<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?><rss version="2.0" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/">
  <channel>
    <title>rosiewolf's Journals on Buzznet</title>
    <description><![CDATA[I'm something of a modern recluse writing in the genre of Southern writing, fiction and otherwise.

At a certain point in my life, I stopped taking pills to enable me to deal with other people's personalities and headed for deeper woods. This is how I ended up in the backwoods of Appalachia raising goats and chickens and completely ignoring my education, experience and training.  I really couldn't be happier.

I'm a southern girl, born in Savannah, GA and gently raised.  I've lived all over the US, England and traveled widely during my years working in the film industry. My favorite place is France. The northern part with the spotty cows.
I'm a liberal, progressive Democrat AND I own a gun.]]></description>
    <link>http://rosiewolf.buzznet.com/user/journal/</link>
    <language>en-us</language>
		    <item>
	      <title><![CDATA[Hope Nunnery and Steve Tarshis]]></title>
	      <link>http://rosiewolf.buzznet.com/user/journal/83325/</link>
	      <description><![CDATA[<br><div style="text-align: center;"><img src="http://img.buzznet.com/assets/imgx/6/5/2/0/4/orig-65204.jpg" border="0"><br><br></div>My dear friend, Hope Nunnery, was in touch with me today.<br><br>I've  known Hope for over half of my life. We were in school together at the  University of South Carolina. She was a graduate student and I remember  really looking up to her. I was a silly, callow undergraduate and she  was one of the people I idolized.<br><br>Hope can remember when I first  started to write, back when I took seminars under William Price Fox. He  told me I needed to get out there and "live". I probably took his  advice a bit too close to heart...for I have certainly done that.  Perhaps with a bit too much enthusiasm. Now I have some real things to  write about.<br><br>She had and still has a voice as big as the sky. I  remember going to the old Grow Cafe in Columbia to hear her. It was a  really wacky old place. I remember the dusty floors and the smell of  stale Budweiser blended with clove cigarette smoke and old dusty  floors. The Grow had this mural of The Incredible Hulk painted on the  wall outside. I guess it was sort of a dive...but it seemed sort of  exotic and hip to me.<br><br>I can see Hope standing up there with her  guitar. I can still remember how her voice filled that room. She was  one of my "coolest" friends. She still is way up there on the  "coolness" factor and lives in New York City.<br><br><font style="font-style: italic; color: rgb(0, 0, 0);" class="epktxt">My  main influence was rural South Carolina Southern Baptist church music.  And I would attend the Pentecostal churches during revival time and  singing conventions. And there was the country music that was played on  the radio. Johnny Cash and Hank Williams were like a member of the  family. For years I thought Johnny Cash was my Daddy's best friend and  in a way I believe he was.</font><font style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);" class="epktxt">She  and Steve Tarshis will be releasing their first album, "Wilderness  Lounge" in early 2007. They've recently been named finalists for the  Independant Music Awards for two of their songs. You can download some  of their work from <a href="http://www.sonicbids.com/epk/epk.asp?epk_id=59353">Supersonic EPK.