#grove city ohio
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Photo
Jolly Pirate Donuts, Grove City, Ohio. by Greg
Via Flickr:
A good old-fashioned donut shop where they make donuts fresh on premises.
4 notes
·
View notes
Text
Harrisburg Pike, Grove City, Ohio.
49 notes
·
View notes
Text
Darby Creek Drive, Grove City, Ohio, USA
Codi Burley
#Darby Creek Drive#Grove City#Ohio#USA#Bison#Wildlife#OHWildlife#US#United States#United States of America#North America
4 notes
·
View notes
Text
Grove City, Ohio (2017)
3 notes
·
View notes
Text
Photo of an Ailanthus Webworm Moth. Photo taken at Scioto Grove Metro Park in Grove City, Ohio. August 2016.
Find me here: [X]
#Ailanthus#webworm#moth#insect#butterfly#wild Ohio#entomology#Scioto grove#Scioto grove Metropark#Metropark#Grove City#Columbus#Ohio#Columbus Ohio#august#2016#photography#photo#animal photography#nature photography#wildlife photography#wildlife art#wildlife#nature#my art#Queer artist#woman artist#autistic artist
3 notes
·
View notes
Text
Transform Your Look with Expert Lip Fillers Near Me
Enhancing your natural beauty with lip fillers is a transformative experience that can significantly boost your confidence and refine your appearance. Finding the right provider is crucial to achieving the best results. Here’s why opting for "lip fillers near me" can help you transform your look with ease and precision.
The Importance of Choosing Local Expertise
Personalized Treatment Plans
When you choose lip fillers near me, you benefit from personalized care tailored to your specific needs and aesthetic goals. Local providers often have a deep understanding of the community’s beauty standards and preferences, allowing them to create customized treatment plans that enhance your natural features while maintaining harmony with your overall look.
Convenience and Flexibility
One of the major advantages of opting for a local provider is convenience. Scheduling appointments, follow-up visits, and any necessary adjustments is much easier when the clinic is nearby. This flexibility ensures that your treatment fits seamlessly into your busy lifestyle, making the process more comfortable and less stressful.
Achieving Natural-Looking Results
Expert Techniques
Local providers who specialize in lip fillers near me often have extensive training and experience. This expertise enables them to use advanced techniques to achieve natural-looking results. They understand the nuances of facial anatomy and how to enhance your lips in a way that complements your unique features.
High-Quality Products
Reputable local clinics use high-quality, FDA-approved fillers such as Juvéderm, Restylane, and RHA. These products are known for their safety, effectiveness, and longevity. By choosing a local provider, you can ensure that only the best products are used to achieve your desired results.
The Lip Filler Procedure
Initial Consultation
The first step in your transformation is an initial consultation. During this appointment, you’ll discuss your goals and expectations with the provider. They will assess your facial structure, review your medical history, and recommend the best treatment plan for you. This thorough consultation ensures that you are well-informed and confident in your decision.
The Treatment Process
The lip filler procedure is relatively quick, usually taking around 30 minutes. Before the injections, a numbing agent is applied to minimize discomfort. The provider then uses fine needles to inject the filler into specific areas of your lips, enhancing their shape, volume, and definition. The process is precise and tailored to achieve the most natural-looking results.
Aftercare and Recovery
Post-treatment care is crucial for optimal results. Your provider will give you detailed aftercare instructions, which may include avoiding certain activities and products for a short period. Most patients experience mild swelling and bruising, which subside within a few days. Follow-up appointments may be arranged to monitor your progress and make any necessary adjustments.
Long-Lasting Confidence
Immediate Results
One of the most rewarding aspects of lip fillers is the immediate enhancement they provide. You’ll leave the clinic with fuller, more defined lips that instantly boost your confidence. The results continue to improve over the following days as any swelling subsides.
Maintenance and Longevity
The duration of lip fillers varies depending on the specific product and individual factors. Generally, outcomes usually persist for about 6 to 12 months. Regular maintenance appointments can help sustain your look, ensuring your lips remain plump and youthful over time.
Conclusion
Transforming your look with lip fillers near me offers numerous benefits, from personalized care and convenience to expert techniques and high-quality products. By choosing a local provider, you can achieve natural-looking results that enhance your beauty and boost your confidence.
For more information on finding the best local providers for lip fillers, contact us and schedule your consultation today.
0 notes
Text
Water Line Installation Grove City, Ohio
Elevate your Grove City, Ohio property with the trusted expertise of Dunn Excavation Grove City in water line installation. Our skilled team ensures precise and efficient installations for both residential and commercial projects. Count on Dunn Excavation for a seamless process, adhering to regulations and delivering a reliable water supply. Choose excellence with our top-notch water line installation services in Grove City, Ohio, and experience the expertise of Dunn Excavation for quality and precision in every project.
Visit Us: https://dunnexcavationgrovecity.com/excavation-services/water-line-installation/
Contact Info:
Contact Number: (614) 665-8090
Email: [email protected]
Location: Grove City, Ohio
#underground water line installation grove city ohio#underground water line installation cost grove city ohio#water line installation grove city ohio grove city ohio#water line installers grove city ohio
0 notes
Text
Doris … April 12, 1939. Doris sang with Barney Rapp’s band at his nightclub Sign Of The Drum.
