Wednesday!!
As you can see by Itzl's concerned look, this group is for us to check in at to let people know we are alive, doing OK, and not affected by such things as heat, blizzards, floods, wild fires, hurricanes, tornadoes, power outages, or other such things that could keep us off DKos. It's also so we can find other Kossacks nearby for in-person checks when other methods of communication fail - a buddy system. Members come here to check in. If you're not here, or anywhere else on DKos, and there are adverse conditions in your area (floods, heatwaves, hurricanes, etc.), we and your buddy are going to check up on you. If you are going to be away from your computer for a day or a week, let us know here. We care.
Our diaries are now produced a new group of regularly-scheduled writers:
Monday: BadKitties
Tuesday: jan4insight
Wednesday: Caedy
Thursday: weck
Friday: FloridaSNMOM
Saturday:broths
Sunday: loggersbrat
We also welcome submissions from anyone who would like to jump in, whether as a fill-in for someone else, or just because you feel like writing. Please mention it in the thread, or Kosmail FloridaSNMOM. Anyone scheduled who would like someone to fill in for you, please do the same.
If you'd like to be part of the Itzl Alert Network, please leave a comment asking to join, or send us a message asking to join. We'd love to have you. The bigger our network, the less likely someone will be stranded all alone.
We live next door to a cemetery that can be dated back to pre-civil war era with some of those interred. The weekend we moved in was the Olustee festival, and they rededicated part of the cemetery, the part of the cemetery that they rededicated was nameless Civil War soldiers and those who had been at the hospital during a short span of time.
This is the dedication display that they have set up when you come into the cemetery from the direction of where our house is.
The monument behind the color guard is positioned over six soldier's bodies. They carefully measured and calculated to ensure that each was proper. Each tombstone had a confederate flag on it, and there were six on the grassy base of the monument.