Because the kitchen has various shades of white with black accents, I just removed my Christmas decorations and left out my pines and
a few snow men.
Not exact matches
I remember the first time we took Peacy outside, a
few days after she was born, all bundled up in a million blankets and we walked through the
snow with her to the Sugar Shack to talk with Steve, the
man who was renting the cabin to us.
The leaves are starting to fall off of the trees, we are losing three minutes of daylight each day this month and Old
Man Winter is starting to knock on the door, reminding me to get the furnace checked, purchase new
snow boots for the kids, figure out Halloween costumes and clear out some clutter so I can organize some closets and rooms in a
few months when I begin my annual hibernation!
Few will dispute this car is aggressive in personality; according to AUTOMOBILE senior copy editor Kara
Snow, it is «a pink and purple mohawk among a sea of
man buns.»
But in fact they must, since in the report, any US climate trend in the last 20 years (more rain, less rain, more storms,
fewer storms, more
snow, less
snow, etc) is all blamed on
man.
Ironically, just a
few years ago, believers in anthropogenic (
man - caused) global warming — since renamed «climate change» — claimed cold weather and
snow would soon be just a memory.
This year I was at my limit for Christmas decor budget so I put a wooden cutting board out, topped it with a glass hurricane lantern filled with fresh greens and a
few Christmas ornaments, two white pretty china mugs, a branch of greenery from the tree, and a cake pedestal topped with a giant festive
snow man mug, and voila.