Barney Rapp was a popular band leader and jazz musician for nearly three decades. He is best known for discovering Doris Day and launching the career of Rosemary Clooney.
Barney Rappaport was born in Connecticut on March 25th, 1900. When he was 20-years-old he organized a Jazz orchestra that was styled for dance music. He named it "Barney Rapp and His New Englanders." In a unique move, Barney, unlike most orchestra leaders of his day, played the band's drums. The New Englanders gained a popular following on the East Coast. Barney eventually moved to Cleveland, Ohio, and then to Cincinnati. Once there, his band became a regional attraction, routinely getting their music played on the radio. The band eventually recorded several albums on RCA Victor and Bluebird. Among their early recordings is an MGM film short featuring the band.
The band toured the country in the 1930s and 1940s. Barney needed a vocalist and hired singer Ruby Wright. She became the featured singer with Barney’s band. The professional relationship between Barney and Ruby eventually turned personal and the two were married in 1937. The couple bought a nightclub in the Cincinnati area and named it the ‘The Sign of the Drum.’ Of course, Barney, Ruby, and the New Englanders often performed there.
Barney launched the careers of many artists who went on to achieve great fame: His most famous discovery was 14-year-old Doris Kappelhoff. Barney asked her name, and upon hearing it said: "It’s a very nice name but a little too long for the marquee outside." He suggested the name Doris Day after hearing her sing "Day After Day.” Doris replaced Barney’s wife Ruby as the band’s featured singer when Ruby became pregnant in 1939 • After hearing the teenage Clooney Sisters, Rosemary and Betty, sing on the radio in Cincinnati, Barney recommended the girls to bandleader Tony Pastor • Others who got their start with Rapp include actor Eddie Ryan and singer Barry Wood, who is best known for being Frank Sinatra's immediate predecessor as the lead male vocalist on ‘Your Hit Parade.’ Wood also performed with musician Buddy Rogers.
In the fall of 1956, Barney and Ruby started the ‘Reds' Rooters Fan Club.’ Waite Hoyt, Hall of Fame pitcher and Cincinnati Reds Radio Broadcaster, urged his friend Barney Rapp to promote a fan trip to Milwaukee to help root the Reds on to victory. Over 700 people traveled by train to cheer on their team. This was the beginning of the Red Rooters’ Club. Under the leadership of Barney, the Red Rooters’ Club took fans all over the world including every National League city, several American League cities, Japan, and Europe. Over 100,000 Rooters have traveled to root for the Reds.
Barney Rapp died on October 12th, 1970, at the age of 70. He is interred in Spring Grove Cemetery in Cincinnati, Ohio.
#doris day#1930s#big band singer#big bands#classic movies#classic hollywood#vintage#barney rapp#sign of the drum
36 notes
·
View notes
Text
Grove City, Ohio.
119 notes
·
View notes
Text
For Cincinnati’s Dandelion Hunters, Harvesting Weeds Was Often An Adventure
It was the spring of 1913. Cincinnati Police got word a craps game was operating in the shadow of the Fairview Incline. The gamblers picked a good location, with clear views all around. They could spot any police interference with plenty of time to conceal all the evidence. The cops determined that subterfuge was necessary to put a lid on this game.
It is likely Police Lieutenant Thomas M. Hall came up with the gambit, or maybe it was Officer William B. Meyer or Office John H. Rabe Jr., the two patrolmen who assisted him, but the strategy proved flawless. The three policemen disguised themselves as dandelion hunters. The gamblers paid no attention to three men in mufti filling baskets with spring greens. They were caught red-handed and flat-footed and all five of them ended up in the hoosegow.
Dandelion hunters? Who would have thought? Today, there would hardly be any cover story more suspect. Who goes out hunting for dandelions these days? A hundred years ago, dandelion hunting was a very big thing and dandelion hunters figured into some of the biggest mysteries in Cincinnati.
In November 1904, the body of 18-year-old Alma Steinigeweg was found, brutally murdered, in the field between the foot of Winton Road and the Mill Creek. An investigation dragged on for years, but no one was ever charged with the crime. For months, investigators didn’t even have a murder weapon. Then, in April of 1905, Joseph Raison of Madisonville took a break from his job at a lumberyard on Spring Grove Avenue to pick some dandelions for dinner. He found a splintered pickaxe handle with hair matted on one end just 150 feet from where the victim’s body had been found. It matched the victim’s wounds.
Then there was the case of Edmund Grossmann of Cumminsville. He was a grocer and butcher who one day walked out of his house and never returned. Grossmann’s family scoured the area for a week with no luck. And then, according to the Cincinnati Commercial Tribune [26 February 1906]:
“Saturday, while picking dandelions on the side of Roll Hill, with her two children, Mrs. Maggie Markle, 3631 Borden Street, noticed the prostrate form of a man lying in the bushes close by. She thought it was that of a sleeping man and avoided the neighborhood.”
Returning home, Mrs. Markle described the incident to a neighbor, John Pherson, who walked over to Roll Hill expecting to chase away a tramp. He found Grossmann’s body. The grocer had strangled himself with a handkerchief and his own suspenders.
