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Showing posts from November 4, 2016

THANKSGIVING IN CANADA, EH!

  In Canada, Thanksgiving is celebrated on the second Monday in October. The origin and history of Thanksgiving Day in Canada is different from the American Thanksgiving. Whereas the American tradition talks about remembering Pilgrims and settling in the New World, Canadians give thanks for a successful harvest. The geographical location of Canada is further north as compared to the United States therefore the harvest season falls earlier in Canada.    In Canada Thanksgiving 2009 will be celebrated on second Monday in October -  12th October 2009 . History and Origin of Canadian Thanksgiving There are  three traditions  behind Canadian Thanksgiving Day: 1 .  The farmers in Europe held celebrations at the time of harvesting to give thanks for their good fortune of a bountiful harvest and abundance of food. The farmers would fill a goat's curved horn with fruits and grains. This curved horn was known as a cornucopia or the horn of plenty. It is believed that

DIY 3D CARDBOARD STAR TUTORIAL!

This diy comes from www.greylustergirl.blogspot.com .  The holidays are just around the corner and these in different sizes would look great during the winter holidays. 3-D Cardboard Star I have one thing from my Fourth of July mantel done, wahoo! I better get cracken cause the 4th is just around the corner! If you are in a Independence Day mode too, why not make one of these fun 3-D cardboard stars! Here is what I did: Grab an empty box of cereal. Trace and cut out two stars. Score both stars from their tips to the indented parts (5 times each star). Push the stars out on the score lines by the tips and push in by the indented parts.       If that doesn't make sense to you, head over and follow this tutorial . Glue the stars together. I used hot glue.       Once dry, spray paint them your color of choice. Distress with ink if desired.

DIY MODELING OR SCULPTING CLAY!!

This was found at www.southernasbiscuits.com .   I've bought the sculpy clay and it's not very cheap.  Nothings better than making it yourself and saving a few buck at the same time.  Good luck!   There are many things during the holidays when this stuff will come in handy. Homemade Model Magic My second-grader recently had a school assignment to make a model of an African animal. Two pounds of model magic costs around $20. I thought perhaps those nifty DIYers would have a recipe or tutorial online and I wasn't disappointed. We whipped up a batch at home, using only two ingredients and water! Since I had these on hand, it didn't cost me, but I'd estimate it at around almost $3, especially if buy generic. We had fun making the modeling clay and the model! I added food coloring to tint. It worked, but know that for strong color, you'll need stronger coloring gels. We painted our model with craft paint. DIY Model Magic Ingredients 2 cups baking so

10 TESTS FOR GUILT AT THE SALEM WITCH TRAILS!

 Rhetoric is only as potent as its source material – this is why any allusion to the Salem Witch Trials of 1692 is so effective. What comes immediately to mind is the hideous and completely unfound legal proceedings – based mostly on superstition, irrational paranoia, Puritanism-fueled mass hysteria, and deception–which resulted in 19 wrongful executions, each one hanged, burned, or drowned for some ill-fated finger-pointing. The imagery evoked is just as barbaric and painful as the means by which these accused “witches” were tried and ultimately “proven” guilty. (In actuality, most of the “afflicted” were just suffering from some mental illness medical science hadn’t quite caught up to at the time, “evil” being amongst the worst know epidemics.) Here are ten ways their verdict was ascertained: 10. Spectral Evidence    This type of evidence is based on claims by accusers that they would see the individual accused of witchcraft in dreams or visions doi

TURDUCKEN FROM FOOD OF ROYALTY, TO THE THANKSGIVING DELICACY FOR THE MASSES!!

Four and twenty blackbirds baked in a pie–the blue-blood ancestor of the turducken    Once upon a time, you had to be royalty to be surprised by your food. But these days, an ordinary Thanksgiving gathering is cause for trepidation and excitement. It's 2015, and any turkey you face could be a turducken.     The turducken, if you’ve managed to avoid its company thus far, is exactly what it sounds like–a chicken stuffed into a duck stuffed into a turkey, all deboned and layered with various types of stuffing. It looks like a regular turkey, but, when cut, magically reveals its true soul (the duck), as well as its soul’s soul (the chicken). It would fit nicely next to a  Midwestern dessert salad , but is also the kind of main course you’d expect from a Thanksgiving feast  thrown by the psychedelic machine minds at Google Deep Dream . In short, it is a truly mysterious food, melding the nostalgic with the futuristic, the traditional with the impossible.     The carniv