slow uptake of the residential dishwasher (photos per televised documentary) |
inside a current domestic dishwasher |
A blogsite offering entertaining oddities since January 2020 at the rate of 30x/month. There are now over seventeen hundred posts in these four years. Images -- poetic (including song-lyrics), photographic, and computer-simulated -- are drawn from daily life as well as from poems and wordplay grouped by topic on our parent blog "Edifying Nonsense". The poetry displayed is all original (as are the song-lyrics), although portions evolved through rigorous editing on a collaborative website.
slow uptake of the residential dishwasher (photos per televised documentary) |
inside a current domestic dishwasher |
great egret, stalking slowly |
great egret, striking |
takeoff from railing, Shem Creek Park, Mt Pleasant SC |
From the Archives: An Illustrated E-Mail about Urban Portaging, 2017
| Nov 13, 2016, 7:50 PM | |||
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I encountered this on my late afternoon cycle-ride through trendy Rosedale on a rainy autumn afternoon. In its second year,
this festival, I found out, brings together people portaging canoes across a 17 km ancient aboriginal trail between the
Humber and Don watersheds. At this point, the portagers had just crossed the Mt Pleasant Expressway.
You can review poems, pictures and diverse nonsense related to Canada on the post "Canadiana" on our full-service blog "Edifying Nonsense".
PARODY SONG-LYRICS
... |
... in a fallout shelter? |
immature white ibis (less than two years) Note the duller color of the bill and legs and the brown-black body feathers versus its older companions |
In this post, we are introducing a novel form of poetic wordplay, the details of which are displayed on the accompanying slide.
The name reflects its derivation from Japanese poetic concepts; most of us learned a smattering of haiku poetry in elementary school. But the format we are presenting today is strongly influenced by palindromes: This form of wordplay is a concoction that can be found in both English and Japanese, and has been the basis of study, wonderment and amusement by scholars and word-nerds. The very different structure of the two languages makes the incorporation of wordplay into poetry unique in each case. We were delighted to learn recently that palindromic sentences, known as kaibun are found relatively frequent in Japanese ; the phenomenon is enhanced by the fact that there a fair number of single word palindromes in the language.
And, just in case you have forgotten what palindromes are about in English, your blogsite hosts have arranged a serial set of brief lessons on the topic ('Political Palindromes') which you can review by clicking HERE.
Hi! I'm your social distancing trainer. |
You can view the entire collection of these 50 wordplay maps, by accessing the collection 'Tourists Palindromic Guides: The Americas'. Start by clicking HERE!