Vernon Presley, of 1504 Elm Street, found a much less macabre bit of criminal evidence when he and his wife parked their car along the Mary Ingles Highway in Daytona, Kentucky. According to the Cincinnati Enquirer [13 April 1955]:
“A dandelion hunter was $100 richer yesterday because, instead of finding dandelions, he uncovered a box containing stocks and bonds valued at $62,000.”
The box was part of the loot carried off from the home of William Peebles of Silverton, who had been robbed a week earlier while the family was out of town. Peebles gave Presley $100 for his acuity.
And then there was Viola Nolan of 1578 Baymiller Street, who told the Cincinnati Post [28 September 1923]:
“While picking dandelions on Price Hill, I cut one flower and found a plain gold ring on the stalk. The stalk had grown thru the ring which had been dropped.”
But dandelion hunting had its hazards as well as its rewards. In 1907 a good-sized hog escaped from the pens of farmer Henry Brink in Hartwell. The porcine fugitive established itself in Pfau’s Woods near the city infirmary (now known as Drake Hospital) and chased away children who came to the woods to hunt dandelions. The men of the neighborhood organized a posse to capture the beast. In another case, the Enquirer [14 April 1917] reported:
“Mrs. Mary Hurst, 55 years old, Rossmoyne, Ohio, was killed yesterday by a south-bound Dayton Express on the C. L. and N. Railway near her home. Coroner Bauer was informed Mrs. Hunt was picking dandelions at the side of the tracks and she was drawn under the train by suction.”
And some folks just didn’t cotton to random trespassers picking dandelions on their property. In 1909, George Wasser sued George Weyman in Campbell County Court because, while Wasser was picking dandelions on Weyman’s farm, Weyman shot him twice – in his hip and in a foot – permanently crippling him. Similarly, Denato Mariaus of California, Ohio, sued Jack Weiner for shooting at him while he hunted dandelions on Weiner’s property near Coney Island.
In the 1920s, with Prohibition settling like a wet blanket on the land, dandelions surged in popularity because of the ease with which they could be induced to create a sort of wine. The Cincinnati Post [18 July 1923] opined that dandelion wine had replaced beer as Cincinnati’s iconic beverage:
“Some Cincinnatians suggest adoption of the dandelion as the city’s official flower. How the mighty hops have fallen! Moreover, homemade dandelion wine isn’t bad, at all.”
So popular was this concoction, that the Enquirer [24 April 1930] facetiously investigated a mystery:
“We see a lot of people picking the dandelion blossoms without trying to dig the plants themselves out of the lawn. What can it mean d’ya suppose?”
Interestingly, the Volstead Act that created Prohibition allowed for modest production of grape or fruit wine at home. Since dandelions were not fruit, dandelion wine was strictly prohibited. Dandelion wine was so easy to make, Cincinnati revenuers generally ignored the law and looked the other way during the springtime harvest. If you want to try dandelion wine yourself, here is a recipe from the Cincinnati Post [7 April 1913]:
“To 4 quarts flowers, take 4 quarts boiling water, cover well with water, let stand 3 days. Add peel of 3 oranges and 1 lemon, boil for 15 minutes, drain and add juice of oranges and lemons to 4 pounds of sugar and one cupful of yeast. Keep in a warm room, strain again. Let stand for 3 weeks, then bottle and serve.”
12 notes
·
View notes
Text
President Rutherford B. Hayes (far right), First Lady Lucy Webb Hayes, and their party visiting Yosemite -- which was still ten years away from becoming a National Park -- on October 21, 1880. President Hayes was not only the first President in American history to visit the West Coast of the United States while in office, but he was the first incumbent President to travel west of Salt Lake City and only the second to travel west of the Rocky Mountains (his immediate predecessor, Ulysses S. Grant had visited Utah in 1875).
The President's "Great Western Tour", which lasted from August 26-November 6, 1880 took the Presidential party through Iowa, Nebraska, Wyoming Territory, Utah Territory, Nevada, California, Oregon, Washington Territory, Arizona Territory, New Mexico Territory, Colorado, and Kansas en route to the Hayes family home, "Spiegel Grove" in Fremont, Ohio in time for Hayes to cast his ballot for fellow Ohioan James Garfield to be his successor.
#History#Presidents#Rutherford B. Hayes#President Hayes#Hayes Administration#Lucy Webb Hayes#First Families#Presidential History#Presidency#Presidential Trips#Great Western Tour#1880 Great Western Tour#Presidential Travels#Politics#Political History#1880 Election#James Garfield#West Coast#Presidential Firsts#Yosemite#Yosemite National Park#Yosemite Falls#Lucy Hayes#Spiegel Grove#Ohio Presidents#Ohio History#POTUS History
17 notes
·
View notes
Text
The gnarly tree by Mark K.
Via Flickr:
This old tree has been battered and abused by the weather and is still going strong. The Ashtabula River Gulf in Indian Trails Park, Ohio. October 17, 2023.
