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BranShea #172817 01/23/08 05:05 AM
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the vegetarian option: cheese, sliced open and stuffed with layers of cheese and, and, um, cheese.
The vegan variation gets really interesting.

JCS #172830 01/23/08 01:45 PM
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Thanks for pointing out what 'blue moon' means. Never really understood or saw it.
Only know the word from a songline: 'Blue moon, you found (or saw) me standing (or crying)? alone,etc.' (Sorry for mentioning songs all the time. They played a big part in learning the language).



BranShea #172842 01/24/08 04:02 PM
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Switching to blue moon, here's something:
What Is a "Blue Moon?"

Usually, a moon's cycle lasts 29 1/2 days, called the moon's synodic period. During the months of the year, excepting February, it is possible that a full moon could appear twice. When this rare occurence happens, about once every two to three years, it is called a "blue moon."

The expression "blue moon" dates back to the time of Shakespeare. If someone said, "He would argue the moon was blue," the average sixteenth century man would take it the way we understand, "He'd argue that black is white."*** This meant that a blue moon was something absurd, which led eventually to a second meaning, that of "never." To say that something would happen when the moon turned blue was like saying that it wouldn't likely happen.

In the 1940's, astrologists and meteorologists started using the term to describe when the moon takes on a blue coloration. This happens when small atmospheric particles interfere with light, causing a bluish tint to the moon's appearance from earth. The particles can come from things such as forest fires and volcanic eruptions. However, this only occurs "once in a blue moon."

From: Kentucky Department for Libraries and Archives

I was trying to find a site where you could listen to the song Blue Moon of Kentucky, but the link here doesn't work. But YouTube has a clip of the Father of Bluegrass, Bill Monroe, doing it. He wrote it in '46 or '47.
Bill Monroe

Jackie #172845 01/24/08 04:25 PM
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Woe!! Bill Monroe! Thanks for giving the whole story about the blue moon as the link refuses to connect. I'll be on the lookout if there's ever a blue moon here.
Not only the moon , also the grass is mighty blue in Kentucky!

BranShea #172855 01/25/08 02:19 AM
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Oh, I'm sorry--I checked both links before I posted, and again just now, and they still work for me. You didn't miss much by not hearing Bill sing, but he sure could pick.

BranShea #172857 01/25/08 03:01 AM
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Kentucky blue blue (the plant) is a native american bamboo.

bamboo is a specific kind of grass (and how it differs from other grasses is lost (to me in the details)

It is a bluish green (not so blue as a blue spruce, but blue when it is seen next to other grasses) (and while its natural distribution extends beyond kentucky, it is found extensively there)

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