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The Red-Headed Harbinger of the Apocolypse



Last Updated: 11/22/2009

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Gender: Female
Status: Married
Age: 102
Sign: Aquarius

City: Longing to be in Aspen
State: COLORADO
Country: US
Signup Date: 8/1/2006

Blog Archive
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Tuesday, January 22, 2008 

Current mood:  stoked
Category: Travel and Places

YAY!! home from Disney!!
The Pirates and Princesses party ROCKED!! We just got home and I'll update soon!!

 

Currently listening:
Pirates Of The Caribbean: At World’s End
By Hans Zimmer
Release date: 22 May, 2007
Monday, December 31, 2007 

Current mood:  creative
Category: Goals, Plans, Hopes

Almost 2008....

As I gaze at the calendar I see we're just about wrapping up 2007 and entering the gates to 2008!
It amazes me that the older I get, the shorter a year seems! It feels like we just rang in 2007 yet here we are at the threshold of another year!

So... got resolutions?
Whatcha got on your list for '08?

I'm not a resolution kinda girl.... not my thing. I know that the moment I make 'em is the moment I'm gonna break 'em so I don't even 'go there'!!!
I'd love to know what your New Year's Resolutions are and if you've made any that you've actually KEPT in years past.......
Currently listening:
The Definitive Collection
By Bing Crosby
Release date: 24 January, 2006
Monday, April 02, 2007 

Current mood:  chill
Category: Pets and Animals
Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket
Currently listening:
Telemetry of a Fallen Angel
By Crüxshadows
Release date: 06 July, 2004
Tuesday, January 02, 2007 

Current mood:  indifferent
Category: Life

Nice. New years eve. 7:30PM. Happy toddlers jumping on the bed during bedtime routine. Me sitting on the bed laughing hysterically at my 4 year old. She's a comedian already. She can make this vocal sound and it sounds exactly like a buzzing mosquito. It's funny as hell because she does this funny face and sticks her arms out....
Anyway.. well she was doing just that and I was cracking up because it's so friggin' hysterical.  With my hysterical laughter and her 'buzzing' her head collided with MY face, breaking my friggin' nose.
yeah.. nice eh? I got my nose busted by a New Year's Eve Mosquito. *sigh*
Hubby was quick to grab an ice pack and I iced it IMMEDIATELY. There is minimal swelling but there are black circles under my eyes making me resemble a raccoon.(Nice eh?) No I'm NOT posting a picture so shut the hell up. Don't even ask cuz I'll pummel you.
My nose appears normal (aside from very slight swelling) It's not crooked and it's very slightly purple on the bridge. I have an appointment with a ENT Dr. tomorrow to assess the internal damage (if any).
Throw some happy vibes my way if ya can. 

Happy Buzzin' New Year

Currently listening:
It's About Time
By John Denver
Release date: 25 October, 1990
Thursday, December 21, 2006 

Category: Travel and Places

Disney World! Here we come!! (January 15-22 2007)

This will be our 4th or 5th visit Disney World/Land !!

We used to go to Disneyland in January when my husband had a work-related conference to attend! Since changing jobs, that annual conference is no longer part of his requirement so............... we hit FLORIDA's Disney World instead (oh so much more than Disneyland which we still love!!! )
This will be our 3rd trip since our girls were born. They LOVE Disney (what toddler doesn't?!) and they have talked about their past trips EVERY SINGLE DAY since we first vacationed there! They are excited and recite, every day, things they did, characters they saw and places they want to see again.
We didn't spend enough time at Animal Kingdom last year and we will dedicate atleast a FULL day to that park this year. Epcot is the favorite park of all of us. My 4 year old will celebrate her 5th birthday at a Breakfast with the Princesses in Epcot's Norway. My 2 year old will celebrate her 3rd birthday at Chef Mickey's at a breakfast with her favorite characters, Mickey, Minnie and Goofy. We're very laid back travelers and don't jam pack our itinerary. We'd rather have fun than be rushing from place to place. There's just SO MUCH to see that you really don't want to miss anything by rushing.
We're staying at the Animal Kingdom Lodge which is where we stayed last year as well. It is, by far, my FAVOURITE resort. I really can't see staying anywhere else!!!!

 

Currently listening:
Lovecraft & Witch Hearts
By Cradle of Filth
Release date: 11 June, 2002
Friday, December 15, 2006 

Current mood:  satisfied

After many years of sitting in the Chatelaine's seat, I have stepped down to give someone else a stab at it. Though still active with all my SCA Group, I want to focus more on other aspects such as the fighting arts! heh heh heh. Wanna spar?

Yours, Always in Service...

Lady Gabrielle Gealbhain an Ruadh

 

Currently listening:
Excalibur: Original Movie Soundtrack
By Trevor Jones
Release date: 28 August, 2006
Tuesday, December 12, 2006 

Category: News and Politics

By BEN NUCKOLS, Associated Press Writer Sun Dec 10, 10:48 PM ET

BALTIMORE - In 1942, the Gestapo circulated posters offering a reward for the capture of "the woman with a limp. She is the most dangerous of all Allied spies and we must find and destroy her."