1 note
·
View note
Text
"Faerie Tale Theatre" Posthumous Reunion: The Stars' Final Resting Places
Some people might think I'm obsessed with death. A minor hobby of mine is to research celebrities' final resting places, via the website Find a Grave and the YouTube channel Hollywood Graveyard. And I like perusing themed guides to famous graves. For example, Hollywood Graveyard's videos themed to Christmas, Halloween, the cast and crew of The Wizard of Oz, cast and crew members of The Twilight Zone, etc., or Find A Grave's "Posthumous Reunion" pages for famous movie and TV show casts, sports teams, etc.
I decided to create a similar guide for the cast of Shelley Duvall's Faerie Tale Theatre. Sadly, all too many stars of that cult classic series are no longer with us. Here's a guide (with links to Find a Grave pages) to the various places where those stars are buried, in case anyone here might like to visit a few someday.
@ariel-seagull-wings, @thealmightyemprex
Aughaval Cemetery – Westport, Ireland
*Joseph Maher (Narrator, Cinderella/Sultan, Aladdin and His Wonderful Lamp)
Blue Grass Memorial Gardens and Mausoleum – Nicholasville, Kentucky, USA
*Harry Dean Stanton (Rip van Winkle, Rip van Winkle)
Eternal Hills Memorial Park – Oceanside, California, USA
*Karen Black (The Sea Witch, The Little Mermaid)
Fairview Cemetery – Linden, Michigan, USA
*Max Wright (Prince Heinrick, The Dancing Princesses)
Fir Grove Cemetery – Ada, Oregon, USA
*Bridgette Andersen (Gretel, Hansel and Gretel)
Forest Cemetery – Circleville, Ohio, USA
*Conchata Ferrell (Mother, Thumbelina)
Forest Lawn Memorial Park, Hollywood Hills – Los Angeles, California, USA
*Carrie Fisher (Thumbelina, Thumbelina)
*Fred Willard (Paul Pig, The Three Little Pigs)
*Brock Peters (The Ogre, Puss in Boots)
*Pat McCormick (King Fredrico, The Princess and the Pea)
Forest Park Lawndale Cemetery – Houston, Texas, USA
*Shelley Duvall (series creator and hostess/The Miller's Daughter, Rumpelstiltskin/Rapunzel, Rapunzel/voice of the Nightingale, The Nightingale/Snow White's Mother, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs)
Genola Rural Cemetery – Los Angeles, California, USA
John P. Ryan (Hendrick Hudson, Rip Van Winkle)
Green Hill Cemetery – Muskogee, Oklahoma, USA
*James Noble (King Rupert, Cinderella)
Hillside Memorial Park – Culver City, California, USA
*Leonard Nimoy (The Evil Magician, Aladdin and His Wonderful Lamp)
*Dick Shawn (The Emperor, The Emperor’s New Clothes)
Hollywood Forever Cemetery – Los Angeles, California, USA
*Paul Reubens (Pinocchio, Pinocchio)
Holy Cross Cemetery – Culver City, California, USA
*Chris Penn (Will Tussenbrook, Rip Van Winkle)
Lake Lawn Park Cemetery and Mausoleum – New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
*Severn Darden (Farmer Silas, The Princess Who Had Never Laughed)
Lincoln Cemetery – Chambersburg, Pennsylvania, USA
*Jean Stapleton (The Giantess, Jack and the Beanstalk/The Fairy Godmother, Cinderella)
Mount Shasta Memorial Park – Mount Shasta, California, USA
*Brandis Kemp (Mama Bear, Goldilocks and the Three Bears/voice of Nadine Wolf, The Three Little Pigs)
Mount Sinai Memorial Park – Los Angeles, California, USA
*Frances Bay (Granny, Little Red Riding Hood)
*Georgia Brown (Maggie, The Emperor’s New Clothes)
Mountain View Cemetery – Oakland, California, USA
*Jack Fletcher (The Wizard, Rumpelstiltskin)
Queen of Heaven Catholic Cemetery – Hillside, Illinois, USA
*George Kirby (The King, Puss in Boots)
Polizzi Generosa Cemetery – Palermo, Sicily, Italy
*Vincent Sciavelli (The Priest, Pinocchio)
Riverside Cemetery – Old Saybrook, Connecticut, USA
*Art Carney (Morty, The Emperor’s New Clothes)
Riverview Cemetery – Hamilton, Montana, USA
*Hoyt Axton (The Ranger, Goldilocks and the Three Bears)
Rose Hills Memorial Park – Whittier, California, USA
*Keye Luke (Imperial Doctor, The Nightingale)
Saint Charles Cemetery – East Farmingdale, New York, USA
*Ray Sharkey (Grand Vizier, Aladdin and His Wonderful Lamp)
Saint Peter Churchyard – Blackland, Wiltshire, England
*David Hemmings (Narrator, Thumbelina/The Reindeer, The Snow Queen)
Saint Voldoldymyr Ukrainian Cemetery – Oakville, Ontario, Canada
*Gregory Hines (Edgar, Puss in Boots)
Valley Oaks Memorial Park – Los Angeles, California, USA
*Stephen Furst (Peter Pig, The Three Little Pigs)
Westwood Village Memorial Park – Los Angeles, California, USA
*Eve Arden (The Stepmother, Cinderella)
*James Coburn (The G**sy, Pinocchio)
*Doris Roberts (Mother Pig, The Three Little Pigs)
*Tim Conway (The Mayoral Candidate, Rip Van Winkle)
