
This week’s
quiz is a bit different than normal... but then isn’t everything on this blog? I
guarantee that it will be easier than the last one. We start today with 2
photographs. There will be four more sets of photos, for a total of ten (10)
for those who are arithmetically challenged. Your objective, should you choose
to play, is to identify each photograph with a simple description (max of 20
words, please; we don’t need the Great American Novella here.) If you don’t
have a clue as to its identity and/or location, then just make something up. There
will be two winners: the one with the most correct answers and the one with the
most original answers, even if they are totally wacko. And yes, you can have a mix of the two, so you’d
be crazy not to enter!
Okay, Photo #
1. Here is a hint: it is NOT in Europe.
And now,
Photo # 2 (the bird, not the tree):
Flowers of the Day: I wanted to add these just because they struck me as beautiful. I don't have a clue as to what they are, since I never grew flowers. If any would like to identify them, just drop me an email at ftgiesemann@aol.com.
Our word for the day is kerfuffle n. U.K. a noisy disturbance or commotion (informal) [Early 19th C. Origin uncertain: perhaps from Gaelic car “twist” + Scots fuffle “fuss”, similar in meaning to "getting your knickers in a twist".] Example of use: “My goodness, Margaret, that American chap is creating a kerfuffle at the front desk.” “It’s simply shocking, Louise; these colonials just don’t know how to behave in polite society, do they?” (Actually overheard by My Lovely Bride in reference to a disturbed American at the Cooper Island Beach Club, British Virgin Islands, 1999. The American in question was subsequently identified as Your Faithful Correspondent.)
His shorts look like they are covered with Peacock
ReplyDeletefeathers..
#2) woodpecker-there are different kinds
#3) pansies
#1 don't know....