Tuesday, 17 December 2024

A Postcard A Day - Tuesday 17 December 2024 - T for Pioneer Woman and lots of stsmps

 Hello lovely peeps, How are you all?  Things are okeydokey here. I'm getting ready for Christmas and have put up some decorations and a Christmas tree.

But let me show you my postcard. I really like it:


I call her Pioneer Woman. (It's not of course) It's a photo by Barbara Van Cleve from 1987. 
But I started following Ree Drummond (Pioneer Woman)  in 2008 and this is how I imagined her to look like. Of course I know now that she doesn't look like that, but back then she would write about her life and include recipes and I enjoyed her blog. When she got big, I stopped following her. But it was because of her that I started my blog a few years later.

Back to the postcard: It has some writing on the back: "Double Duty: This rancher was out helping gather, move and sort cattle well before dawn. Now she prepares lunch for family and hands."

The card was sent to me by Mark back in August. Mark is a healthcare administrator and lives in Cleveland in a large (Victorian?) house with up to six residents. At the moment of writing his house mates were a Turkish doctor in residence, a Peruvian IT engineer and a proud New Yorker and a grey cat called Smokey. 

The stamps are beautiful. Thanks Mark! There are nine stamps in total! The first one is the World Cup Soccer from 1994.

Brazil was crowned the winner after defeating Italy 3–2 in a penalty shootout at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California, near Los Angeles.

The top two stamps feature Daniel Webster. A stamp website writes: This stamp commemorates the 150th anniversary of the Dartmouth College Case.  In 1816, the legislature of New Hampshire changed Dartmouth College’s charter in an attempt to make the institution public.  Daniel Webster argued successfully that the change violated the contract clause of the U.S. Constitution.

The stamp crossways at the bottom features Abraham Lincoln.


The next lot of stamps feature a horse and rider on the top left. It comes from a 1993 whole sheet of horses:

Next to it the New York Stock Exchange. Here you can see it a bit clearer:
 The stamp was issued to commemorate the 200th anniversary of the signing of the Buttonwood Agreement on May 17, 1792.  A group of brokers and merchants signed an agreement under a buttonwood tree that they would only trade securities with each other and would trade on commission.  This agreement was the basis for the New York Stock Exchange.

Then below that stamp another 29 cent stamp. This time about the Commonwealth of Northern Mariana Islands.

The Postal Service recognized the Northern Mariana Islands and their relationship of forty-five years with the United States with the issuance of a 29-cent commemorative stamp on November 4, 1993, in Saipan, Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands.
Herb Kane of Captain Cook, Hawaii, designed the stamp.
In case, like me, you don't know where those islands are... here is a. map:


The stamp mentions 'Latte stones'.

 Found an explanation on Reddit: Latte (also latde) is a CHamoru term that refers to stone pillars and cup-shaped capitals or capstones, which represent house supports and are ascribed to the ancient people of the Mariana Islands. In some accounts, they are also referred to as casas de los antiguos (houses of the ancients).

The last stamp is the Chinese Year of the Boar.

Third in the U.S. Lunar New Year stamp series. It features an intricate Chinese paper-cut design by artist, Clarence Lee.  Boar years include 1923, 1935, 1947, 1959, 1971, 1983, 1995, 2007, 2019, and 2031

Phew! That were a lot of stamps! 

So what has been happening here? I have been to a concert in Granada on Saturday night with my friends David and Patricia.

We got to Granada just as it was getting dark. This is outside the Auditorium:
A lovely view over the city.

We went to Händel's Messiah.
It was amazing. The choir consisted of the main choir on the stage and then in addition to that, choirs in the side seats and also the two lateral panels of people in the downstairs (Those people who are stood up with the music in their hands). More than 100 strong!

Here are David and Patricia, and me on the right.

As today is T-Day, and Elizabeth and Bluebeard are hosting the T-Party, I need a drink. That was sorely lacking at the auditorium. There was nowhere for us to have a drink. We had come a long way and were ready for one. Oh well, you can't have everything.

So this is my drink for the T-Party:

Happy T-Day everyone!

Hugs,

Lisca



























1 comment:

My name is Erika. said...

My mother loved Handel's Messiah, and she would play it as soon as the US's Thanksgiving was over. I learned to love it, and I'm jealous you were able to hear it live. What a great auditorium. And it's interesting to see Daniel Webster and Dartmouth college mentioned in your post. So many places here in my state are named after him, and of course Dartmouth is still here and is quite a an important university. And those latte stones are really fascinating. Thanks for sharing all this. Have a super T day and week ahead Lisca. hugs-Erika