</a><br><br></font><font style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);" class="epktxt"><font style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);">If you like them...and I know you will...please buy "Wilderness Lounge" when it comes out! </font><br style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);"><br></font><a href="http://media2.sonicbids.com/EPK/Assets/audio.mp3?file_id=%7BB5BCE58C-68EC-40AA-9CE3-F7A7ACBC4A8A%7D">Sweep My Yard Clean</a>             <br><b><i>Written by: Hope Nunnery and Steve Tarshis</i></b><br>One baby cooing in the fruit crate<br>One sleeping in a drawer<br>An angel kicking in my belly<br>Jesus please don't send no more, but<br><br>Mister Sweet pea standing yonder<br>Reverend peeking through the crack<br>Deacon hunkered by the corn crib<br>Satan crawling up my back<br><br>Chorus<br>Sweep my yard clean<br>No more tracks 'round my yard<br>I sure could use some comfort, but I<br>Keep my broom standing guard<br><br>In black dark night of lonesome<br>A sweet voice called to me<br>Say "baby my name is Jesus<br>Let me rock you on my knee"<br><br>Never knew my Daddy<br>Never knew my Daddy name, but<br>Now I got a Daddy<br>Sweet, sweet Jesus is His name<br><br>Chorus<br>Sweep my yard clean<br>No more tracks 'round my yard<br>I sure could use some comfort, but I<br>Keep my broom standing guard<br><br>Cut a heap of broom straw, it all<br>Bunched and tied with twine<br>Gonna whoop that old temptation<br>I ain't no mans concubine<br><br>Chorus<br>Sweep my yard clean<br>No more tracks 'round my yard<br>I sure could use some comfort, but I<br>Keeps my broom standing guard<br><br><br><br><font style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);" class="epktxt">Isn't she cool?<br><br>PS...This is crossposted from my blog where I'm actively blogging now.&nbsp; Sorry guys, it's just easier and quicker.&nbsp; I do miss everyone here, but I so need to get my nose to the grindstone with my writing.&nbsp; Come visit me at:&nbsp; http://smokeymountainbreakdown.blogspot.com/<br><br>Rosie<br></font>]]></description>
		  		  	<category>gospel</category>
		  		  	<category>hope nunnery</category>
		  		  	<category>indie music</category>
		  		  	<category>steve tarshis</category>
		  		  <category>Buzznet</category>
	      <dc:creator>rosiewolf</dc:creator>
	      <dc:date>2006-12-08T23:29:00Z</dc:date>
	    </item>
		    <item>
	      <title><![CDATA[Still on a hiatus from Buzz..]]></title>
	      <link>http://rosiewolf.buzznet.com/user/journal/10565/</link>
	      <description><![CDATA[Hi guys,<br>
<br>
I'm still sort of on a hiatus from Buzznet.&nbsp; But the bullfrogs
woke up in the pond two days ago so things will start to come back to
life and I'll once again feel like taking photos.<br>
<br>
Both of my new redesigned web sites are up.&nbsp; The new petfinder page for the rescue is at:<br>
<br>
<a href="http://www.rcrr.petfinder.com">Rosie's Cocker Rescue Referral</a><br>
<br>
The new Angel Dogs site is at:<br>
<br>
<a href="http://www.angel-dogs.com">Angel Dogs</a><br>
<br>
I'm running a rolling raffle on AD for the rescue for my current
fundraiser.&nbsp; It's for a 2007 calendar and I'm raffling off AD
portraits for each month of the year. <br>
<br>
<a href="http://www.angel-dogs.com/raffle.html">Angel Dogs Calendar Raffle Project</a><br>
<br>
I'm arranging Bart's transport for this coming weekend.&nbsp; Please
say a prayer or cross your fingers that I get enough volunteer
transporters to get my sweet boy to his new home on the Maryland
shore.&nbsp; He's waited so long for this perfect placement I've found
for him and I'm going to be so sad when he's gone.<br>
<br>
I'm getting together stuff to start soapmaking.&nbsp; I'm going to
start selling my goatmilk soap this spring when I start up the jams and
jellies.&nbsp; <br>
<br>
So...that's the news from here.&nbsp; <br>
<br>
Hugs,<br>
<br>
Rosie<br>
 

]]></description>
		  		  	<category>rosiewolf</category>
		  		  <category>Buzznet</category>
	      <dc:creator>rosiewolf</dc:creator>
	      <dc:date>2006-01-23T15:32:47Z</dc:date>
	    </item>
		    <item>
	      <title><![CDATA[The Night the Animals Talk]]></title>
	      <link>http://rosiewolf.buzznet.com/user/journal/8713/</link>
