HAPPY HUNTTING N FISHING TO YA!! HEY HERE'S AN IDEA!!!!
ONE DAY WHEN YA PLAN ON GOING TAKE SOMEONE WITH YA!!!
BE IT A BUDDY,WOMEN,CHILD,R A DISABLE N SHOW THEM THE ROPES ...
U NEVER NO IT JUST MIGHT MAKE THERE DAY MORE THAN U'LL EVER KNOW!!!
STOP BY MY PAGE N CHECK IT OUT N SIGN MY GUEST BOOK WHILE UR THERE!!!
HAVE FUN ''BUT'' BE SAFE,... UR FRIEND POSSUM1 R / POSSUM_2...AKA...TRISH
My name is Nick Podell. I live in Indiana. I would like to take a couple of children hunting on our property. We have about 1400 acres in northern Indiana.I've tried to contact a couple of people about this and never have heard anything back. I think it is important to get our youth out in the woods. They are the outdoorsmen of the future. I f you are intereasted please message me back and let me know. I dont care if it is on t.v. or not. I just want to kind of spread the wealth of my land to people that dont have as much as my family does.
Every flower has a history and every flower symbolizes something. Often the history and symbols are confusing and contradictory but they are still fascinating. If your birthday is in the month of June, your flower is the rose. Here is the story and language of your flower.
The Linguistic Roots for the Name Rose
The Latin name for the rose, rosa, literally means red. Diana Wells suggests that saying that rose means red is like saying the heart is a muscle situated on the left side of the rib cage, it is an incomplete understanding of what the blossom symbolizes.
History of the Flower
Quite possibly the most popular flower in the history of the world, the rose has a multitude of legends and myths surrounding it. A flower of such prominence must be related to the gods of our world or at least one would think so when considering the wealth of otherworldly associations attached to the blossom. Was the smile of Amor the source of our first rose or did it fall from the hair of the goddess of dawn, Aurora?
The sweet scent and frowsy beauty of the blossom resulted in it being popular among the rulers of this world. The infamous Cleopatra had her pillows filled with rose petals. Romans used petals to decorate their feasts and even had canopies filled to shower petals upon the guests. Sometimes the Romans love of roses became too much and the shower of petals would actually smother guests.
The Symbolism of Roses
Jewish legends attributed the color of the rose to the first blood that darkened the earths soil. The Teutons believed the rose was a symbol of the underworld and called their battlefields rose gardens.