Colliemom wrote:Wow Anne, thanks for ll this information. Wish I could hear one of your talks.
Thanks, Sue. I would love to give one.
Maybe one day we will meet at a GTG somewhere. LOL.
I can see it now: five or ten ladies (And dogs! There must be dogs!) all gathered around, sitting in folding chairs, drinking coffee. I start to yak. And yak. And yak. One by one the ladies suddenly realize that they have something "important" to do inside their rigs. I don't notice, I just keep right on yakking!!
I have been fascinated by volcanoes since a very young child, I think my interest began when I was six or seven years old and I first saw the 1935 version of "The Last Days of Pompeii", on my family's black-and-white, twelve-inch, tv.
The film scared the living crap out of me at the time (I saw it again a few years ago, and thought it a total snore). I had volcano nightmares for months, drove my parents crazy, they could not convince me that the mountains, surrounding the San Fernando Valley where I grew up, were not all volcanoes, all ready to blow. I think, to allay my fears, I decided to learn about volcanoes instead of just being terrified by them.
ANYWAY!!
SHEILA, Beth and Sandi: !! It was a "two-fer" last night!! Thanks for mentioning, and thanks for helping me find these programs!!
Checking the PBS channel on Roku last night for "Living Volcanoes" (a "Nature" program), I found that the program had been posted to the channel since I had originally checked, so was able to watch it on my big screen tv.
And, after I finished with "Living Volcanoes", I noticed that the latest episode of PBS's "Nova" program was also about volcanoes, and had also been posted, "The Next Pompeii".
What a treat!! Both programs were about volcanoes, both very different one from the other, both really, really excellent. Be still my heart!!
If anyone missed watching these on your local PBS station, they can still be streamed online from the PBS website, and watched online on most computers.
Thanks again!
Crazy Anne