Showing posts with label fireworks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fireworks. Show all posts

Saturday, July 7, 2018

fireworks at my house by Barbara Edwards


The fourth of July is also time for my family picnic. the town has a firework show in the park next door. everyone brings food and we enjoy being together. 
The volunteer fire department parks an engine close to the houses in case a shell starts of fire. After its over, they will walk the woods searching for any problems.


The fireworks are so close, we need to lay on blankets to watch the show.


I took some pictures to share.

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Wednesday, July 4, 2018

Firework by Christine DePetrillo

I'll admit to not feeling very patriotic this Fourth of July. My faith in our country, my fellow citizens, humans really, has been greatly shattered by events that don't belong in real life. I watch the news--not even certain I'm getting any truth anymore--and after about sixty seconds, I want to pack my bags and move to Canada. (My Vermont home is pretty far north. Maybe I can get someone to lower the Canadian border, eh?)

I know I'm not the only one who feels this way.

On this Fourth of July then, I encourage everyone to remember what ideals this country was built upon. Remember the outstanding men AND WOMEN who worked so tirelessly to make a place where opportunity and freedom are the cornerstones for a better life. Remember that our future depends on the decisions made today.

And don't forget to be a nice human to your fellow humans. Hate is infesting the land currently. We need more smilepower. Urgently. Be the reason someone else feels good.

Be like fireworks. Burst with light and color. Rumble with power. Spray fun in all directions. Collect oohs and ahhs.

Sparkle in the darkness.

Red fireworks exploding in the night sky


Toodles,
Chris
www.christinedepetrillo.weebly.com

Tuesday, July 7, 2015

Had a fun Fourth by Barbara Edwards

Since we live next to the park where the town fires off the annual fireworks, we have family and
friends come over for a barbeque and viewing. there is no way to
describe the sight of thousands of sparks flaring
close overhead.












I don't think my photos need a lot of description.
Here's a few. I already asked everyone to come again next year.


Monday, July 22, 2013

Friends and Fireflies by Leah St. James



I’ve been married for about a hundred years to a man who hates going to see the fireworks. My sons for some reason never took to them either, so ever since they got to the age where they could beg off the annual fireworks show, I’ve consigned myself to watching them on TV. Watching on TV is a pale second though. You can’t feel the big boom when the explosive charge goes off, can’t smell the sulfur in the air, hear the oohs and aahs of the people to your right and left. Still, I’m accustomed to what has become our annual celebration.

That changed this year, however. Sort of. I didn’t see fireworks on the 4th of July, I saw them on the last weekend in June. I’d driven from my home in southeastern Virginia to a writers’ retreat called The Porches about three hours west. The inn is an antebellum six-bedroom farmhouse converted by writers, for writers, where the house rules call for quiet all day, and socializing is permitted only after 5:30 in the evening. The two levels of porches overlooking the Appalachian mountains give the home its name. I was joining four writing buddies for a weekend of peace, quiet, friendship and writing. Heaven, right?

When you travel to The Porches, you bring your own food, and luckily for me, some of my friends are really good cooks. (To say I ate well doesn’t do justice to the increase in my girth after the weekend.) One friend is a bartender who’d arrived with a case of wines and liqueurs with pretty labels and exotic-sounding names. (I did say this was a writer’s version of heaven.)


Being that we’re all friends, we bagged the “no socializing till 5:30”rule that first night and hunkered down for some serious girl talk. We lingered over dinner, which was served on the first-floor porch, and watched hummingbirds hover at the birdfeeder, sipping their own dinner. When the mosquitoes started to bite, we headed to the second-floor porch and its view of the surrounding mountains.


Wine was poured, talk and laughter  ebbed and flowed, and aside from our conversation, all was quiet, except for the sounds of nature. We heard birdcall (including an honest-to-God Whippoorwill!), frogs doing their mating thing, and the lonesome clacking of a nearby freight train passing by. As giant birds that might have been eagles soared over the trees, I squelched the urge to burst out into a chorus or two of "God Bless America." :-)


Eventually night fell, and with the darkening sky came lightning bugs, or fireflies. I say “lightning bugs” as if they were the same creatures I  used to run around and chase in my backyard in Central Jersey. We’d catch them in jars with holes punched in the lids, and watch them light up for a while before releasing them back to nature.

Those were Jersey lightning bugs. What I saw at The Porches was a whole different species. 

Their show started out slowly, subtly. A flash here and there. “Oh, look, lightning bugs,” one of the ladies said, and we all paused to watch. Then it built – the intensity, the number – and pretty soon the air around us filled with lights, twinkling on and off, high up in the trees that stretched for another fifty feet or more above us. At one point, those tiny little insects lit up so big and bright, they looked like golf balls flitting playfully among the branches. 

They didn’t shake the ground with the force of an explosion, and they didn’t release the scent of sulfur into the sky, but those lightning bugs put on a show worthy of 4th of July fireworks. And as I sat there, sipping my wine, listening to the quiet oohs and aahs of friends, I thanked God for the opportunity to share that memory. 

God bless America, and lightning bugs.

Sunday, July 7, 2013

Fireworks in my backyard by Barbara Edwards

Our house is the last house on a dead-end road

that borders Henry Park. The annual fireworks

show is fired from the Fox Hill Tower, the

highest point in town and less than  three hundred

feet from our home. To say the least it is

spectacular. The explosions are right overhead

and it feels like you could reach up and touch them.

We practically recline in our chairs to watch the
Watching the show
show.

As a safety measure the local fire department

has crews placed at each danger point. We have

one at the end of the road and they keep watch

during the show. All their equipment is ready to

use.

Ready for anything!

Ready for an emergency.

Spectacular finale!
 The display continues for 45 minutes.
After the show, the firemen patrol the property for embers.
Doing their job. Thank you for your service.



Visit my website at http://www.barbaraedwaards.net