	      <description><![CDATA[I spent most of yesterday worming and vaccinating the goats.&nbsp; I'd
go down to the paddock with a bucket of grain and bring them up singly
to the house to give shots and feed pelletized wormer to them.&nbsp;
Nod was the toughest to catch.&nbsp; She's always been a bad girl but I
absolutely had to get ahold of her this time.&nbsp; She'd grown out of
her collar and it was way too tight.&nbsp; I have a festive purple one
just for her.<br>  <br>
Nod is one of my original three goats.&nbsp; She was just a wee doeling
when she came here with Winkin' and her mother, Blinkin', and she's
never calmed down.&nbsp; This time, I decided to keep her up here at
the house for a few weeks to see if I could tame her down.&nbsp; I
don't want her fighting me when I help her deliver her kids this
spring. <br>  <br> I honestly think Nod will be happier for being
gentled.&nbsp; She's not like the other goats.&nbsp; She's actually
pretty mean to them.&nbsp; She's always the ringleader when the other
goats decide to play "Throw Lucky against the Electric Fence."&nbsp;
She bites the other goats and pulls their ears and tails.&nbsp; I've
been remiss in not doing this before.&nbsp; Most herd keepers would
just sell Nod for meat rather than fool with her,&nbsp; but I'm sort of
fond of her ornery self.<br>  <br> When I was a child, my favorite
Christmas myth was "The Night the Animals Talk".&nbsp; Supposedly, on
Christmas Eve, for a time...the animals can speak.&nbsp; I'm not sure
if they are supposed to speak English or not.&nbsp; I always just
assumed that I would be able to understand them in the way I understand
people.<br>  <br> My parents foiled numerous attempts on my part as a
child to confirm this.&nbsp; My plan was to sneak out to the stable and
finally hear my horse, Sonny, tell me that he loved me every bit as
much as I adored him.&nbsp; I'm not sure what other sorts of horsely
wisdom he might have had to tell me.&nbsp; <br>  <br> We once had a
Siamese cat named Itty-Bitty who was taken from her mother too
soon.&nbsp; She had that typically odd sounding cat cry that Siamese
cats have.&nbsp; My root woman nanny was terrified of this cat.&nbsp;
She swore the cat was saying, "Maaa-maaaa, maaaaa-maaaa".&nbsp; <br>  <br>
It's not that I haven't always known exactly what my animals were
saying.&nbsp; I just thought it would be neat to actually hear what
their voices sounded like.&nbsp; <br>  <br> This midnight as the clock
heralded in the wee hours of Christmas Day, I went out onto the porch
to check on Nod.&nbsp; I think the part of me who was still eight years
old was half-hoping to hear her say something.&nbsp; <br>  <br>  "Blah.&nbsp; Blah-blah." She said, looking up at me with her topaz colored goat eyes and snorting.<br>  <br>  I understood perfectly.<br>  <br>  "Screw you!&nbsp; Give me some damn corn, you bitch!" <br>  <br>  <br>  <br>  <br>      
]]></description>
		  		  	<category>goats</category>
		  		  	<category>rosiewolf</category>
		  		  	<category>the night the animals talk</category>
		  		  <category>Buzznet</category>
	      <dc:creator>rosiewolf</dc:creator>
	      <dc:date>2005-12-25T12:14:00Z</dc:date>
	    </item>
		    <item>
	      <title><![CDATA[Skillet Cookies]]></title>
	      <link>http://rosiewolf.buzznet.com/user/journal/6681/</link>
	      <description><![CDATA[Skillet Cookies<br>
<br>
My family's traditional Christmas cookie.<br>
<br>
1 stick butter<br>
2 cups sugar<br>
4 eggs<br>
1 package chopped dates<br>
1 tablespoon vanilla<br>
1 box Rice Crispy cereal<br>
1 cup chopped pecans<br>
<br>
Melt butter in a large iron skillet over medium heat.&nbsp; Cream eggs
and sugar together.&nbsp; Pour into skillet with chopped dates.&nbsp;
Stir constantly until caramelized mixture is a dark brown.&nbsp; Add
vanilla. Remove from heat and whip by hand until cooler (5 minutes).
