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Happy T.O.T Day

Karen | blogging | Friday, 31 October 2008

I was afraid I was going to miss Grey’s Anatomy all together last night. I got caught up in a movie hubby rented called, Leatherheads.

It was a pretty good movie. You have to watch it just to laugh at the helmets that football players wore back in those days. I would venture to guess that they are collectors items. I never see one in an antique shop.

George Clooney was his boring self in the movie. If not for his good looks, I doubt he would get any work. Renee Zellweger is always interesting to watch. Her facial expressions are so amazing. I wonder how old she is now and what happened between her and Kenney Chesney. Oh my, I am so nosy this morning.

Happy Halloween everyone. I hope you receive lots of chocolate in your bag this year.

Ooops, I forgot to say…I caught the last half hour of Grey’s. It was pretty good again. They can leave that sexual stuff out (between the two women) as far as I am concerned. That should be kept private and doesn’t need detailed in a tv program. Sheesh. Bailey was wonderful as usual.

Preserve Your Travel Memories with Dragon NaturallySpeaking

Karen | Important | Monday, 27 October 2008

While traveling, I have wondered if my ancestors traveled and visited the places I have visited. Did they marvel at the same waterfall I had the pleasure of seeing? I will never know. I want to keep a record of my travels so that my ancestors will be able to enjoy my wandering as much as I have.

There is an exceptional software program available that allows us to record our thoughts in an exciting and convenient way. I learned of Dragon Naturally Speaking from my friend Heather who blogs at Boating In Beautiful British Columbia . She wanted to find a way to record her father’s life stories so she would have them as a permanent diary to share with future generations. Watch the video to see how she and her father have benefited from this wonderful software. After a few adjustments to get her father situated, she was able to type at $150 Words Per Minute for $99!.

Dragon NaturallySpeaking 10 Standard

My friend Brett knows more about this wonderful software than I could possibly share so let me, let him tell you how much this software can record the history of generations and preserve great stories for those generations to come.

From Brett:
The above video is not the typical Dragon NaturallySpeaking video. It was created by a blogger named Heather from British Columbia. She writes a blog called Boating in Beautiful British Columbia.

In the video that she has created, she talks about Dragon NaturallySpeaking. She talks about using Dragon NaturallySpeaking. In fact in the video, she is using Dragon NaturallySpeaking while she’s talking about it but you don’t quite realize that until the video is about halfway done.

The thing that’s REALLY interesting about this video, is not the fact that Heather is using the software and it’s not the fact the software works for her so much as HOW she chooses to use it. She took Dragon NaturallySpeaking and sat down with her father who is 95 years old. She spent a few minutes with him getting the software tuned to his voice so that the computer recognizes his sentences and words. Then she’s lets her father tell some of his great stories to the computer which transcribes everything that he says.

You can tell just by watching the video and listening to her father that he really does have some interesting stories to tell. I have a feeling that I could probably listen to the stories myself quite a bit, enjoying them immensely. And that too is not really the cool thing about this video. Although I’d love to hear her father tells more stories, the COOL THING is that she’s using Dragon NaturallySpeaking to capture a piece of her family’s oral tradition.

I can think of hundreds of different stories that my family has shared with me over the years that have not been documented. Our family is slowly losing some of those great stories and unfortunately, as we are losing some of our family members. We survivors don’t know all of the stories ourselves that our parents or grandparents or our great grandparents knew. But this video shows that you can use Dragon NaturallySpeaking to help capture some of those great stories that your parents and grandparents and great grandparents have probably told you dozens of times.

It’s something that we don’t always think about, but in a lot of ways those stories are some of the most cherished memories that we will walk away with from our family. And the sad thing is that our family cannot Be with us forever, but their memories can live on and this is where Dragon NaturallySpeaking really shows us its value. It’s true for $99 you can use Dragon NaturallySpeaking and you can type 150 words a minute. That’s a pretty good value for the software. It’s not too expensive and the benefit is tangible.

Now, you can get a useful tool at any computer store or Home Depot or Lowes, and if you don’t know how to use it well, then it really doesn’t matter what you pay for it. It is a waste of money.

Heather shows us a great way to use Dragon NaturallySpeaking to capture some of the most valuable information and stories from her father that she might ever be able to record not only for herself but for her daughter and her grandchildren someday and great-grandchildren and many other branches of the family even.

So that’s just another great reason why they Dragon NaturallySpeaking is a pretty cool piece of software. $99 could help you capture your family history easily and even make it indexable too, so that you can search it from your computer. That’s just amazing.