The dangerous woman was Virginia Hall, a Baltimore native working in France for British intelligence, and the limp was the result of an artificial leg. Her left leg had been amputated below the knee about a decade earlier after she stumbled and blasted her foot with a shotgun while hunting in Turkey.

The injury derailed Hall's dream of becoming a Foreign Service officer because the State Department wouldn't hire amputees, but it didn't prevent her from becoming one of the most celebrated spies of World War II.

On Tuesday, the French and British ambassadors plan to honor Hall, who died in 1982 at age 78, at a ceremony at the home of French Ambassador Jean-David Levitte in Washington.

British Ambassador Sir David Manning plans to present a certificate signed by King George VI to Hall's niece, Lorna Catling. Hall should have received the document in 1943, when she was made a member of the Order of the British Empire.

"I think it was ironic that the State Department turned her down because she was an amputee, and here she went on and did all this other stuff," said Catling, who lives in Baltimore. Catling said she didn't learn many of the details of her aunt's espionage career until after her death.

Hall, who was fluent in French, was living in Paris when the Nazis invaded in 1940, and she decamped for London, where she was recruited by the secret British paramilitary service, the Special Operations Executive, becoming its first female field operative.

Hall was sent to Lyon, becoming "the heartbeat" of the local French Resistance, said Judith L. Pearson, whose biography of Hall, "Wolves at the Door: The True Story of America's First Female Spy," was published last year.

"Any agent from London came through her flat. She coordinated them with Resistance members," Pearson said. "Most agents only stayed about three months in the field. She stayed 15 months."

After the Gestapo wanted posters made her situation untenable, she fled through the Pyrenees mountains into Spain. During the journey, she sent a radio message to London, reporting that "Cuthbert" — her nickname for her prosthetic leg — was giving her trouble.

Her commanders didn't understand the reference, and their reply suggested the gravity of Hall's circumstances and her value to the Allied cause: "If Cuthbert troublesome eliminate him."

Back in London, she joined the American Office of Strategic Services — the precursor to the CIA — and returned to France in 1944, disguised as an elderly peasant. She located parachute drop zones where money and weapons could be passed to Resistance fighters and later coordinated guerrilla warfare. Her teams destroyed bridges, derailed freight trains and killed scores of German soldiers.

"I would certainly put her name in the pantheon of people who distinguished themselves in intelligence," said Peter Earnest, executive director of the International Spy Museum in Washington, which has an exhibit devoted to Hall.

Hall maintained her cloak of secrecy after the war. The certificate that went with her British OBE medal sat in a vault for more than 50 years because the British government was unable to track her down.

In the meantime, OSS chief William Donovan had presented Hall with a Distinguished Service Medal in September 1945 during a private ceremony in his office that was witnessed only by Hall's mother. She was the only civilian woman to win the medal for service in World War II.

In 1950 she married French-born OSS agent Paul Goillot. She took a job with the CIA in 1951 and retired in 1966, living out her days with her husband on a farm in Barnesville.

"She would talk about books and she was very into animals and things like that. But work, no. There was a big wall about anything like that," Catling said. "She always seemed kind of glamorous and mysterious."

On the rare occasions that Hall told war stories, they weren't particularly harrowing.

"One time she said she and Paul found a deserted chateau, and they discovered a whole wine cellar," Catling said. "They had a wonderful evening enjoying that."

 

 Spy Museum:

Currently listening:
White Christmas
By Bing Crosby
Release date: 01 June, 1995
Saturday, December 09, 2006 

Current mood:  content
Category: Blogging

Currently listening:
Begin the Beguine
By Artie Shaw and His Orchestra
Release date: 25 October, 1990
Monday, December 04, 2006 

Current mood:  artistic
Category: Life

Well what's new is this:

Got this on Nov 30th. Isn't she a beauty? *sigh* Aye... a beauty she is!!
as I've stated before, we have a traveling WW2 museum and now we have a nice, vintage WW2 Dodge Amubulance to bring to events. It's been a dream of ours to have one of these for about 5 years. What a great piece this is to add to our WW2 collection!
Now all we need to do is find an appropriately sized building to house the collection so we can open our WW2 Museum. We're taking it one day at a time.

I've been M.I.A. for a few weeks due to overwhelming BUSYNESS! It's been NON-STOP around here for the past month or so and it's only going to continue like this. I need to schedule in time for my BLOG! I MISS hanging out here and checking out everyone's blogs!

Currently listening:
Tinderbox
By Siouxsie and the Banshees
Release date: 25 October, 1990
Friday, November 17, 2006 

Current mood:  tired
Category: Blogging
Currently listening:
Music from the Succubus Club -- Vampire: The Masquerade
By Various Artists
Release date: 22 February, 2000