Well, I took this news story with half a grain of salt:
This impressive picture was taken with a special camera on board the Icelandic coastguard’s TF-SIF research plane. The picture shows three craters in the Eyjafjallajokull volcano. The craters are each 200 to 300 metres wide.
The picture undeniably looks like a face: some sort of monster which has broken its way out of the earth and is now spewing fire and sulphur into the atmosphere.
The chaos being wrought on European transport connections is the greatest ever during peace time.
Yeah, yeah rrrriiiight. Like spotting Elvis behind the curtain, or the Virgin Mary on the piece of toast, right?
Superstitious kooks. Betcha this will be ALL OVER George Norry’s Coast to Coast…
But then I saw the image.
Whoa. Creepy.

Yik.
Then I remembered this, a painting taken during a volcanic eruption.

Europe will be having some pretty funky weather patterns this year, won’t they? Good thing about funky weather– it rarely lasts long. Ah, but “global warming” legislation is forever…




April 19th, 2010 at 9:38 am
Saw that picture too….yikes. We feel we are SO in control….with one ‘belch’ God can change the whole world! Love you crabby blogging lady!
April 20th, 2010 at 3:26 pm
Hey Crabby Blogging Lady,
Sorry to bother you again…and I may have already asked this question…so please forgive…..how do I follow you? Usually, I can figure this out. On your blog, I can’t. Are you so crabby you don’t even CARE about followers? If so…that’s righteous! But, if there is a way, let me in on it, OK? Thanks, CBL!
April 22nd, 2010 at 11:33 pm
Kate, LOL. Gee… I don’t have much here, now do I? I guess I never thought I’d have followers! I don’t think I can actually HAVE followers, because this is not a Google blog. But there is an RSS feed, if you are interested. http://www.crabbyblogginglady.com/feed/
April 24th, 2010 at 3:10 pm
Saw that picture too….yikes. We feel we are SO in control….with one ‘belch’ God can change the whole world! Love you crabby blogging lady!
April 24th, 2010 at 3:12 pm
I hear an echo…