[lace-chat] Exhibtion of Royal Wedding memorabilia

2007-03-18 Thread Ann McClean

FYI -

27 April 2007 – March 2008 at Windsor Castle:

To mark the Diamond Wedding Anniversary of Her Majesty The Queen and His 
Royal Highness The Prince Philip,
Duke of Edinburgh, this exhibition tells the stories of five royal 
weddings – from the marriage of Queen Victoria
and Prince Albert to the wedding of Princess Elizabeth and Lieutenant Philip 
Mountbatten – through photographs,
documents from the Royal Archives, rare memorabilia and charming personal 
gifts exchanged by members of

the Royal Family.

http://www.royalcollection.org.uk/default.asp?action=articleID=409

NO mention of any dresses or veils being on display :)


Regards,  Ann McClean
in Llanmerewig, Mid-Wales, U.K.
~~~
Lace on Stamps of the World:
http://www.annmcclean.co.uk
~~~

To unsubscribe send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] containing the line:
unsubscribe lace-chat [EMAIL PROTECTED] For help, write to
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


[lace-chat] Dog and cat food recall (US)

2007-03-18 Thread Tamara P Duvall
Everyone who has pets may have already heard about it -- the recall is 
2 days old-- but, in case you haven't... Please check to see if your 
preferred brand is one of the ones being recalled; pets have died 
(kidney failure) in some instances. The company itself is unknown to me 
but the brand names they sell their products under are very common.


And please pass it on to other people you know who have pets.

http://www.menufoods.com/recall/
--
Tamara P Duvallhttp://t-n-lace.net/
Lexington, Virginia, USA (Formerly of Warsaw, Poland)
 
 


To unsubscribe send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] containing the line:
unsubscribe lace-chat [EMAIL PROTECTED] For help, write to
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


Re: [lace-chat] Dog and cat food recall (US)

2007-03-18 Thread Alice Howell
This applies to wet food -- canned or moist packets.
If you use this kind, check the webpage for the
various brands.
Alice in Oregon


--- Tamara P Duvall [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Everyone who has pets may have already heard about
 it -- the recall is 
 2 days old-- but, in case you haven't... Please
 check to see if your 
 preferred brand is one of the ones being recalled;
 pets have died 
 (kidney failure) in some instances. The company
 itself is unknown to me 
 but the brand names they sell their products under
 are very common.
 
 And please pass it on to other people you know who
 have pets.
 
 http://www.menufoods.com/recall/
 -- 
 Tamara P Duvall   
 http://t-n-lace.net/
 Lexington, Virginia, USA (Formerly of Warsaw,
 Poland)
   
   
 
 To unsubscribe send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 containing the line:
 unsubscribe lace-chat [EMAIL PROTECTED] For help,
 write to
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 

To unsubscribe send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] containing the line:
unsubscribe lace-chat [EMAIL PROTECTED] For help, write to
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


[lace-chat] Outback Adventures

2007-03-18 Thread David in Ballarat

Dear Friends,
I arrived home yesterday morning after another month in Australia's 
glorious Outback. Thank goodness it's a very pleasant 25C here in 
Ballarat today, so I don't have to do too much acclimatizing.


A month up north will always yield some exciting adventures and this 
year was no exception. I suppose the most dramatic occurred on the 
night of Friday Feb 2nd. For those of you who are unfamiliar with 
Australia's climatic zones, our Northern Territory is currently in 
the grip of its Wet season and consequent monsoons. How I love their 
thunder storms. That night though the heavy rain started about 6:00 
p.m. with very little in the way of thunder and lightning - shuts 
solid walls of water cascading down. It just didn't stop and if 
anything increased in volume and noise as the night progressed.


Some time before Picaninny Dawn I woke and could hear the roar of our 
little Burrell Creek. Could hardly wait for daylight to see just how 
much it had risen. Another couple were staying with us and her 
brother was out here on holiday from Germany. He's a Warrant Officer 
in the Army and at 44 yrs and 6''6 doesn't speak much English. He 
was sleeping in what is commonly known as the Guest House - a 
concrete slab with a roof, walls made from shade cloth and a doorway. 
At 3:00 a.m. he rolled over and thought the roof was leaking. 
However, when he put his legs over the side of the bed he could feel 
the strong current of the creek up to his knees. To make matters 
worse, you have to realize that this was in total darkness (no 
electricity) and the house would have been crawling with snakes, cane 
toads and the odd crocodile!


Somehow or other he managed to wade to the other donga where his 
sister was staying and roused her along with her partner. They 
grabbed torches and got back to his spot where they were just in time 
to rescue his bag (containing his passport) as it floated out the 
doorway! The poor bloke was naturally in shock and everything single 
thing he owned was saturated. He managed to squeeze himself into a 
pair of my trousers and a T shirt. At least the temperature didn't 
get below 27C overnight, so coldness was not an issue. I am currently 
making a Power Point of the flood and its subsequent damage.


The invasion of cane toads is now unstoppable, and whereas last year 
we were catching about 2 or 3 per night, this year it was more like 
13 - 20. Viv now has cages to put the night's haul in. Then next 
morning I had to dong them on the head with a heavy iron mallet. You 
have to ensure the toad is lying on its back when doing this or 
otherwise you can easily get squirted in the eyes with their venom. 
The bodies are then buried. They are hideous revolting poisonous 
creatures and already many of the native species have disappeared 
from Viv's block in just 15 months since their arrival. These include 
Quolls (native cat); goannas, water monitors, freshwater crocodiles; 
Western Chestnut mice; black footed tree-rats etc. etc. Fortunately 
(or some might say unfortunately) the pythons seem to be tolerant. 
You may recall that about 3 years ago I had the honour of 
entertaining a 12 foot python in my bed one night. Well this year his 
little grandchild made his appearance - luckily only about 5 feet 
long. He's a stunner.


Of course I managed to obtain the now obligatory nude lace making 
photos, with nothing untoward visible. So if anyone's interested in 
seeing them or those of the flood, let me know. The flood ones will 
be a large Power Point though.


Viv also has a new nightly visitor which is a Melomys Burtoni - a 
little native trimmer about half way between a mouse and a rat in 
size. It would spend an hour or so in the bottom of the cocky's cage 
cleaning up the sunflower seeds, and was not the least bit perturbed 
by a gentle pat or the flash from a camera.


It's good to be back, but will take some days to establish my old 
routines again. First off, I MUST commence practising 
Vaughan-Williams' In Windsor Forest for a concert in July.

Bye now
Love
David in Ballarat

To unsubscribe send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] containing the line:
unsubscribe lace-chat [EMAIL PROTECTED] For help, write to
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


[lace-chat] Outback Adventures P.S.

2007-03-18 Thread David in Ballarat

Dear Friends,
I forgot to sat that on the night of that flood, Burrell Creek rose 
some 12 metres (40 feet) as a result of about 30cm (12) of rain. It 
only took about 24 hours to drop to it's normal West Season level, 
but by then the damage was done - orchard totally gone, many rare 
palms flattened, huge water tanks on their sides.


David in Ballarat

To unsubscribe send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] containing the line:
unsubscribe lace-chat [EMAIL PROTECTED] For help, write to
[EMAIL PROTECTED]