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Thursday, May 07, 2026

A Pinwheels and Smiles Weekly Link Round-Up

 


It's time to share a little secret with you: I love pinwheels. I've loved pinwheels since I was five years old. When I was five, I had the ring finger on my left hand shut and locked in a car door. (Don't ask me how. You wouldn't believe the things that happened to me when I was a kid.) Due to negligence on the local doctor's part, I had to go to the big city doctor for some rather unpleasant procedures. On one such trip, I was more reluctant than usual, so Mom promised me a present if I was good. I was, and the present I picked was a blue pinwheel. I stuck that thing out of the car window all the way home. It made me smile and forget about that doctor's visit.

I removed the headrest on my scooter and put a pinwheel in one of the holes. I love to hear that thing whirring behind my head when I'm out and about. What surprised me is other people's reactions to it. Talk about compliments and smiles! I guess pinwheels make many of us feel like children again, and those smiles certainly lift my own spirits.

I now seem to be collecting an assortment of them. Here's a photo of ones that I got while my nieces were here.



Do pinwheels make you smile, too? Virtual hugs to you all!

Enjoy the links!


Books & Other Interesting Tidbits

►Channeling My Inner Indiana Jones◄
  • See the largest Viking Age hoard ever found in Norway. At nearly 3,000 coins and counting, the cache is a once-in-a-lifetime find.
  • This souvenir bowl may have commemorated an ancient Roman soldier's service at Hadrian's Wall. It was discovered on a Spanish farm 1,900 years later.
  • This man fled Pompeii as Mount Vesuvius erupted. Archaeologists found him 2,000 years later, holding a bowl to protect his head and a lamp to light his way.
  • Dead bodies filled a mass grave when the first plague pandemic struck this early medieval city. New research explores the identity of the victims.
  • In a graveyard of shipwrecks between Europe and Africa, archaeologists discovered vessels doomed over thousands of years.
  • Tudor Heart: a Renaissance gold necklace featuring a French-English pun on the love between Henry VIII and his first wife, Katherine of Aragon.

►Channeling My Inner Elly May Clampett◄
  • City birds appear to like men more than women, but experts have no idea why.
  • What did dogs mean to the ancient Maya? Scientists are unlocking new clues.
  • Some polar bears are adapting to their melting habitat. Will it be enough to save the iconic species?
  • The endangered proboscis monkey is easily identifiable by one physical trait: it's supersized schnoz.
  • These rotund and "charmingly goofy" birds are delighting New Yorkers and dancing on social media. What is the American woodcock?
  • Cinco the jaguar has expanded his territory across southern Arizona.



The Wanderer

►Fascinating Folk◄

►I ♥ Lists◄

That's all for this week! No matter how busy you may be, don't forget that quality Me Time curled up with a good book!

12 comments:

  1. Those are beautiful pinwheels, Cathy! I can see why you love having one on your scooter, and why other people have such a great reaction to it. The collection you're showing here is beautiful, too. I just smiled, so thanks. Now, I'm off too....well, I'll bet you can guess! ;-) Enjoy your weekend!

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  2. Love the pinwheel story and I bet you do get a lot of smiles with one on your scooter! Have a nice weekend, Cathy!

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  3. Pinwheels are the best! I put them in my flower garden so I always have something colorful and fun to look at...and that doesn't need watering! ;D

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  4. Hello friend, it's been awhile. I have been so busy at work. I love pinwheels!! I have them here and there in the yard and at work.

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    1. That's good to hear, Ti. Thanks for stopping by. :-)

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  5. Pinwheels are fun, and I'm glad you have so many to brighten your days and decorate your scooter. Now I'm going to read that Tim Sullivan interview, and check out the underwater eruption, and then ...

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    1. I was hoping someone would read that Sullivan interview. :-)

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    2. It was fascinating! I had never looked at his bio, so all the details were new to me. And that background certainly helped with his writing.

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    3. It certainly has. I'm just about to finish The Bookseller. I can't believe I'm almost caught up with this series!

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