Thursday, June 25, 2026

A Stitching Up a Storm Weekly Link Round-Up

 


Not much to say this week. My nieces in the UK are suffering through a heat wave. Although the temperatures are nowhere near what they are here in Phoenix, I feel for them because, not only are they not used to such heat,  neither are they prepared for it. I doubt Phoenix would be the metropolis it is without the invention of air conditioning, but countries with little experience of heat haven't had any reason to adapt for it. 

Yes, I've been stitching up a storm on those needlepoint tissue box covers. My home health nurse kept looking covetously at one of the completed ones, so I'll be making her one, too. I send progress report photos to the person I'm making them for, and he's shown them to some of his friends. From the sound of it, I could have myself a booming cottage industry if I wanted. However, I don't want to. I tried that before, and I grew sick to death of making the same thing over and over. Using different color combinations wasn't enough to encourage me to keep on stitching for profit.

Here's a photo of three of the requested five that I've completed.


Looking at them, you wouldn't believe I used the exact same pattern on all three, would you?

Virtual hugs to you all. Enjoy the links!


Books & Other Interesting Tidbits

►Channeling My Inner Indiana Jones◄

►Channeling My Inner Elly May Clampett◄
  • These butterflies can live 25 times longer than their relatives. They might provide insights into healthy aging in humans.
  • Female dolphins seem to remember which males were aggressive during mating season-- and may try to avoid them.
  • A border collie named Milo goes to great lengths to complete his human's fetch challenges.
  • Male bowerbirds in Australian cities are turning human trash into treasure to impress potential mates. (I've loved bowerbirds ever since watching one of Sir David Attenborough's documentaries.)
  • Ants can get distracted by cookies, chips, and other junk food. Here's why that could be a problem for the environment.
  • See the first-ever photographs of Cozumel's elusive dwarf fox, one of the rarest canids in the world.



The Wanderer
  • Major Oak, the 1,200-year-old tree with ties to the Robin Hood legend, is presumed dead after failing to produce leaves.
  • Hidden tunnels dating back to Henry VIII's reign were discovered at this English boarding school, where the king once lived.
  • Welcome to Pieve Santo Stefano, Italy's "City of Diaries."
  • The ghost roads of Ireland's Great Famine.
  • To see the magnificence and majesty of Machu Picchu without the hike, check out these amazing images.
  • Literary travel ideas for every kind of book lover. 

►Fascinating Folk◄
  • Rollerena, New York's fairy godmother.
  • By signing his name to massive jars, enslaved artist David Drake defied literacy bans in the South. Now, his masterpiece is on view with a famed Paul Revere bowl.
  • Sequoyah, the man who created a written language for the Cherokee, did it so efficiently and elegantly, his peers thought it was magic.
  • Andrea Wulf considers the rare humanity of 18th-century naturalist George Forster.
  • 13 surprising facts about famous naturalist (and one of my heroes), Sir David Attenborough.
  • "I will not comply": librarian Luanne James fights the censorship demands of the Rutherford County library system's board.

►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!

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