*Frank Zappa (Attila, The Boy Who Left Home to Find Out About the Shivers)
*Lu Leonard (Mrs. Toad, Thumbelina)
*Gena Rowlands (The Witch, Rapunzel)
William Henry Lee Memorial Cemetery – Los Angeles, California, USA
*Beatrice Straight (Queen Veronica, The Princess and the Pea)
Cremated, Ashes Held Privately or Scattered
*Robin Williams (Prince Robin, The Tale of the Frog Prince)
*Hervé Villechaize (Rumpelstiltskin, Rumpelstiltskin)
*Christopher Reeve (The Prince, Sleeping Beauty)
*Treat Williams (Prince Andrew, The Little Mermaid)
*Brian Dennehy (King Neptune, The Little Mermaid)
*Klaus Kinski (The Beast, Beauty and the Beast)
*Roddy McDowell (Narrator, Rapunzel)
*Christopher Lee (King Vladimir, The Boy Who Left Home to Find Out About the Shivers)
*Dana Hill (Princess Amanda, The Boy Who Left Home to Find Out About the Shivers)
*Vincent Price (The Magic Mirror, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs/Narrator, The Boy Who Left Home to Find Out About the Shivers)
*David Warner (The Innkeeper, The Boy Who Left Home to Find Out About the Shivers)
*Jeff Corey (Father, The Boy Who Left Home to Find Out About the Shivers)
*Jack Riley (Sexton, The Boy Who Left Home to Find Out About the Shivers)
*Ned Beatty (The King, Rumpelstiltskin)
*Roy Dotrice (Peter Vanderdonk, Rip Van Winkle/The King, The Dancing Princesses)
*Zelda Rubinstein (Old Woman, The Dancing Princesses)
*Burgess Meredith (Mr. Mole, Thumbelina)
*Lee Remick (The Snow Queen, The Snow Queen)
*Lance Kerwin (Kai, The Snow Queen)
*Linda Manz (The Robber Girl, The Snow Queen)
*René Auberjonois (King Ulrich, The Tale of the Frog Prince/King Boris, Sleeping Beauty)
*Sally Kellerman (Queen Natasha, Sleeping Beauty)
*Barrie Ingham (Finance Minister, The Emperor’s New Clothes/Tutor, The Princess Who Had Never Laughed)
*Richard Libertini (King Murray, Sleeping Beauty)
*Alex Karras (Papa Bear, Goldilocks and the Three Bears)
*Katherine Helmond (Jack’s Mother, Jack and the Beanstalk)
*John Vernon (Father, Little Red Riding Hood)
*Mako (Gardener/Minister, The Nightingale)
*Billy Curtis (Barnaby, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs)
*Rae Allen (Aladdin’s Mother, Aladdin and His Wonderful Lamp)
*Howard Hesseman (The King, The Princess Who Had Never Laughed)
*Jackie Vernon (Phlegmatic Jack, The Princess Who Had Never Laughed)
*Albert Hague (Nicholas Vedder, Rip Van Winkle)
*James Earl Jones (Genies of the Lamp and the Ring, Aladdin and His Wonderful Lamp)
Donated to Medical Science
*Ian Abercrombie (The Royal Cobbler, The Dancing Princesses)
Unknown (Not Publicly Revealed or No Information Online)
*Carl Reiner (Geppetto, Pinocchio)
*Alan Arkin (Bo, The Emperor’s New Clothes)
*Peter Risch (Bruno, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs/Herald, Puss in Boots)
*Lou Carry (Bertram, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs)
*Stephen Elliott (Father, Beauty and the Beast)
#faerie tale theatre#celebrities#actors#actresses#graves#famous graves#burial#cremation#tw: death#fairy tales#shelly duvall's faerie tale theatre#find a grave
8 notes
·
View notes
Text
oh yeah, while nowadays i remember it, it still confuses / messes me up how washington DC isn't even in washington. I mean, it makes sense, that's what happens when you have such a large and populous country. There's like what, 20 different towns called springfield?
In software development there's a joke / wisdom that once you're large enough, you WILL run into a problem where city and country will be interchangeable. Here are only some of them from the US:
Peru, Indiana Peru, Kansas Peru, Maine Peru, Massachusetts Peru, Nebraska Peru, New York Peru, Pennsylvania Peru, Vermont Peru, West Virginia Peru, Wisconsin Mexico, Indiana Mexico, Kentucky Mexico, Maine Mexico, Maryland Mexico, Missouri Mexico (village), New York Mexico (town), New York Poland, Maine Poland, Chautauqua County, New York Poland, Herkimer County, New York Poland, Ohio Poland Township, Mahoning County, Ohio Turkey, North Carolina Turkey, Texas Germany, Georgia Germany, Indiana Germany, Texas Germany Township, Pennsylvania China, Maine, United States China Township, Michigan, United States China, Texas, United States China Grove, Texas, United States Cuba, Alabama Cuba, Illinois Cuba, Kansas Cuba, Missouri Cuba, New Mexico Cuba (village), New York Cuba (town), New York Cuba City, Wisconsin Cuba Township, Minnesota Syria, Virginia Sudan, Texas
shoutout to Germany, Georgia, USA
47 notes
·
View notes
Text
Photos of trees at Scioto Grove, a metro park along the Scioto River in Grove City, Ohio. April 2018.
