today, I appreciate you being here. This week I’m taking you to the state of Alabama. I love the photo and how it captures all the different shades of red.

In health,

Melinda

Fun · Travel

#Wordless Wednesday Gulf Shores, Alabama

Hi, it’s Wednesday! I’m so glad you stopped by today. This week I’m taking you to beautiful Gulf Shores, Alabama. This area was recently hit by a hurricane and there was extensive damage across the shoreline. You can see an Oil Rig in the distant sunset. This photo was taken from the balcony of the condo we stayed in.

Gulf Shores Sunset

In health,

Melinda

Celebrate Life · Fun · Travel

Interview With Photographer/ Guest Blogger Cindy Knoke — For the Love of Art

Cindy Knoke has traveled the world, to the most unusual off the beaten path places you can imagine. Her photography is a window to the world. I ask Cindy a few questions to learn her photography background and how she plans for her extraordinary trips. At what age did you pick up your first camera? Did the world […]

Interview With Photographer/ Guest Blogger Cindy Knoke — For the Love of Art
Fun · Travel

#Wordless Wednesday Wapama Falls, Yosemite National Park

Hi, it’s Wednesday! I’m so glad you stopped by today. This week I’m staying with the Yosemite National Park theme and taking you to the Hatch Hetchy trail. The Hetch Hetchy trail is across the damn from the Yosemite Valley. It’s a five-mile round trip with a moderate rating and is not a heavily hiked trail which makes it perfect for a picnic. You cross over a bridge built right over the bottom of the Wapama waterfall. This is where these photos were taken from.

Hetch Hetchy
Hetch Hetchy

In health,

Melinda

Moving Forward · Travel

Where in the world will you find the most advanced e-government? Estonia. IDEAS​.TED.COM

IDEAS.TED.COM
Mar 15, 2018 /

This tiny republic has the most startups per person and the fastest broadband speeds, and it offers something no other country does: e-residency. Estonia is aiming to create the ideal information society. Technology thinker and entrepreneur Andrew Keen goes there to find out how it works.

The future sometimes appears in the unlikeliest of places. The tiny country on the northeastern edge of Europe known as Estonia — or “E-stonia” as former president Toomas Hendrik Ilves calls it — has the most startups per person, the zippiest broadband speeds, and the most advanced e-government in the world.

Estonia has had the ill fortune to share a border with Russia and a sea with Denmark, Sweden and Germany, regional powers that have all been rather too related to the little Baltic republic. And yet this land of just 28,000 square miles is today — with South Korea, Israel, Singapore and its Scandinavian neighbors — one of the most wired and innovative countries. The government and people of Estonia are trying to invent the ideal information society and figuring out how to live well in cyberspace.

Estonia is the first country in the world to offer “e-residency”: an electronic passport that offers any businessperson the right to use legitimate Estonian legal or accounting online services and digital technologies. With this initiative, the country is disrupting the age-old intimacy between physical territory and citizenship. The e-residency program underwrites online identity by establishing fingerprints, biometrics and a private key on a chip.

“We want to be the Switzerland of the digital world,” says the director of the e-residency program in Estonia.

The goal is to have 10 million e-resident citizens by 2025, almost eight times the number of Estonia’s population of 1.3 million, according to the program’s director, Kaspar Korjus. He wants to create what he calls a “trust economy” for businesspeople around the globe — and a well-lit antithesis to the Dark Web, the digital hell infested with drug and arms dealers, pedophiles and criminals. “We want to be the Switzerland of the digital world,” Korjus says. Estonian Chief Technology Officer Taavi Kotka is more ambitious — we are becoming “the Matrix,” he tells me without smiling.

Given its inconvenient geography, Estonia has always struggled to find physical residents. E-residency creates a platform for a new kind of citizenship, Kotkus says. Not only is Estonia running a government in the cloud, it is also trying to create a country in the cloud: a 21st-century distributed community of people united by networked services rather than by geography.

Practically everything and everyone in Estonia is connected to the Internet: As measured in 2017, 91.4 percent of its citizens are Internet users; 87.9 percent of households have computers; 86.7 percent of Estonians have access to broadband; and 88.4 percent use it regularly. In neighboring Latvia, by contrast, 76 percent of its citizens are Internet users, while in Russia, Estonia’s former colonial ruler, that number is just 71 percent.

The country is planning a national test for digital competency in five areas, including the correct use of netiquette.

