She started out sweet and shaggy (on the top left) and finished fluffy and Spring ready!
She was tuckered out afterwards!
Kisses,
K
(All images created and owned by Krista Carson.)
She started out sweet and shaggy (on the top left) and finished fluffy and Spring ready!
She was tuckered out afterwards!
Kisses,
K
(All images created and owned by Krista Carson.)
What will you do with your thousand dreams?
I say start a blaze.
Put in the work to let them burn bright and light up the world.
(Or at least your little corner of it!)
Life is a preciously delicate fleeting gift.
So go make your dreams happen.
Light the world on fire.
Kisses,
K
(Graphic via H2O_WINE tumblr.)
Adam, you brought joy with your smiles and caring to everyone you met.
You are so dearly loved and so very very missed.
We are heartbroken.
But I will always remember how joyful you could be and how extremely loving you always were. You were an incredibly giving human being and will always be remembered for your sweet heart and kindness.
You brought sparkle and love everywhere you went. You gave with a kind and open heart.
You brought laughter and joy to all who crossed your path.
There is a hole in our hearts where you should be that will never be filled.
So Very Heartbroken,
K
(Images via and owned by the Carson/ Dryburgh families.)
This Tuesday morning a very special lunar eclipse will be happening that you don't want to miss! That is if you're into those things, and I am! If you are too check out what Space Weather has to say below:
"LUNAR ECLIPSE, TUESDAY MORNING: The mainstream media is abuzz with reports of a "blood moon" on Tuesday morning. The scientific term is "lunar eclipse." On April 15th at 6 minutes past midnight Pacific Time (3:06 a.m Eastern Time), the Moon will enter the sunset-colored colored shadow of Earth, producing a total eclipse of the Moon:
The color of Earth's shadow, and thus the color of the eclipsed Moon, depends substantially on the amount of volcanic ash and other aerosols floating in the stratosphere. According to atmospheric sciences professor Richard Keen of the University of Colorado, the stratosphere is clear. This means the eclipse will be not "blood red," but rather bright orange.
See for yourself. The event will be visible from Australia, New Zealand, and all of the Americas: visibility map. It's so bright, even observers in light-polluted cities will have no trouble enjoying the show. Got clouds? No problem. The event will be broadcast live on the web by the Coca-Cola Science Center at Columbus State University in Georgia.
For more information about the eclipse, get the full story and a video from Science@NASA."
Be sure to go to their site for further information and to sign up for their space weather alerts if you'd like (I subscribe)!
Lunar Kisses,
K
(All information and images via Space Weather.)
And now that you have the song stuck in your head I bid you adieu! ;)
Kisses,
K
(All images created and owned by Krista Carson and taken on Disney Property.)