My name Brett Bumeter, and I write about Dragon NaturallySpeaking. I’ve been writing reviews about it for almost 2 years now. You could say that I’m sold on the software, and I hope that this article and this video helps show you the value of using it as well.

Sincerely,
Brett Bumeter
Softduit Media
www.softduit.com

PS this article is about 630 words long and it took me five minutes to write and another minute or two to edit with Dragon Naturally Speaking 10. Even with editing time that’s close to 100 words per minute!

Helping Needy While Traveling

Karen | travel | Monday, 27 October 2008

How many of us see people who could use our help but don’t want to intrude? We would like to find a way to help people in the places we visit but don’t know where to begin to offer help. There is a wonderful organization called StuffYourRucksack.com that is committed to helping you help others. Travelers helping other travelers to give practical assistance to people who have the least, but often give the most. Helping a community is probably best done through an already-established organization. It is not wise to go it alone, especially when traveling. Unfortunately, there are those who prey on tourists and play on their generous spirits. Let the website at StuffYourRucksack.com help you to help those in need while traveling safely to your destination.

Finding the Right Spot

Karen | attractions | Monday, 27 October 2008

After a weekend of staying home, I am ready to travel. My husband is itching to try out a new fly he made so maybe we should make a visit to the lake. He has been tying his own flies and the fish stole the last two he made. He wants to try a heavier line and see if he can catch the pesky bass who has been grabbing his bait.

There are many lakes in Indiana and each is filled with crappie, blue gill and bass. You just have to visit on the right day and find the right spot at the right lake. It is like playing the slots at a casino where you think the next pull is going to bring the big win. A friend talked with some men who had just returned from a fishing tournament in Linton, Indiana. They brought in 160 crappie and those weren’t enough to win the tournament! How exciting! I would hate to have to clean that many fish. LOL

Holiday Photo Cards and Activities

Karen | news | Friday, 24 October 2008

Photobucket Are any of you traveling during the Christmas holiday season? I think you might get lucky because it seems as if airline ticket prices are going down. I think the travel industry is trying to do more to get people to travel this year.

To me, the holidays are all about family time. It is so nice when families can get together and share gift giving and big holiday meals. Outdoor activities are especially fun to do with all of our relatives. Even if you cannot be with your extended family, your immediate family can make wonderful memories. Making a snowman is a fun treat. Sledding is fun and great exercise to work off those holiday treats. Religious festivities are especially meaningful when families attend together.

Another fun family tradition is a Christmas card exchange. I love to get Holiday Photo Cards from my family and friends. I keep each years and compare how everyone has changed from year to year. Vista Print is a great website that makes it easy to have photo cards produced each and every year. They even have my favorite, caricature cards. Vista Print is ready to help you share your family fun with others through beautiful cards.

It is not too early to start planning your holiday festivities. Make your reservations and get those cards addressed! Photobucket

Would You Spend the Night?

Karen | attractions | Sunday, 19 October 2008

Make a reservation at the Lizzie Borden Bed and Breakfast/Museum, the site of the infamous 1892 murders. Wouldn’t it be fun to spend Halloween night at such an infamous house? The house, located in Fall River, MA is being restored. You can read more in the article from the B & B’s website. Rhode Island nursing home owner Donald Wood bought the house — now a bed-and-breakfast and tourist attraction — last year, he said one of his first priorities was to remove two structures added in the 1900s, which housed a print shop. The city landmark known as the Lizzie Borden house is on its way toward looking more like it did on the day in 1892 when Andrew J. Borden and Abbey Durfee Gray Borden were murdered than it has in decades.

The house’s history with the Bordens began in 1872, when Andrew J. Borden, a wealthy Fall River businessman, bought it in order to live closer to the city’s downtown district. His daughter Lizzie became the prime suspect when he and his wife, Lizzie’s stepmother, were murdered.

Lizzie was acquitted in 1892, and she and her sister Emma moved out of the house, to a home on French Street. Lizzie lived there until her death.

The Borden sisters sold the house in 1918, and it has changed hands several times since then.

Before Wood, it was owned by the McGinn family, who bought it in 1940 and used it as a private home and base for Leary Press. In 1996, they converted it to a bed-and-breakfast.

The proprietors of the B & B offer two two bedroom suites, Lizzie & Emma’s Bedrooms, and Abby & Andrew’s Bedrooms (this suite has a private bath); the John Morse Guest Room, Bridget’s Attic Room and two additional spacious attic bedrooms (the Jennings & Knowlton Rooms), each of which offer a double bed in a room with Victorian appointments.