The education system has played an important role in this phenomenon. By the late 1990s, a government-backed investment fund was paying for Internet access for all schools, and teaching computer programming skills to kids as young as seven. “It’s like literacy,” one software engineer told me, describing how these skills are viewed in schools. The Estonian educational system has been redesigned to make people more responsible citizens. Schools have obligatory programs in “digital competence.” The country is even planning a national test for digital competency in five areas, including the correct use of netiquette. Education is “two steps ahead of the labor market,” says Kristel Rillo, who runs e-services at the Ministry of Education; he says that kids are turning out to be “two steps ahead of middle-aged workers in learning how to become digital citizens.”

But the most intriguing step in Estonia’s digital development is taking place outside the classroom. The key to its revolution is an identity card system that puts digital identity and trust at the heart of a new social contract. The mandatory electronic ID card, used by more than 95 percent of Estonians, gives everyone a secure online identity and offers a platform for digital citizenship featuring more than 4,000 online services, including voting, paying taxes and online storage of health and police records.

This online ID system is an attempt to “redefine the nature of the country” by getting rid of bureaucracy and reinventing government as a service. So says Andres Kütt, the chief architect of the Estonian Information System Authority. Kütt, a recent MIT graduate and former Skype employee, aims to integrate everyone’s data into a single, easy-to-navigate portal. Estonia wants to smash bureaucratic silos and distribute power down to the citizens so that government comes to them rather than their having to go to the government.

“The old model is broken,” Kütt says. “We are changing the concept of citizenship. This technology creates trust. It’s transparent. All agencies can access this data, but citizens have the right to know if their data has been accessed. In the old world, citizens were dependent on government; in Estonia, we are trying to make government dependent on citizens.”

In Estonia, citizens are empowered to watch the operations of government, and although the government can look at their data, it must notify them when it does so.

The ID system is supposed to be the reverse of Orwell’s Big Brother. In Estonia, citizens are empowered to watch the operations of government, and although the government can look at their data, it must notify them when it does so. Kütt gives me an anecdote of how the system works. He’d driven to a lecture in Tallinn to demonstrate the ID system. When he looked at his data, he saw that a police officer had accessed his information 30 minutes earlier. Following up in his online records, he found that an unmarked police car had followed his car because his license plate was dirty. The police accessed his records, checked his driver’s license, and decided not to stop him. The point of this story, according to Kütt, is to stress the accountability of government in this system. Nothing can be done secretly — the transparency is designed to protect individual rights and compound the trust between citizens and their government.

The most important aspect of the ID system is the creation of trust.Everyone I spoke to in Estonia, from startup entrepreneurs to policy makers to technologists to government ministers, agreed with Kütt on this point. Estonian trust in government is, in fact, much higher than the EU average. A 2014 studyfound that 51 percent of Estonians trust their government, in contrast with the EU average of 29 percent.

There are extremely significant potential consequences of the Estonian government’s entry into the data business. One result might be a new rivalry between sovereign governments and Silicon Valley’s private superpowers. “Governments are realizing that they’re losing the digital identities of their citizens to American companies like Google, Facebook, Amazon and Apple. And they are waking up to the realization that they have a responsibility to protect the privacy of these citizens,” says Linnar Viik, another architect of the ID card and a serial tech entrepreneur dubbed by the press “Estonia’s Mr. Internet.”

Personal data is what’s made these private superpowers so wealthy and powerful. Although the ID system doesn’t stop Estonians from using Facebook or Google, the database is designed as a rival ecosystem, a secure public alternative designed to benefit citizens rather than corporations. One of today’s great challenges is to reinvent the relevance of government in the new digital world, and that’s where the longer-term significance of the ID system may lie, according to Viik. “The government’s role is to protect the privacy of its citizens,” he says. “It’s an extension of public infrastructure, the 21st-century version of the welfare state.”

To some readers, particularly those who cherish their privacy, this ID system and its radical transparency might sound dystopian. But one of the unavoidable consequences of the digital revolution is the massive explosion of personal data on the network. Like it or not, this data is only going to grow exponentially with smart homes, smart cars, smart cities and all the other smart objects driving the Internet of things. We don’t have a choice about any of this. But we do have a choice about the amount of transparency we demand of the governments or corporations that have access to our personal data.

The country’s revolution remains a work in progress, and many ordinary Estonians remain indifferent to a lot of these digital abstractions.

