Monday, May 24, 2010

I Need Help Choosing the Title

I tried to think of a creative title for this blog post, but had trouble narrowing it down. Maybe you can help! Here are a few to choose from:

How I Spent My Summer Vacation--Sledding!
or
The Polar Bear Re-location Program Comes to Utah
or
It Bites Having to Give Back Your Nobel Prize
or
Oh, That's Right. We're Not Calling it Global Warming Anymore. It's Called "Climate Change."





10 comments:

  1. All sound good to me. You want to laugh? Here's my husband's response when he saw the pictures:

    "Holy crap! That's ridiculous!" What am I married to Homer Simpson? LOL.

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  2. septembermom: He's right! (And I did laugh!) This is ridiculous. It's a week away from June. I should be planting a garden, hanging out at the lake, or complaining about the heat. Nay, I am turning on space heaters, bringing my potted plants indoors, and looking for my packed gloves. Ugh. Isn't it supposed to be in the 80's in your neck of the woods today? I'm coming over.

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  3. I'll trade you Randi, it is 85+ degrees here plus humidity. It was 91 degrees on Sunday..


    God Bless,
    Adam

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  4. Adam: Hmmm...humidity vs. snow. I've lived in Iowa. I think I'll keep the snow.

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  5. No - are you serious? That's snow - right now?!?!
    We've had some wacky weather too...fluctuations of 20-30 degrees but not SNOW.

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  6. In a book I'm reading, a light snowfall was called a souffle. I like that. But, snow in late May?

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  7. Auntie M: Ooh, I like that too! How did they use it? As in "a souffle of snow?" Yeah, snow in late May. Preposterous. They interviewed a farmer last night on the news who had twenty acres of fruit trees and lost them all because of all the snow we've had this May.

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  8. Jill: Yeah, we woke up yesterday absolutely shocked. I had gotten chilled during the night and when I woke up I realized why. They had predicted snow in N. Utah but for the mountain tops only, which is not unusual. For it to hit where we live was bizarre.

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  9. From The Zookeeper's Wife:
    The snowy autumn of 1942 hit the zoo with a special fury, as winds lashed buildings until they moaned, and whisked snowbanks into sparkling souflles.

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  10. Auntie M: The imagery is beautiful. We don't use the word "souffle" often enough. :)

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