04-21-2020, 12:37 PM
What an absolutely brilliant calendar! Very clever names, all. (And you sometimes say you have trouble with English?? I'm quite sure I couldn't do something like that in French....)
Alas, I cannot take credit for the pun. Saw it on a Britcom many years ago and have always wanted to use it. However, I'm not sure anyone in my immediate area knows what secateurs even are.
Wow, we are over 8 pages and 100 posts on this thread! Cheers to everyone who's been playing along!
Here are some of the crew with the next prompts... we seem to have got into a 'thing' with 4 at a time, so.....
A house number.
Something from another country.
I got this in Venice ages ago. (The first pic I took, of Sara wearing it, was just, um, creepy )
What you are reading right now.
The oldest thing in your house!!
Cherie is holding a piece of "dinosaur bone" from my grandmother's rock collection. I'm waiting to hear from DinoLab in Victoria, whose tour guide thought someone might be able to identify it if I sent some pix. Or at least confirm that that is what it really is.
If it isn't, our next contender is Victoria's little treasure: a piece of ballast rock from the original HMS Bounty, which was scuttled in 1790, signed on the bottom by Charles Christian from Pitcairn Island.
Wow eh??
Alas, I cannot take credit for the pun. Saw it on a Britcom many years ago and have always wanted to use it. However, I'm not sure anyone in my immediate area knows what secateurs even are.
Wow, we are over 8 pages and 100 posts on this thread! Cheers to everyone who's been playing along!
Here are some of the crew with the next prompts... we seem to have got into a 'thing' with 4 at a time, so.....
A house number.
Something from another country.
I got this in Venice ages ago. (The first pic I took, of Sara wearing it, was just, um, creepy )
What you are reading right now.
The oldest thing in your house!!
Cherie is holding a piece of "dinosaur bone" from my grandmother's rock collection. I'm waiting to hear from DinoLab in Victoria, whose tour guide thought someone might be able to identify it if I sent some pix. Or at least confirm that that is what it really is.
If it isn't, our next contender is Victoria's little treasure: a piece of ballast rock from the original HMS Bounty, which was scuttled in 1790, signed on the bottom by Charles Christian from Pitcairn Island.
Wow eh??