Add rice crispies and nuts to mixture then form small balls and roll in
powdered sugar or coconut.<br>
<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;"><br>
<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;"><br>
I have been making these cookies for as long as I have memories.&nbsp;
In my mind's eye, I can see my chubby little four-year old hands in
front of me, covered in stickiness and powdered sugar.&nbsp; I can feel
the heat of the mixture of crisped rice, nuts and caramelized dates and
creamed sugar. <br>
<br>
I hear my mother's voice.&nbsp; "Be careful...it's still hot!" or "You're rolling them too big!"<br>
<br>
I liked to roll them big.&nbsp; That was because later, after they were
chilled, I would slyly select the largest ones when they were
offered.&nbsp; Munching into that cold sweet crispiness and getting
powdered sugar all over my shirt.&nbsp; My face. I loved it when my
mother would look exasperated and dust me off with her hand.&nbsp; <br>
<br>
"I swear!....," she would say.&nbsp; <br>
<br>
The recipe was lost for a time.&nbsp; My sister had gotten rid of the
cookbook that the recipe was in.&nbsp; I was devastated when I realized
this particular book was gone.&nbsp; I thought I was being fair by
leaving the sugar-stained tattered book behind for her.&nbsp; She did
not see the old book as the pearl of great price that I did.&nbsp; My
brother and sister have often been bemused by the things I deem
valuable, but I think they are coming around to my way of
thinking.&nbsp; History is important.&nbsp; Even the history of one
family is important.&nbsp; <br>
<br>
I reconstructed the recipe from my memories.&nbsp; My dead mother
whispering in my ear the entire time.&nbsp; She often whispers to me.<br>
<br>
I make them alone now to send to my family and friends.&nbsp; It
doesn't seem right somehow, they are the sort of treat that really
needs tiny sticky hands to form the warm melange into the little
sugar-covered balls.&nbsp; If you have such little fingers in your
house, you may want to give these a try. <br>


]]></description>
		  		  <category>Buzznet</category>
	      <dc:creator>rosiewolf</dc:creator>
	      <dc:date>2005-11-18T12:52:30Z</dc:date>
	    </item>
		    <item>
	      <title><![CDATA[He was, quite simply, a rock star...]]></title>
	      <link>http://rosiewolf.buzznet.com/user/journal/1659/</link>
	      <description><![CDATA[It was 1999 and we were all piled in Tree's office with the big glass
windows at CNN in Atlanta.&nbsp; The door had been shut as we five
"girls" in our late 30's and early 40's were having an important secret
meeting.&nbsp; We always looked both ways down the hall to make sure no
one was coming before doing this.<br>
<br>
Tree, ceremoniously, withdrew the glossy 8 X 10 from the envelope to
display.&nbsp; We all gasped and held our breaths.&nbsp; There he was,
in his tweed jacket and impeccably tailored trousers, lounging in the
doorway of his book-lined office.&nbsp; His long lines, graceful, and
his weathered face in a world weary half-smile.&nbsp; His little
reporter's notebook just peeking out of a pocket.&nbsp; You could
almost imagine the smell of tobacco and scotch that surely must have
infused that amazing tweed jacket and scented his long-fingered
hands.&nbsp; We all swooned. <br>
<br>
For women working in broadcast news, Peter Jennings was a rock
star.&nbsp; There was something about his particular mix of
extraordinary competence,&nbsp; stellar journalistic abilities,
sardonic wit and easy confidence that just made one go all gushy
inside.&nbsp; It wasn't about looks, though Jennings was very easy on
the eye.&nbsp; Anchors have to be goodlooking, but they don't have to
be smart or particularly talented in journalism.&nbsp; It was about
presence, power and ability. <br>
<br>
Like a the bumbling teenage nerd, I once was...I just kept saying, "She's gonna freak, man!&nbsp; She's gonna freak!"<br>
<br>
I was speaking of the inscription on the photo.&nbsp; Tree had pulled
some strings and gotten the photo personally autographed, "To Joan and
Katy, Many happy regards, Peter Jennings."<br>
<br>
Joan was our friend over at Turner Entertainment who had a huge Peter
Jennings crush.&nbsp; Katy was her miniature French Poodle.&nbsp;
Joan's birthday was coming up and she really was the gal who had
everything.&nbsp; At least everything she needed.&nbsp; Tree really had
done something special by pulling this particular rabbit out of the
hat.&nbsp; That she had gotten the French Poodle included on the
