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December 1st: My Favorite Non-Holiday

 

Pere Noel

Pere Noel

The advent calendar is a special calendar used to count or celebrate the days in anticipation of Christmas. Many take the form of a rectangular card with 24 “windows,” one for each day of December leading up to Christmas Day. The windows open to reveal an image,  a portion of a story or a small gift, such as chocolate. Some calendars are strictly religious while some are just for holiday fun.

What is Advent?
Advent is the four-week period beginning on the Sunday nearest the feast day of St. Andrew the Apostle (November 30) through the following three Sundays. Historians estimate that Advent, which derives from the Latin word for coming, has been celebrated since the fourth century. The period originally began as a time for converts to Christianity to prepare for baptism, but is now more commonly associated with the anticipation of the anniversary of Christ’s birth on December 25th.

The First Printed Advent Calendars
Gerhard Lang is widely considered the producer of the first printed Advent calendar in the early 1900s.

Around the same time, a German newspaper included an Advent calendar insert as a gift to its readers. Lang’s calendar was inspired by one that his mother had made for him and featured 24 colored pictures that attached to a piece of cardboard. Lang modified his calendars to include the little doors that are a staple of most Advent calendars today and they became a commercial success in Germany. Production stopped due to a cardboard shortage during World War II, but resumed soon after, with Richard Sellmer emerging as the leading producer of commercial Advent calendars.

Today we live in a digital, computerized world.  The advent calendar has taken on a new look! About six years ago a friend sent me an online Christmas card produced by Jacquie Lawson, an artist living in the UK. It was beautiful and so different! I quickly became very fond of the assortment of cards she had for various holidays and non-holidays too! Then in 2010 the Advent Calendars were introduced! They are magical! Every year the advent calendar is set in a different animated background with music.  The first year the calendar was set in London. Last year there was a Victorian “Downton Abbey” look. This year we are visiting a Christmas Market! The calendars come out in mid-November with puzzles and games and decorating to do while you wait for December first. There are two parts to the calendar: an indoor room and then the street scene where the “windows” are opened. It is so much fun for children and the young at heart! It is my favorite non-holiday of the year, opening the first day of the advent calendar! To check out the array of cards and calendar see the Jacquie Lawson site here!

 

Photography 101: Day 14, Swarm

Todays assignment. Swarm: To fly off together in a group, to move in great numbers. I hate swarming! I hate big groups and trying to wedge myself into the melee to get a picture! The road I was traveling on was blocked off. What? What is going on? I might as well get out and take a look see. I wiggled my way into the crowd along the street. “What are we waiting for?” I asked the policeman. “The Tour de France is coming through town,” he replied.

OMG! Where is my camera?  Swoosh, swoosh, and they’re here and gone just like that! Two seconds and gone! The Ultimate Swarm! Enjoy!

Tour de France

Tour de France

Photography 101: Day 10, Mystery

This picture is a mystery to me! It was taken at Christmas on the streets of Paris. That tree was not white! However, it must have had some kind of lighting on it. My first reaction, when I saw the picture, was to delete it, but the more I looked at it the more I liked it! It was taken on my cellphone, because it was pouring and I didn’t want to take out my camera. Enjoy!

Mystery on the Streets of Paris

Mystery on the Streets of Paris

Photography 101, Day 6, Connect; In Flanders Fields

In Flanders Fields

In Flanders Fields

“The “Soldiers” graves are the greatest preacher of Peace” (Albert Schweitzer, Nobel Peace Prize Laureate)

Thanks to a fellow blogger I met on WordPress, I was introduced to online courses from FutureLearns and Open University. I was very interested in the course WWI: Trauma and Memory, which I started lasted week. The course is free and includes videos, lectures, pictures and stories of what the men endured in WWI. The course has been a real eye opener and one of the best aspects of the course has been the interaction with other students through their comments after every session. I have gleaned even more information from the students’ comments. As a Critical Care Registered Nurse, myself, this course has been significant in studying how the term  “Shell Shock” has  progressed to now what we know as Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome. We are learning how mental trauma was defined and treated in WWI and the lasting effects it had on the men and their families after returning home from the war. The millions of lives that were lost in the war was just one part of it. The men returning with severe injuries and mental trauma were another. The effect on the general population of all countries involved was another. 

