Update about blogCa

A small creek crosses under the Blue Ridge Parkway just as you approach the Tanbark Tunnel from the south. But if you pull over and park, you can see this little cascade on the opposite side of the Parkway before it goes under the road.

Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Lovin' my life

 I gotta admit, there are days when it feels like h-e-l-l and days when I feel so loved and embraced by the world, that I just sit here in awe. In high school we used to say "H-E double hockey sticks." We were being raised to be proper young ladies. Then the 60s and 70s happened (to me at least!)

The other day (the day after one from hell) I had friends give me a memory mug.




I don't know how many years we've been going on day trips. But probably 7-9 years. I'll ask Teresa, who's younger than me!

We drive somewhere within 50 miles and spend the day looking around at stores if it's a town, or sites and maybe waterfalls, find somewhere to either purchase lunch or bring a picnic, and take a selfie! So Teresa and Helen put this collection of selfies together for me to take with me when  I move...if I move.

Yep, the question of moving gives me high blood pressure when dealing with the iffy situations that come up. My sons are totally supportive of my desire to live where I can breathe better, hopefully a drier climate.


Yes, I cried when they gave the mug to me the other day over coffee. What sweet people I have as friends!




I even updated my blogger portrait photo!


There is no way to peace. Peace is the way.

A.J. MUSTE



Monday, June 15, 2026

Black Boy Joy mural


 

There’s a joyful new work of art that peers over the coffee shops and galleries lining Asheville's River Arts District.

The mural, titled “Black Boy Joy,” was unveiled Friday as the latest addition to the Asheville Black Cultural Trail, a network of public markers and artwork honoring the people and places that have shaped the city’s Black history.

Tommy Lee McGee, the lead artist behind the piece, said he designed it after noticing that Black and brown joy is rarely highlighted in Asheville’s public murals.

The central figure is “a beautiful, excited, happy, joyful Black boy,” he said. “He's in the middle of his own garden that he's watering.”

McGee, who works under the name Sir Tom Foolery, collaborated with local artists Gus Cutty and Kathryn Crawford to paint and assemble the installation, which had to be “hoisted, piece by piece” 60feet high to be placed on the building’s tall brick walls.

The mural is composed of large sheets of painted plexiglass installed on the brick wall of Glen Rock Apartments, located at 372 Depot Street. Flowers, glowing orbs and a large tropical bird surround the child, while the sun forms a crown around his head.

The project is months-in-the-making, McGee told BPR, and is a response to the limited ways Black boys are often portrayed in art and popular culture.

“Black boys don’t always have to be hard and thugs and aggressive,” he said. “You can be in the midst of beauty and exhibit beauty and exhibit joy.”

The new installation is a counterpart to one installed last year called “Black Girl Magic.” The trail is funded by a $500,000 grant from the Buncombe County Tourism Development Authority’s Tourism Product Development Fund.

The Asheville Black Cultural and Heritage Trail launched in 2023 and includes 14 stops and 20 interpretive panels across neighborhoods in Asheville, including downtown, Southside and the river area. The trail plans to add a third and final installation on South Market Street this winter.

Source: Blue Ridge Public Radio

Sharing with Monday Murals


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All the great speakers were bad speakers at first. - Ralph Waldo Emerson





Yesterday was Flag Day.

Here's a pretty one. Don't miss the words in the stripes!

By Margo Ellis

Sunday, June 14, 2026

Just some old photos

 Sepia Saturday

My sister and her daughter in 1974, living in a log cabin in woods near Livingston TN. No running water or electricity. The great push for Floridian hippies to go "back to the land."

By Anton Cherkio 2022



I'm sure Rev. Fred Rogers was a cousin, in spirit if not in blood.


An actual map of neuron connectivity in the brain. The sample is roughly the size of a grain of sand



Everyone is dealing with something...be kind!



1946 Bikini Atoll Nuclear Test

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Sharing with Sepia Saturday (a day late and who knows what that kid is doing sitting next to a life saving ring, anyway!) Thanks for hosting, Alan!


Saturday, June 13, 2026

Some neighbors of mine

 
Photos by Steve Helms in Cades Cove, Smoky Mountain National Park, Tennessee.




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Sometimes it's worth copying from FaceBook





Sharing with Saturday's Critters
Thanks for hosting, Eileen!