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“Go sit in the corner.” - Mrs. Causey, my 3rd grade teacher
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You know what's great about a weekday matinee movie? Not only is it cheaper but every once in a while, you can get the whole place to yourself.
It's…
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I am now a published author. Well, semi-published. Somebody else thought enough to put my words on their site, so I guess that makes me published. Visit hackwriters.com …
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I've been married twice, to two completely different women. Number One was 5-5, long blond hair, green eyes, curvy, smart, from West Palm Beach with a strong Catholic upbringing and…
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I don't care what anyone says or how many people give me wedgies for this but I think Martha Stewart is hot. Before the email barage begins, have you seen…
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Stress is one of those realities of life that we all experience. Whether it's stress on our job or stress in our relationships, eventually this harbinger affects us all. It's…
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Yesterday, someone asked me how my day was. I took a few seconds and then told them, "Pretty good, got a lot done. Yep, it was a pretty good day." …
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I have a legitimate question: What type of person buys the mid-octane gas? In America, we're sold three octane levels of gas at the pump; 87, 89 and 92 (or…
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That pretty much sums up the thought patterns of a typical American man. Oh sure, there are males who think differently, but this is what American MEN think about 90%…
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I had a dream last night, of a girl. A girl I'd had a crush on since elementary school. We all have that girl (or guy), the one we noticed…
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This past week, I had my bi-annual kidney stone attack. Only, this attack was a culmination of a bunch of small attacks that have happened over the last few months. …
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Written by Ross Cavins
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Tuesday, 08 January 2008 06:32 |
 A Garden Gnome. An epidemic has swept the South, one of epic proportions that threatens the very underpinnings of good taste. We've all seen it and we've all commented on it, it's the phenomenon of yard art and it's a plague that seems to have set in for the long haul.
Yard art takes on many forms, from your traditional gnomes (made popular by a certain internet travel site) to your pink flamingos to your garden variety ceramic rabbits. There's yard art to match every whim and mood you might need.
For the hunters and naturalists, there's every kind of animal imaginable. I once had neighbors across the street from me that had geese, frogs, rabbits, deer, mushrooms and squirrels. All ceramic. They were arranged in a little nativity-type scene as if they were all in mid-step, frozen in time like the creatures of Narnia.
What I don't understand about yard art is the compulsion to display it in the front yard. It's the one addition to a house guaranteed to lower the value. To this day, I still don't comprehend my neighbor's desire to keep an entire plaster zoo in the natural area of their front yard.
Wife Number 2 and I used to make fun of the display. We thought it would be funny to put a ceramic Elmer Fudd alongside them, elephant gun and all. Or maybe late one night, arrange the animals into some obscene orgy and see how long it took for our neighbors to notice. We even toyed with the idea of buying some outrageous yard art for our own front yard, and trying to out-gaud them. Move the pieces a foot each night so that every day, they looked like they were alive but moving in super slow motion.
After all our talk, Number 2 and I did finally break down and get into the yard art craze. We bought a gnome at a flea market for ten bucks. He was patina colored and pushed a manual lawnmower, the kind with the cylinder blades they used in the fifties. We named him Gordy the Garden Gnome and stuck him in our herb garden out back. It was our wish that one day, he would come to life and mow the back yard for us. He never did.
Have you even been out driving and seen that wonder of architecture known as the Plaster Yard? That's the front yard that has more yard art than grass. Miniature wells, painted animals, birdbaths, garden gazing balls. You name it, those people have it. What, may I ask, is so alluring about these adornments? What type of childhood trauma must one endure to believe this much yard art looks good?
Yard art is one of those amazing phenomena that I will never understand. Its appeal crosses racial and social lines, refusing to allow type-casting of its many denizens. Most displays are beyond the definition of gaudy, pushing the boundaries of questionable taste and I just don't get it. But then again, you should see the lights I decorate the house with at Christmas. Griswald, Schmiswald. For some really gaudy yard art, visit SouthernYardArt.com .
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