I am not fond of bus excursions. However, during our trip to Bruges, Belgium my husband really wanted to tour Flanders Fields and our best option was a group tour on a bus with Quasimodo Tours. It was the best bus tour we have ever taken. It concentrated on the Battlefields of the Ypres Salient. We toured German and Allied Cemeteries, the Hooge Crater Museum, (a must if you are in the area), bunkers and craters, and the field dressing station of John McCrae, author of the famous poem, In Flanders Fields, the reason why the poppy is so revered. The tour ended at the Menin Gate Memorial in Ypres, memorial to 55,000 missing soldiers and the sacrifice they made. It is also possible to visit an ancestor’s grave if advanced preparations are made. The tour was a very moving experience. I have come full circle with the visit to Flanders Fields and the class. Here are pictures to compare. May we all remember our brave soldiers on this Veteran’s Day!

Chateau Wood Ypres 1917

Flanders Fields, Chateau Wood, Ypres, 1917

Poppy Memorial at a German Cemetery, Flanders Fields

Poppy Memorial at a German Cemetery, Langemark, Flanders Fields

German Cemetery, Flanders Fields

Langemark Cemetery, Flanders Fields

The Front bogged down in Flanders Fields on November 11, 1914 until the end of the war in 1918. One  22 day battle was fought with German troops made up of poorly trained volunteers, students, and apprentices, many as young as 13.  The Volkbund, (The German War Graves Commission), was created after the war to lay out and construct Langemark Cemetery, just one of the German Cemeteries, collecting funds by grants from Germany and relient on donations to maintain this special site. In Germany the site became known as the Students Cemetery. To this day, it is still maintained by students  from several countries, who volunteer to maintain it. 44,304 victims lie here.

Memorial at Passchendale, Flanders Fields

Allied Memorial at Passchendale, Flanders Fields

Hooge Crater 1915, Flanders Fields

Hooge Crater 1915, Flanders Fields

Miles and miles of tunnels were built in order to blow up opposing sides. This crater was the aftermath of blowing up the village of Hooge.

Shell Casings are Still Dug up from the Farm Fields

Shell Casings are Still Dug up from the Farm Fields of Flanders

Shell casings and explosives are still found 100 years after the war. They are left by the roadside for ordinance men to pick up after the explosives are determined safe to do so.

Memorial at Hooge Crater, Flanders Fields

Memorial at Hooge Crater, Flanders Fields

The Hooge Crater Museum was opened by Roger and Rosita de Smul in 1994 in a renovated chapel and small school on the Ypres-Menin Road. Since then the museum has expanded several times and now holds many of the finest WWI collections in the area. It contains a unique collection of First World War uniforms, displays and military artefacts.

Since Roger’s retirement in 2008 the museum is under the management of Nick and Ilse. The museum and café have undergone redevelopment and it is one of the finest museums for remembrance of the First World War in the Flanders area.

Decorative Shell Casings in the Hooge crater Museum, Flanders Fields

Decorative Shell Casing Art in the Hooge Crater Museum, Flanders Fields

Graves, Flanders Fields

Graves, Flanders Fields

Rows and Rows of Graves, Flanders Fields

Rows and Rows of Graves, Flanders Fields

Australian Infantry, Small Box Respirators, Ypres 1917

Australian Infantry, Small Box Respirators, Ypres 1917

Hill 60, Flanders Fields

Hill 60, Flanders Fields

 

Memorial at Hill 60, Flanders Fields

Memorial at Hill 60, Flanders Fields

Hill 60, Flanders Fields, Belgium

Walk to Hill 60, Flanders Fields, Belgium

Bunker, Flanders Fields

Bunker, Flanders Fields

Trenches in Flanders Fields 31July1917

Trenches in Flanders Fields, 31 July 1917

Field Dressing Bunkers, Flanders Fields

Field Dressing Bunkers, Flanders Fields

 

Bunker, Flanders Fields

Bunker, Flanders Fields

Battle of Menin Road, Wounded at Side of the Road

Battle of Menin Road, Wounded at Side of the Road

The Menin Gate Memorial, Ypres, Belgium

The Menin Gate Memorial, Ypres, Belgium

The final stop of the tour is The Menin Gate Memorial, located at the eastern exit of the town of Ypres and marks the starting point for one of the main roads out of the town that led Allied soldiers to the front line. The Last Post Ceremony is held under the gate everyday at 8pm. It is a ceremony you will never forget.

Photography 101: Day 2, Street

Two weeks ago I was in my favorite city, Quebec City, Canada! I love this shot in Bas-Ville and the view of the street that is now closed off to vehicular traffic. Notice the cruise ship in the background? Enjoy!

Photography 101: Street

Photography 101: Street Quebec City, Canada

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