Does this country without borders offer a preview of our 21st-century fate?Stuff may happen there first. Will it happen everywhere else next? Perhaps. The Estonian model comes with three important caveats.

First, it’s important to remember the country’s ahistorical exceptionalism. Like other startup nations such as Israel, Estonia has reinvented itself because of its good fortune in being able to stand outside history. Just as Israel began in 1948 without any legacy institutions or traditions, so the post-1991 Estonian digital revolution occurred because a new generation of technologically literate policy makers and politicians filled the vacuum created by the retreating Soviet bureaucracy.

Second, there is the distinctively unexceptional nature of the Estonian economy. Estonia is a relatively underdeveloped place, especially in comparison with postindustrial economies like the United States or Germany. A tech megabillionaire could buy Estonia outright if he wanted. Its per-capita GDP of around $17,600 is ranked 42nd in the world (above middle-rank economies like Russia and Turkey but a third of Singapore’s $52,900), and the average monthly wage, after taxes, of its workforce of 675,000 is under 1,000 euros. Reports of Estonia as the next Silicon Valley are, to be polite, slightly exaggerated.

The third caveat is separating its appearance from its reality. All the policy makers and legislators with whom I spoke have, in the best Silicon Valley fashion, drunk the Kool-Aid and loudly proclaim the triumph of their “country in a cloud.” But the truth is less triumphant. The revolution remains a work in progress, and many ordinary Estonians remain indifferent to a lot of these digital abstractions.

Nonetheless, Estonia matters because the government is prioritizing what Ilves calls “data integrity.” This prim-sounding issue will surely come to dominate conversations about 21st-century politics. What the republic on the northwestern edge of Russia can do is offer an alternate model of a transparent, open and fair political system, one that is the antithesis of the monstrous purveyor of untruth that’s emerging on its eastern border. One that prioritizes trust and is built upon the integrity of data. One, above all, that makes all of us accountable for our online behavior.

Excerpted from the new book How to Fix the Future by Andrew Keen. Published by Atlantic Monthly Press, an imprint of Grove Atlantic. Copyright © 2018 by Andrew Keen.

Watch Andrew Keen’s talks from TEDxBerlin and TEDxDanubia:

 

Moving Forward · Survivor · Travel

Saudi Arabia Lifts Ban on Women Driving

 

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In a surprise decision earlier this week, the Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia announced that he will lift the country’s infamous ban on female drivers. Beginning in 2018, women in Saudi Arabia will finally be able to apply for driver’s licenses and legally get behind the wheel.

The controversial driving ban – the only of its kind in the world – has faced criticism from a younger generation of Saudi Muslims who are resistant to the ultraconservative Wahhabi interpretation of Islam that controls nearly everything in the country.

The long-awaited change comes after years of protests dating back to the 1990s, during which countless women were charged steep fines, thrown in jail, or given the “official sentence” of 10 lashes – all for the high crime of driving a car.

Women React

For Saudi women, the news was almost surreal. Under the oppressive Wahhabi system, women are allowed few freedoms and remain largely subservient to men. Given how deeply embedded these cultural attitudes are, the government’s decision took many people off guard. Although activists were pleased with the decision, many insist it should have come far earlier.

“It’s been 27 years of demanding and asking, but a whole lifetime of suffering,” said Dalal Kaaki, a woman who participated in protests against the ban. “I can’t really celebrate because every time I come to celebrate I remember all the years of suffocation. … Of trying to arrange transportation to work and having to beg people at home to take me to run errands.”

“Things have to change. People are demanding it,” another woman pointed out. “Young people don’t want to live the way we lived. They want to live better. They want to live how other people are living.”

Backlash

The ultraconservative factions of the country levied heavy criticism toward the move, calling it unthinkable to allow women behind the wheel. In fact, many Saudi men are determined to ignore the new law — Twitter feeds were alight with a hashtag that translates to “The women of my house won’t drive.”

Some expressed serious concerns for road safety – arguing that putting so many brand-new drivers on the roads will cause accidents to skyrocket. Others echoed the sentiment, but using different reasoning: that female drivers will be major distraction to men, who might pay more attention to women driving in the vicinity than the road in front of them.

Progress Yet to Be Made

Despite this recent victory, the fight for women’s rights in Saudi Arabia is far from over. Aziza Youssef, a female professor at a Saudi university and a prominent critic of Wahhabism, had this to say: “This is a good step forward for women’s rights, but it’s the first step in 1,000 miles to go.”