Find me here: [X]
Please: Like, Reblog, & Follow
#Wild Ohio#Grove City#Columbus#Ohio#Columbus Ohio#Scioto Grove#Scioto Grove Metropark#Dendrology#photography#photo#trees#dendrologyphotography#plant photography#nature photography#wildlife photography#wildlife art#wildlife#nature#my art#April#2018#Queer artist#woman artist#autistic artist
0 notes
Text
Holidays 8.30
Holidays
Archivist Day (Kyrgyzstan)
AVID Day
Barberry Day (French Republic)
Commemoration Day for the Fatalities in Pre-Deportation Detention (Germany)
Frankenstein Day
Fred Hampton Day (Illinois)
Freeman-Moss Day
Huey P. Long Day (Louisiana)
International Day of the Disappeared
International Day of the Victims of Enforced Disappearances (UN)
International Missy Barratt Day (Aenopia)
International Puma Day
International Whale Shark Day
Jimmy Buffet Day
Manu Ginobili Day (Texas)
Marcelo H. Del Pilar Day (Bulacan, Philippines)
Motel Day (Colombia)
National Ass Clapping Day
National Beach Day
National Bite People Who Annoy You Day
National Black Beauty Founders Day
National Grief Awareness Day
National Harper Day
National Holistic Pet Day
National Homecare Day of Action
National Press Freedom Day (Philippines)
National Screen Time Awareness Day
National Small Industry Day (India)
Pinaglabanan Day (Philippines)
Retrospection Day
Rowboat Day
Saint Rose of Lima’s Day (Peru)
Slinky Day
Talk Intelligently Day
Victory Day (Turkey)
Food & Drink Celebrations
International Cabernet Sauvignon Day
National Mai Tai Day (a.k.a. Real Mai Tai)
National Toasted Marshmallow Day
New England Apple Day
Independence & Related Days
Ashoka (Declared; 2010) [unrecognized]
Constitution Day (Kazakhstan)
Constitution Day (Turks and Caicos Islands)
Kohlandia (Declared; 2019) [unrecognized]
Leylandiistan & Gurvata (Declared; 2014) [unrecognized]
Liberation Day (Hong Kong; from Japanese Occupation; 1945)
National Liberation Day (Gabon; 2023)
Tatarstan (from Russia, 1990) [unrecognized]
5th & Last Friday in August
Burning of Zozobra (Old Man Gloom effigy) [Friday before 9.1]
College Colors Day [Friday nearest 9.1]
Comfort Food Friday [Every Friday]
Daffodil Day (New Zealand) [Last Friday]
Five For Friday [Every Friday]
Flashback Friday [Every Friday]
Forgive Your Foe Friday [Friday of Be Kind to Humankind Week]
Friday Finds [Every Friday]
Fry Day (Pastafarian; Fritism) [Every Friday]
Peruvian Coffee Day (Peru) [Last Friday]
Positive Twitter Day [Last Friday]
TGIF (Thank God It's Friday) [Every Friday]
Tracky Dack Day (Australia) [Last Friday]
Wear It Purple Day (Australia) [Last Friday]
Sheep Market Fair begins (Denmark) [Last Friday through Sunday]
Weekly Holidays beginning August 31 (4th Full Week of August)
Labor Day Weekend (U.S. & Canada) [Begins Friday before 1st Monday in September]
Benton Neighbor Day (Benton, Missouri)
Britt Draft Horse Show (Britt, Iowa)
Bumbershoot (Seattle, Washington)
Central City Rock 'n' Roll Cruise-in & Concert (Central City, Kentucky)
Cleveland National Air Show (Cleveland, Ohio)
Clothesline Fair (Prairie Grove, Arkansas)
Colombia River Cross Channel Swim (Hood River, Oregon)
Colorado Balloon Classic (Colorado Springs, Colorado)
Commonwheel Labor Day Weekend Arts and Crafts Festival (Manitou Springs, Colorado)
Daniel Boone Pioneer Days (Winchester, Kentucky)
Fort Bridger Rendezvous (Fort Bridger, Wyoming)
Great Bathtub Race (Nome, Alaska)
Great Grove Bed Race (Coconut Grove, Florida)
Harvest Wine Celebration (Livermore, California)
Hog Capital of the World Festival (Kewanee, Illinois)
Hopkinton State Fair (Contoocook, New Hampshire)
Iroquois Arts Festival (Howes Cave, New York)
Johnson City Field Days (Johnson City, New York)
Jubilee Days Festival (Zion, Illinois)
Lifelight Outdoor Music Festival (Worthing, South Dakota)
Mackinac Bridge Walk (St. Ignace, Michigan)
National Championship Chuckwagon Races (Clinton, Arkansas)
National Hard Crab Derby and Fair (Crisfield, Maryland)
National Sweetcorn Festival (Hoopeston, Illinois)
Oatmeal Festival (Bertram/Oatmeal, Texas)
Odyssey Greek Festival (Orange, Connecticut)
On the Waterfront (Rockford, Illinois)
Old Threshers Reunion (Mount Pleasant, Iowa)
Oregon Trail Rodeo (Hastings, Nebraska)
Payson Golden Onion Days (Payson, Utah)
