After months of preparation, sketches, notes, material research and practice rounds, we are off. I have a metal armature, floral supplies, tools and equipment in one bag. I have a box loaded with dried plant material and my magic sticks. I even included alternate design ideas, just in case my magic sticks get broken. Virus issues worldwide. Kept the numbers down at the airport, so we went swiftly through security and had Goddess and the Grocer sandwiches in the Lounge and Garrett’s popcorn for dessert. We are now getting ready for take off. Next stop, Delhi. Images from our flight, perhaps over Pakistan
Shell at Sea
Wednesday, February 19, 2020
Monday, April 6, 2015
Re: San Tribe healing cave, Namibia
Spectacular!
Sent from my iPhone
Sent from my iPhone
Shelley H. GallowayPlease ask me about the Semester at Sea ProgramParents Council MemberSemester at SeaInstitute for Shipboard EducationUniversity of Virginia
Begin forwarded message:From: Shelley Galloway <flowergenius@gmail.com>
Date: April 6, 2015 at 12:25:42 PM GMT+2
To: Stacey De Luca <sdeluca13@yahoo.com>
Subject: San Tribe healing cave, NamibiaSan tribesman used this cave for healing and religious rites. The cave painting of a giraffe dates from the 1700s. Ostrich egg fragments reflect healing practices. Ground ostrich shell helped children sleep. Shell were also used as containers.<FullSizeRender.jpg><IMG_4839.JPG>
Shelley H. Galloway
Please ask me about the Semester at Sea Program
www.semesteratsea.org
http://vimeo.com/52086255
Parents Council Member
Semester at Sea
Institute for Shipboard Education
University of Virginia
RE: Fwd: The dead vlei
Hi, At Apr 6, 2015, 5:51:06 AM, Shelley Galloway<'flowergenius@gmail.com'> wrote: |