She makes a good point. While in public, women are still required to wear a full-length garment called an abaya in addition to the traditional head scarf. They must seek permission from a male family member before traveling abroad, getting married, or talking to the police (which makes domestic abuse cases nearly impossible to investigate). Saudi women are even prohibited from walking down the street without a male guardian.

The end of the driving ban brings hope that other oppressive policies will begin to fall. However, such changes will require challenging the deep-seated belief in Saudi culture that women are inferior to men. For now, that looks to be an uphill battle.

Read more at https://www.themonastery.org/blog/2017/09/saudi-arabia-lifts-ban-on-women-driving/#FS1uJpQOxqwtkyM0.99

 

Moving Forward · Travel

Hypo-Mania Allowed Me To Travel

The post is from the archives, written in 19XX, and cleaned a bit. I’m depressed today partly due to exhaustion from Restless Leg which returned three weeks ago, which doesn’t help my mood. Chronic Lyme Disease took my memory, stress, pain, and on and on. My brain gave parts of it back with holes, today it’s gone again. I’m rambling….the reason? I’m lost again and used the WordPress Copy a Post Function for the first time. I can’t tell you the year it was written or if the WordPress Copy Function and my brain are on the same page.    

I love to travel, and my goal is to see the world. Bipolar Disorder can dictate your life. The high side is dangerous for me. Life is great, who needs sleep? Not recognizing my Hypo-Mania can make it possible. The titter totter of Bipolar is balance. One side can suffocate you in hell, the other side is suffocating without you knowing there is always a fall.

I was an Executive Sales person, number one in the company, and making big bucks, I felt so lucky that Hypo-Mania stayed for 10 years. Looking back at the scars remember the higher you go the harder you fall. I lived in hell, thought I can cover this up, when I fell it was like dominoes tipping the next.

I went to Russia by myself, traveled with my friends to France and the Caribbean, a girl trip several times a year. My doctor told me the higher you go the harder you fall. I didn’t want to give up the person I was.

The fall began slowly. I got fired from my job, blew though my savings, we’re talking half million and filled for bankruptcy. Did I mention a divorce and building a new house. I lost everything.

What I lost was not worth the high. All the negative thoughts came back. My life is not as exciting, anxiety kept me in the house. Most days didn’t get of bed, used every excuse to cover my absents.

I’ve been suicidal many times, leading me to Psychiatric Hospital to save myself. Having 20 ECT treatments in the past 10 years is not an achievement. A Vagus Nerve Stimulator was implanted in my chest. I thought the newly approved FDA device was my chance, to leave my world behind. Well no.

The thing about research is moving forward. The brain doesn’t have a road map, navigation center, or instruction manual. Medicine and technology will take us closer to managing our lives.

My husband understands most of what he’s seen. The brain is a fascinating  question mark?

Warrior

Blogging · Celebrate Life · Fun · Health and Wellbeing · Travel

The Sunshine Award from Michelle of Putting my Feet in the Dirt

 

 

My friend Michele from Putting My Feet in the Dirt nominated me for the beautiful Sunshine Award. Michelle’s Blog is a Christian-based Blog with a wide variety of posts on travel, children, and short stories. She is funny and serious when needed. Michelle is a great supporter of the WordPress community. Do yourself a favor and stop by to see what she’s up to.

Rules for participating. Have fun.

Thank the person who nominated you.
Answer the questions from the person who nominated you.
Nominate a few other bloggers.
Write the same amount of questions for the bloggers you nominated.
Notify the bloggers on their blogs.
Put the award button on your blog.

1. If a zombie apocalypse would happen right this very minute, are you going to tweet about it? But seriously, are you going to fight or run? Why?

I’m running. I don’t know what Zombie’s can do so I’ll get out of there.

2. How would you spend a million dollars?

Make a contribution to charities I support. Then get on an airplane and see the world.

3. What thing would you want to change yourself?

I cuss too much, it’s a bad habit I’ve had since childhood.

4. What’s your Chinese birth year sign? I’m best suited for breeding.

 

5. If you could invent something, what is that? why?

This is hard, there so many. Clean drinking water to prevent children from dying of preventable diseases. I have to add a far-fetched invention. Magic fairy dust to have all wars stopped and peace around the world. I can always wish.