Guests are treated to a breakfast similar to the one the Bordens ate on the morning of the murders, which includes bananas, johnny-cakes, sugar cookies and coffee in the addition to a delicious meal of breakfast staples.

The interior and exterior of the home has been restored to its original Victorian splendor, with careful attention to making it as close to the Borden home of August, 1892 as is possible.

The owners of the home invite all to view their collection of both Fall River and Borden memorabilia at 92 Second Street.

Located just fifty miles south of Boston, minutes from Providence or Newport, R.I. and the gateway to Cape Cod, this landmark home is accessible from all major highways.

To see actual pictures of the house and various rooms, visit the website at www.lizzie-borden.com.

There have been many unanswered questions concerning the murders.

Maybe the maid did it

The maid, Bridget Sullivan, was not treated so well by the Bordens. First of all, they insisted on calling her Maggie because that was the previous maid’s name and they couldn’t be bothered to remember hers. Second, her lodgings were pretty poor, considering how rich the Bordens were (by today’s standards they would be millionaires). Despite his wealth, Andrew Borden was notoriously cheap and even had the hot water shut off when he bought the house he was killed in. Third, the morning of the murders, Bridget was supposed to be washing the windows outside (on the hottest day of the year, mind you) but asked Abby if she could do them later as she was feeling ill. Abby told her absolutely not and sent her out to do her chores anyway. Bridget disappeared after the murders and it was rumored that the Borden sisters helped her move back to Ireland. She later turned up in Montana where she remained until her death. One story says that right before she died in 1948, Bridget summoned a friend to her deathbed and said she wanted to confess something. The friend was too late, though, and Bridget died before she was able to – what? Confess that she was the murderess? Implicate Lizzie?

The Criminal Investigation

The autopsies of Andrew and Abby Borden were conducted on the Borden’s dining room table. Oddly enough, everyone slept in their respective rooms the very same night of the murders; even guest Uncle John Morse, whose bed Abby Borden was making when she was killed. So he slept right next to the huge bloodstain on the floor where Abby’s body laid until it was discovered.

Police interrupted the burial of the Bordens to inform everyone that the doctor wanted another autopsy. Thus, the heads of Abby and Andrew were removed from the bodies. Andrew’s was never returned.

Other oddities:

Psychic or Shrewd?

Either Lizzie had psychic abilities or she was trying to direct attention away from herself in advance, because the day before the murders she told her friend Alice Russell that she had a feeling something bad was going to happen. She said she just couldn’t shake it and she was concerned about her father’s well being. The day after the Bordens’ funeral, Alice was also the one who discovered Lizzie burning one of her dresses in the kitchen stove. When Alice asked what was going on, Lizzie told her that the old dress had paint all over it so she was just disposing of it.

Following up the trial of the century:

“Lizzie Borden: you’ve been acquitted of brutally murdering your father and your stepmother and have successfully been ostracized from the entire town! What will you do next?” Since Disneyworld wasn’t around in 1892, Lizzie followed up the murders a bit differently. She and her sister took the money they received from their father’s will and bought a mansion in the elite part of town. She started calling herself “Lizbeth” after that, perhaps to distance herself from the murders or perhaps to make herself sound more sophisticated since she was now living in such a fashionable district. Lizzie named the mansion “Maplecroft” and even had the name carved into the steps of the house.

In 1904, Lizzie became friends with actress Nance O’Neil. Emma didn’t approve of Lizzie’s lifestyle because she was having raucous parties with actors and actresses. Around this time, Emma moved out of Maplecroft and she and Lizzie never spoke again. Lizzie died on June 1, 1927, from complications of a gall bladder surgery. Emma died nine days later when she fell down the stairs of her house.

I am fascinated by this stuff!

What better way to forget your troubles than to stay at the notorious Lizzie Borden B & B? Theater designer Tim Haskell of New York City, has created an elaborate haunted house experience that is just waiting for you.

My Own Backyard

Karen | attractions | Wednesday, 15 October 2008

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Be sure to visit other Wordless Wednesday participants. You can find them here.

Tiguan is Hot

Karen | news | Monday, 13 October 2008

Al of you who want to travel buy don’t want to spend a lot of money, listen up! Gas prices fell over the weekend. I paid $2.93 per gallon to fill my tank on Saturday. (I never thought I would ever say that paying almost $3.00 for a gallon of gas would be a good thing. LOL)

The news here in Indiana is all a buzz about the new Volkswagen being rolled off the production line. From AOL.autos, I gathered the following information.