Pennsylvania Arts & Crafts Colonial Festival (Greensburg, Pennsylvania)
Popeye Picnic (Chester, Illinois)
Santa-Cali-Gon Days Festival (Independence, Missouri)
Scandinavian Fest (Budd Lake, New Jersey)
Sta-Bil Nationals Championship Lawn Mower Race (Delaware, Ohio)
Snake River Duck Race (Nome, Alaska)
Taste of Colorado (Denver, Colorado)
Taste of Madison (Madison, Wisconsin)
Totah Festival (Farmington, New Mexico)
Waikiki Roughwater Swim (Honolulu, Hawaii)
Westfest Czech Heritage Festival (West, Texas)
West Virginia Italian Heritage Festival (Clarksburg, West Virginia)
Wisconsin State Cow-Chip Throw (Prairie du Sac, Wisconsin)
Woodstock Fair (Woodstock, Connecticut)
World Championship Barbecue Goat Cook-Off (Brady, Texas)
Festivals Beginning August 30, 2024
Battle of Flowers (Laredo, Spain) [thru 8.30]
Brisbane Festival (Brisbane, Australia) [thru 9.21]
California Garlic Festival (Los Banos, California) [thru 9.1]
Calumet County Fair (Chilton, Wisconsin) [thru 9.2]
Casey Popcorn Festival (Casey, Illinois) [thru 9.2]
Coconino County Fair (Fort Tuthill County Park, Arizona) [thru 9.2]
Dice Con (Lviv, Ukraine) [thru 9.1]
Eastern Idaho State Fair (Blackfoot, Idaho) [thru 9.7]
European Medieval Festival (Horsens, Denmark) [thru 8.31]
Fall Fest 2024 (Schweitzer Mountain Resort, Idaho) [thru 9.2]
Galveston Island Wine Festival (Galveston, Texas) [thru 9.1]
Giant Cabbage Weigh-Off (Palmer, Alaska)
Great Pershing Balloon Derby (Brookfield, Missouri) [thru 9.2]
Harmony Fair (Harmony, Maine) [thru 9.2]
Marshall County Blueberry Festival (Plymouth, Indiana) [thru 9.2]
Michigan Bean Festival (Fairgrove, Michigan) [thru 8.31]
Midway Swiss Days (Midway, Utah)
National Hard Crab Derby (Crisfield, Maryland) [thru 9.1]
Nauvoo Grape Festival (Nauvoo, Illinois) [thru 9.1]
North Carolina Apple Festival (Hendersonville, North Carolina) [thru 9.2]
Obetz Zucchinifest (Obetz, Ohio) [thru 9.2]
Oktoberfest (Beaver Creek, Colorado) [thru 9.1]
PAX West, a.k.a. PAX Prime (Seattle, Washington) [thru 9.2]
Payson City Golden Onion Days (Payson, Utah) [thru 9.2]
Red Rooster Days (Dassel, Minnesota) [thru 9.2]
St. William Seafood Festival (Guntersville, Alabama) [thru 8.31]
Washington State Fair (Puyallup, Washington) [thru 9.22]
Wilhelm Tell Festival (New Glarus, Wisconsin) [thru 9.1]
Wisconsin State Cow Chip Throw & Festival (Prairie du Sac, Wisconsin) [thru 8.31]
Woodstock Fair (Woodstock, Connecticut) [thru 9.2]
Feast Days
Agilus (a.k.a. Aile; Christian; Saint)
Alexander of Constantinople (Eastern Orthodox)
Alfredo Ildefonso Schuster (Christian; Blessed)
Anne Line, Margaret Ward & Margaret Clitherow (Christian; Saints)
Black (Positivist; Saint)
Camilla Läckberg (Writerism)
Candle in a Wine Bottle Day (Pastafarian)
Charisteria (Charis, Goddess of Mercy; Old Roman Thanksgiving)
Chatter Champion Announcement Day (Shamanism)
Day of Satisfying the Hearts of the Ennead (Nine Major Gods; Ancient Egypt)
Eustáquio van Lieshout (Christian; Blessed)
Evelyn De Morgan (Artology)
Charles Chapman Grafton (Episcopal Church)
Fantinus (Christian; Saint)
Felix and Adauctus (Christian; Martyrs)
Festival of Charisteria (Day to Give Thanks; Ancient Rome)
Fiacre (Christian; Saint)
Guy de Lussigny (Artology)
Habetrot’s Eve Day (Northern Britain; Starza Pagan Book of Days)
Isaac Levitan (Artology)
Jacques Louis David (Artology)
J. Alden Weir (Artology)
Jeanne Jugan (Christian; Saint)
Leonor Fini (Artology)
Mary Shelley (Writerism)
Narcisa de Jesús (Christian; Saint)
Pammachius (Christian; Saint)
The Pullover Sweater (Muppetism)
Robert Crumb (Artology)
Rose of Lima (Christian; Saint)
Rumon (a.k.a. Ruan; Christian; Saint)
Sacrifice to Tari Pennu Day (Indian Earth-Goddess; Everyday Wicca)
Santa Rosa de Lima Day (Peru)
Stephen Nehmé (Maronite Church, Catholic Church; Blessed)
Theo van Doesburg (Artology)
Third Onam (Rice Harvest Festival, Day 3; Kerala, India)
Thor Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
The Three Arts Day (Celtic Book of Days)
Virginia Lee Burton (Artology)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Dismal Day (Unlucky or Evil Day; Medieval Europe; 16 of 24)
Egyptian Day (Unlucky Day; Middle Ages Europe) [16 of 24]
Sakimake (先負 Japan) [Bad luck in the morning, good luck in the afternoon.]