6. A gift that you would love to receive on your birthday?

A ticket around the world first class by myself and a guide. Traveling alone is the best way  To top the dream birthday, a new professional camera and gear. We can’t forget bug spray, tall very thick boots for snakes, and a gun to kill anything trying to take me down.

7. What is WordPress effect in your life and your message to me as your fellow blogger?

My life with WP is shaped by the people I meet. It’s great to meet people with similar interests to BS, and great writers to admire. I can reach out to people who are struggling and offer someone to talk to. My heart is filled with sunshine in many ways being in the WP family.

A message to fellow bloggers: Being rude to followers or responding to comments isn’t worth it. If you have a desire to grow your followers, thank each person for stopping by your site. Write for yourself, not for the number of followers.

The nominations have opened my mind and touched my soul. Congrats!

thefallingthoughts.com

cindyknoke.com

yadadarcyyada.com

 

XO Melinda

Celebrate Life · Travel

I’m Blessed To Celebrate My Birthday With You *I get stronger every birthday*

Worhol Wall
Glimpse Of Warhol Wall

Verna Falls Yosemite Nation ParK
Painted Verna Falls Yosemite National ParK

I hope everyone has a great day. Everyone can celebrate the blessing of today. It’s fun posting photo prints, you can see my interest outside of WP. You can see another side of me.

Let’s Celebrate the day together.

XO  M

Celebrate Life · Travel

I'm Blessed To Celebrate My Birthday With You *I get stronger every birthday*

Worhol Wall
Glimpse Of Warhol Wall

Verna Falls Yosemite Nation ParK
Painted Verna Falls Yosemite National ParK

I hope everyone has a great day. Everyone can celebrate the blessing of today. It’s fun posting photo prints, you can see my interest outside of WP. You can see another side of me.

Let’s Celebrate the day together.

XO  M

Travel

It’s my sixth anniversary on WordPress *Get out the streamers*

I received a reminder from WordPress today, it’s my 6th year anniversary! Wow, time fly’s when having fun or not. I’ve written 303 post on Looking for the Light, in less than two years. I must have a lot to say. I had several blogs before starting Looking for the Light. The greatest reward of blogging is the people I meet daily and hearing about the adventures of long-term followers. Thank you for reading, commenting and filling my heart with joy.

Enjoy the Picasso, photo taken in D.C.

ACHIEVEMENT

6 Year Anniversary Achievement
Happy Anniversary with WordPress.com!
You registered on WordPress.com 6 years ago!
Thanks for flying with us. Keep up the good blogging!

Picasso Statue Washington, D.C.
Picasso Statue
Washington, D.C.

M

Travel

It's my sixth anniversary on WordPress *Get out the streamers*

I received a reminder from WordPress today, it’s my 6th year anniversary! Wow, time fly’s when having fun or not. I’ve written 303 post on Looking for the Light, in less than two years. I must have a lot to say. I had several blogs before starting Looking for the Light. The greatest reward of blogging is the people I meet daily and hearing about the adventures of long-term followers. Thank you for reading, commenting and filling my heart with joy.

Enjoy the Picasso, photo taken in D.C.

ACHIEVEMENT

6 Year Anniversary Achievement
Happy Anniversary with WordPress.com!
You registered on WordPress.com 6 years ago!
Thanks for flying with us. Keep up the good blogging!

Picasso Statue Washington, D.C.
Picasso Statue
Washington, D.C.

M

Travel

Virtual Photo Tour of Washington, D.C.

White House
White House

Old Federal Building
Old Federal Building

WWII Memorial
Atlantic View of WWII Memorial

Hope you enjoy. I have many more photos of our capital. I’ve also been practicing my black and white skills. I look for your feedback.  XO   M

Travel

Bucket List Friday Sydney, Australia * Several Country's In One *

I loved Sydney, look forward to seeing other regions. Australia is several country’s in one. There are many photos to share with you. The city is so clean, many spend time outside, walking to work, running or other type of fitness. There’s a special connection to us Texans, I felt automatically at home. Must be the twang. If you can handle a challenging climb the Harbour Bridge is a treat. That is my kind of thrill, unfortunately my back isn’t as young anymore. The trill of standing in middle of bridge looking across the city, I haven’t given up , there’s always tomorrow. I can talk forever about what attracts me to the county. We bought several pieces of Aboriginal art. If you looking for Opals, you have many choices.

I hope you get a chance to see the city and have time for the wine country. The wine, so good.

XO  W

 

Opera Houseimageimage