Volkswagen says the Tiguan (the name comes from a combination of tiger and iguana) is based on the same chassis elements already used on the Rabbit, Jetta and Passat. That means front strut suspension, four-link rear suspension, aluminum subframes, electric power steering and the full complement of safety gear: ABS brakes with Brake Assist, electronic stability control, traction control, tire pressure monitoring and six air bags.

Inside, standard equipment includes power windows, power locks, cruise control, four 12-volt power points, an AUX jack for music players, and an electronic parking brake. VW pointed out that all of its 2009 models, including the new Tiguan, will have ESP (Electronic Stability Program) standard, a first in the non-luxury category, and three years ahead of the federal mandate.
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I think it is a classy looking car.

Bald Heads as Billboards for Air New Zealand

Karen | travel | Friday, 10 October 2008

Heads up to all you travelers who would love to be a part of promoting life-changing journeys to New Zealand. New Zealand is located southeast of Australia across the Tasman Sea. Wouldn’t you like to enjoy the Aoraki/Mount Cook, the highest peak of the Southern Alps? Think of the Lord of the Rings Trilogy. Beautiful mountainous countryside filled with crystal clear lakes formed from mountainous glaciers. Here is how you can enter for your chance to win some money by advertising travel to this beautiful country:

Air New Zealand is looking for beautiful bald heads to use for advertising. They plan to use these heads as billboards in Los Angeles. Can you think of anyone you would like to see use their balding assets to promote a life-changing journey to New Zealand?

I remember the journey I call life-changing. It involved seeing the giant redwood trees in California. Nothing can make you feel the power of God until you have stood at the base of a giant redwood tree. Looking up made me feel small yet remember that I am one in his treasured tribe.
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Start thinking of who to tell about this fun campaign. Who do you know with a balding head that would make a terrific billboard for this promotion? I think my sweet hubby would make an excellent candidate if he shaved his head.PhotobucketCheck out www.airnewzealand.com a domestic and international airline with services within New Zealand and Australia as well as South West Pacific, Asia, North America and United Kingdom, offers new promotions, hot deals and special offers to travelers.

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Dracula’s Castle

Karen | attractions | Friday, 10 October 2008

Since October is Halloween month, I think it is only fitting to do some research on Dracula’s castle. I discovered the following information at Answers.com.
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Bran Castle, situated near Bran and in the immediate vicinity of Braşov, Romania, is a national monument and landmark. The fortress is situated on the border between Transylvania and Wallachia, on Highway 73. Commonly known as “Dracula’s Castle” and famous because of persistent myths that it was once the home of Vlad III Dracula, it is believed that Dracula did not actually live in the Bran, but rather spent two days locked in the dungeon while the Ottomans controlled Transylvania. The castle is a museum of medieval arts, open to tourists, who can tour the interior individually or by a guided tour. At the bottom of the hill is a small park exhibiting traditional Romanian peasant structures (cottages, barns, etc.) from across the country.

Bran Castle was originally built as a stronghold by the Teutonic Knights in 1212. The castle was first used in 1378 in defense against the Turks, and later became a customs post on the mountain pass between Transylvania and Wallachia. The castle briefly belonged to Mircea the Elder of Wallachia. From 1920, the castle became a royal residence. It was the principal home of Queen Marie, and is decorated largely with artifacts from her time, including traditional furniture and tapestries that she collected to highlight Romanian crafts and skills. It was inherited by her daughter, Princess Ileana, and was later seized by the communist regime after the expulsion of the royal family in 1948.

In 2006, the Romanian government returned the castle to Archduke Dominic of Austria, Prince of Tuscany (known as Dominic von Habsburg, an architect in New York State), son and heir of Princess Ileana. In 2007, Habsburg put the castle up for sale for a price of £40 million ($78 million). On July 2, 2007, Michael Gardner, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Baytree Capital, the New York investment firm which has been retained to create a plan for the castle and to sell it, predicted it would sell for more than $135 million, but added that Habsburgs will only sell it to a buyer “who will treat the property and its history with appropriate respect.”

In September 2007, an investigation committee of the Romanian parliament stated that the retrocession of the castle to Dominic of Habsburg was illegal, as it broke the Romanian law on property and succession.
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“Dracula’s Castle”

Bram Stoker, who fashioned portions of his character Count Dracula from Vlad the Impaler, allegedly used Bran Castle as his model for Dracula’s Castle. Bran Castle was subsequently featured in multiple film adaptations of “Dracula,” and has informally become known as “Dracula’s Castle.” The local economy has made use of the connection to boost tourism; a small market exists at the castle gates selling souvenirs related to Dracula and vampires.