

It’s National Flower Day!
So what’s your favorite flowers?
For me … there isn’t many I can have around me as I have allergies!!
But while we’re here – A Snippet (another one from my list! Though for this one – no one answered but I took the suggestion)

Leonardo was youngest son of a small Patrician family. He was educated by the finest tutors, and had shown his gift in art and mathematics. His father encouraged his inventions and artistic endeavors.
He was apprenticed to an architect who worked for Caesar to build new buildings for the glory of Rome. He watched in horror as many of them burned in 64 AD. In the following years he started to work on rebuilding areas that were destroyed.
It wasn’t until he started working on the Colosseum that he felt for once he was helping something grand for Rome.
He met Archimedes during this time, who had come to see the new constructions. The two became friends easily, though Leonardo’s frantic work and inability to rest had the older Greek worried. When he found Leonardo collapsed on his workshop floor, he nursed him back to health then gave him an option to be Turned.

Actually – this day was the 14th – but that was PI DAY!
So I moved it to now. Here’s the thing – ask any Sylum Question and I’ll answer it!

It’s also St. Patricks Day!
So blessings to you and your family!
Also make sure to wear green 😀


So how’s it going.
Eyes the bunnies. Look dudes I don’t have time for all of you – pick one so I can focus!!!

Need this after the day I’ve had.
YES – Sylum is back up! Systems got updated and one plug in crashed the blog and the wiki! It’s is now fixed.
I’m snagging the drink and going for a nap!

Considering the latest natural distasters plus on going conflicts and the work the WCK has been putting out – I figured best to showcase them.
WCK is first to the frontlines, providing meals in response to humanitarian, climate, and community crises. We build resilient food systems with locally led solutions.
World Central Kitchen started with a simple idea at home with my wife Patricia: when people are hungry, send in cooks. Not tomorrow, today.
Everyone knows that food is central to life and family all over the world. What we learned very quickly was that food is even more essential in a crisis.
It all began in 2010 after a huge earthquake devastated Haiti. Cooking alongside displaced Haitians in a camp, I found myself getting schooled in how to cook black beans the way they wanted: mashed and sieved into a creamy sauce.
You see, food relief is not just a meal that keeps hunger away. It’s a plate of hope. It tells you in your darkest hour that someone, somewhere, cares about you.
This is the real meaning of comfort food. It’s why we make the effort to cook in a crisis.
We don’t just deliver raw ingredients and expect people to fend for themselves. And we don’t just dump free food into a disaster zone: we source and hire locally wherever we can, to jump-start economic recovery through food.
After a disaster, food is the fastest way to rebuild our sense of community. We can put people back to work preparing it, and we can put lives back together by fighting hunger.
Cooking and eating together is what makes us human.
Since those early days our journey has taken World Central Kitchen all over the world. We fed an island after Hurricane Maria destroyed Puerto Rico. We fed tens of millions struggling with the Covid-19 pandemic. We put boots on the ground when a blast devastated Beirut, bushfires ripped through Australia, and a volcano transformed a Spanish island.
We were under a bridge with thousands of asylum seekers in Texas, in a demolished Kentucky town after brutal tornadoes, on the Louisiana coast when yet another enormous hurricane made landfall.
We have traveled a long way together, with support from people just like you.
We have witnessed enough disasters to know that food relief is not enough. So we have invested in our Food Producer Network to help create resilience ahead of the next disaster. We train aspiring chefs in skills and safety to build their careers and the food economy. We advocate for more hunger relief and better nutrition. We want clean cookstoves in the homes of the one billion cooks whose health, and the climate, are in danger, when all they want to do is feed their families.
And we launched our Climate Disaster Fund: a $1 billion commitment over the next decade to support communities impacted by the climate crisis.
Because food is not a luxury reserved for the lucky few. It’s a universal human right to live free from hunger.
At times like these, it’s easy to feel overwhelmed by the scale of the challenges we face, and the speed of each new crisis.
But many complex problems have simple solutions. Sometimes you just need to decide to do something. Sometimes you just have to show up with a sandwich or some warm rice and beans.
You’d be amazed at the power of a plate of food. It can change the world, and so can you.
José Andrés
For More Information: World Central Kitchen

So who’s traced their genealogy?
My dad has done a good amount, and found some interesting things (we won’t mention the ax murder in the family line)