inscription was nothing short of inspired.<br>
<br>
All of us had to trail our fingers over his signature, trying to sense whatever essence he might have left behind.&nbsp; <br>
<br>
Jodi said, "I bet he has stacks of these photos that he sends out to women."&nbsp; <br>
<br>
"Yeah." We agreed.&nbsp; <br>
<br>
Today, I'm sobbing into my kitchen sink as I'm loading the
dishwasher.&nbsp; Large, tearful, heart-wrenching sobs of
mourning.&nbsp; I'll always remember exactly what I was doing, the
moment I heard that Peter Jennings had died.<br>
<br>
<br>


]]></description>
		  		  	<category>peter jennings</category>
		  		  	<category>rosiewolf</category>
		  		  <category>Buzznet</category>
	      <dc:creator>rosiewolf</dc:creator>
	      <dc:date>2005-08-08T11:27:57Z</dc:date>
	    </item>
		    <item>
	      <title><![CDATA[The Scent of Peaches...]]></title>
	      <link>http://rosiewolf.buzznet.com/user/journal/1074/</link>
	      <description><![CDATA[I've been putting up a bushel of peaches for the freezer.&nbsp; There
is something soothing about the strong sweet smell that transports me
back in time.<br>
<br>
I remember eavesdropping on my grandmother and her sisters.&nbsp; They
were in my grandmother's bedroom in the house on Abercorne Street in
Savannah, GA.&nbsp; My great aunt Emmy Jo had come up from Florida with
a box of mangos and oranges from her grove.&nbsp; Great aunt Baby Dear
had come from Tennessee and had stopped in Spartanburg for a few
bushels of peaches.&nbsp; It must have been summer. In my memory, their
gatherings were always garnished with fruit and the work that went into
putting the fruit up for the winter.<br>
<br>
I can hear them talking, sisterly, about mango peelings and
rashes.&nbsp; One of the sisters would take a rash from peeling
mangoes, which are related somehow to poison ivey, they said.&nbsp; I
don't think that's true, somehow, but it sounded right at the time and
I felt I had learned something special.<br>
<br>
They are in the bathroom washing their hands and giggling.&nbsp; I am
very small and sitting on my grandmother's rice bed with the nobbly
white bedspread and wondering if she has any rock candy in her
dresser.&nbsp; She always did. I think about the peaches and wonder if
my grandfather will whittle monkeys from the peach pits as he sometimes
did for me.<br>
<br>
Today, the scent of peaches clings to my hands like gloves.&nbsp;&nbsp; I inhale the scent and for a moment I am five.<br>


]]></description>
		  		  <category>Buzznet</category>
	      <dc:creator>rosiewolf</dc:creator>
	      <dc:date>2005-07-26T18:26:49Z</dc:date>
	    </item>
		    <item>
	      <title><![CDATA[Loving the French....]]></title>
	      <link>http://rosiewolf.buzznet.com/user/journal/268/</link>
	      <description><![CDATA[When that whole "Freedom Fries" thing came up...I was cringing.&nbsp;
As if our french fries could even hold a bic lighter to pommes
frites.&nbsp; There is absolutely no comparison and we should feel
lucky that the French even allow us to call our pale, greasy imitation
a "french" fry.<br>
<br>
It's true...I drew a "moue" or seven while I was there.&nbsp;
Particularly in Paris, where the tone is a bit higher.&nbsp; The coat
check ladies at the Louvre were particularly offended by my smelly
Barbour jacket that I wore everywhere.&nbsp; They thought I was a
Brit.&nbsp; And everyone pleaded with me to please not speak
French.&nbsp; That's how amazingly bad my French is....plus it is
spoken very slowly with a thick South Carolina Lowcountry accent.&nbsp;
<br>
<br>
"ou est la toilette, y'all".&nbsp; <br>
<br>
But I think I got points for at least trying to speak the
language.&nbsp; I always loved David Sedaris' "Me Talk Pretty One
Day"....because that was so me as well.<br>
<br>
It is one thing to love France.&nbsp; Many people love France.&nbsp;
But it is another thing entirely to love the French.&nbsp; I know my
sister loves France...and she goes there quite often.&nbsp; I wish I
could travel there as often.&nbsp; But I'm not sure she loves the
French as I do.&nbsp; <br>
<br>
Loving the French means submersing yourself in a set of priorities that
are quite foreign to Anglo sensibilities.&nbsp; It means being
violently passionate about certain things....and suffering from a
dreadful ennui about others.&nbsp; It means caring deeply about human
rights, tradition, food, wine, leisure time and sex, while at the same
time having an abiding concern and devotion to Catholicism, family and
privacy.&nbsp; As I do with any culture, I identified more with the