Unlucky Day (Grafton’s Manual of 1565) [39 of 60]
Premieres
Alice Chops the Suey (Ub Iwerks Disney Cartoon; 1925)
Anna Karenina (Film; 1935)
Bad Girl, by The Miracles (Song; 1959)
Beer (Film; 1985)
The Big Snooze (Chilly Willy Cartoon; 1957)
A Bird in a Guilty Cage (WB LT Cartoon; 1952)
Carnival Row (TV Series; 2019)
Dance, Girl, Dance (Film; 1940)
The Dark Crystal: Age of Resistance (TV Series; 2019)
Emma (Film; 1996)
Flesh + Blood (Film; 1985)
The Funny World of Fred and Barney (Live Action/Animated TV Variety Show; 1978)
The Good Girl (Film; 2002)
Heart-Shaped Box, by Nirvana (Song; 1993)
Hey Jude, by The Beatles (Song; 1968) [1st Apple Records release]
Highway 61 Revisited, by Bob Dylan (Album; 1965)
Kravn the Hunter (Film; 2023)
The Late Show with David Letterman (Talk Show; 1993)
Little Cesario (MGM Cartoon; 1941)
Medúlla, by Björk (Album; 2004)
A Mouse in the House (Tom & Jerry Cartoon; 1947)
Music of the Sun, by Rihanna (Album; 2005)
Never Kick a Woman (Fleischer Popeye Cartoon; 1936)
Otello (Opera Film by Franco Zeffirelli; 1986)
Putting on the Act (Fleischer Popeye Cartoon; 1940)
Santana, by Carlos Santana (Album; 1969)
The School for Scandal, by Samuel Barber (Overture; 1933)
Short in the Saddle (Woody Woodpecker Cartoon; 1963)
Side to Side, by Ariana Grande (Song; 2016)
Slow Days, Fast Company, by Eve Babitz (Short Stories; 1977)
State Fair (Film; 1945)
Surf’s Up, by The Beach Boys (Song; 1971)
Terror on the Midway (Fleischer Cartoon; 1942) [#9]
The Three Bears (Ub Iwerks ComiColor Cartoon; 1935)
Top Hat (Film; 1935)
What Happened to Monday (Film; 2017)
Today’s Name Days
Felix, Herbert, Rebekka (Austria)
Aleksandar, Aleksandra (Bulgaria)
Didak, Margarita, Petar (Croatia)
Vladěna (Czech Republic)
Albert, Benjamin (Denmark)
Emil, Meljo, Mello, Miljo (Estonia)
Eemeli, Eemi, Eemil (Finland)
Fiacre (France)
Alma, Felix, Heribert, Rebekka (Germany)
Alexandra, Alexandros, Evlalios, Filakas (Greece)
Rózsa (Hungary)
Donato, Fantino (Italy)
Alija, Alvis, Jolanta (Latvia)
Adauktas, Augūna, Gaudencija, Kintenis (Lithuania)
Ben, Benjamin (Norway)
Adaukt, Częstowoj, Gaudencja, Miron, Rebeka, Róża, Szczęsna, Szczęsny, Tekla (Poland)
Ružena (Slovakia)
Íngrid, Pedro (Spain)
Albert, Albertina (Sweden)
Raisa, Rhoda, Rosa, Rosabelle, Rosalie, Rosalind, Rosalinda, Roseanne, Rose, Rosemary, Rosetta, Rosie (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 243 of 2024; 123 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 5 of Week 35 of 2024
Celtic Tree Calendar: Coll (Hazel) [Day 28 of 28]
Chinese: Month 7 (Ren-Shen), Day 27 (Bing-Yin)
Chinese Year of the: Dragon 4722 (until January 29, 2025) [Wu-Chen]
Hebrew: 26 Av 5784
Islamic: 24 Safar 1446
J Cal: 3 Gold; Threesday [3 of 30]
Julian: 17 August 2024
Moon: 11%: Waning Crescent
Positivist: 19 Gutenberg (9th Month) [Fulton]
Runic Half Month: Rad (Motion) [Day 8 of 15]
Season: Summer (Day 72 of 94)
Week: 4th Full Week of August
Zodiac: Virgo (Day 9 of 32)
2 notes
·
View notes