country folk than with the Parisians.&nbsp; I just don't enjoy "putting
on the dog" as we say, as much as other people.&nbsp; Paris is all
about "putting on the dog".<br>
<br>
I'm probably putting it poorly.&nbsp; I'm fairly certain that I don't
actually "get it".&nbsp; But I've tried awfully hard to do so.&nbsp; I
was probably as much of an ugly American as the next guy.&nbsp; <br>
<br>
But I think I got points for not asking directions to the Bastille.<br>
<br>
<br>


]]></description>
		  		  <category>Buzznet</category>
	      <dc:creator>rosiewolf</dc:creator>
	      <dc:date>2005-07-14T09:11:50Z</dc:date>
	    </item>
		    <item>
	      <title><![CDATA[The Seven Warning Signs of Bogus Science]]></title>
	      <link>http://rosiewolf.buzznet.com/user/journal/244/</link>
	      <description><![CDATA[I couldn't make up my mind as to what to put in the Gullible's Travels
gallery today.&nbsp; Did I want to do the psychic dog?&nbsp; Or maybe
MoonFakers?&nbsp; There are just so many wacky things to choose from.<br>
<br>
If you are wondering why this is important to me...it's because I see
an enormous amount of zeal flowing into things that aren't real.&nbsp;
We have big problems.&nbsp; Big problems that are real.&nbsp; If we
could channel the energy we spend on the things that aren't real into
the things that are...I just wonder if maybe we could actually do
something about things like global warming, wars, food safety, the
environment, the rise of fundamentalist extremism, the awful political
situation the US is in....ad nauseum.<br>
<br>
These are taken from Robert L. Park's excellent article, <a href="http://chronicle.com/free/v49/i21/21b02001.htm" target="_self">The Seven Warning Signs of Bogus Science</a>, that appeared in the January 31st 2003 issue of The Chronical of Higher Education.&nbsp;
I encourage you to read the article in its entirety.&nbsp; While most
of the skeptical articles I refer to deal with science...the principles
hold true for politics, commerce and day to day living.&nbsp; You will
readily recognize many of these warning signs from advertising.<br>
<br>
<b>1. The discoverer pitches the claim directly to the media.<br>
</b>"An attempt to bypass peer review by taking a new result directly to the
media, and thence to the public, suggests that the work is unlikely to
stand up to close examination by other scientists."<br>
<br>
<b>2. The discoverer says that a powerful establishment is trying to suppress his or her work.<br>
"</b>The idea is that the establishment will presumably stop at nothing to
suppress discoveries that might shift the balance of wealth and power
in society. Often, the discoverer describes mainstream science as part
of a larger conspiracy that includes industry and government."<br>
<br>
<b>3. The scientific effect involved is always at the very limit of detection.<br>
</b>"All scientific measurements must contend with some level of background
noise or statistical fluctuation. But if the signal-to-noise ratio
cannot be improved, even in principle, the effect is probably not real
and the work is not science."<br>
<br>
<b>4. Evidence for a discovery is anecdotal.<br>
</b>"If modern science has learned anything in the past century, it is to
distrust anecdotal evidence. Because anecdotes have a very strong
emotional impact, they serve to keep superstitious beliefs alive in an
age of science."<br>
<br>
<b>5. The discoverer says a belief is credible because it has endured for centuries.<br>
"</b>
 Ancient folk wisdom, rediscovered or repackaged, is unlikely to match the output of modern scientific laboratories."<br>
<br>
<b>6. The discoverer has worked in isolation. <br>
"</b>Scientific breakthroughs nowadays are almost always syntheses of the work of many scientists."<br>
<br>
<b>7. The discoverer must propose new laws of nature to explain an observation.<br>
</b>"A new law of nature, invoked to explain some extraordinary result, must
not conflict with what is already known. If we must change existing
laws of nature or propose new laws to account for an observation, it is
almost certainly wrong."<br>
<br>
Also check out Robert L. Parks book, <a href="http://tinyurl.com/b84bq" target="_self">Voodoo Science: The Road From Foolishness to Fraud</a>.<br>
<br>
<br>
<br>


]]></description>
		  		  <category>Buzznet</category>
	      <dc:creator>rosiewolf</dc:creator>
	      <dc:date>2005-07-13T17:32:47Z</dc:date>
	    </item>
	  </channel>
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