Harvest sharing

September 5th, 2008


Harvest sharing

Sharing The Harvest-Teddy Bear-Pumpkin-Framed Art Print
Sharing The Harvest-Teddy Bear-Pumpkin-Framed Art Print

:  Print Size: 8x8, Artist: Mary Ann June, Includes Glass, Backing, and Hanger - Ready to Hang!, Solid Wood Frame and High Quality Lithograph Art Print
Company: The Rusty Roof 
List Price: $22.99
Amazon Price: 
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Sharing The Harvest - Artist: Maryann May - Art Print Poster - With a Black Wood Frame - Image Size: 8.00 by 8.00 inches Art Print Poster - With a Black Wood Frame
Sharing The Harvest - Artist: Maryann May - Art Print Poster - With a Black Wood Frame - Image Size: 8.00 by 8.00 inches Art Print Poster - With a Black Wood Frame This item comes framed in a solid wooden Studio Moulding with a black matt finish. The frame is of a very high quality and has a Width of 1 3/16 inches and a thickness of 7/8 of an inch. This frame is fitted with plexi-glass and a hanging wire in back.

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Company: ArtExpression 
List Price: $99.00
Amazon Price: $89.10
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Sharing The Harvest - Artist: Maryann May - Art Print Poster Size: 8.00 by 8.00 inches
Sharing The Harvest - Artist: Maryann May - Art Print Poster Size: 8.00 by 8.00 inches : 
Company: ArtExpression 
List Price: $11.00
Amazon Price: $10.00
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If Teacups Could Talk: Sharing a Cup of Kindness with Treasured Friends
If Teacups Could Talk: Sharing a Cup of Kindness with Treasured Friends

In 1994 the gift book market welcomed If Teacups Could Talk, and thousands of women discovered the warm hospitality of Emilie Barnes and the gracious spirit of artist Sandy Lynam Clough. Now with a fresh new cover, this bestseller (more than 260,000 copies sold) will inspire even more people to savor the blessings of teatime traditions.

In chapters overflowing with ideas for gracious living, Emilie encourages readers to embrace and pass on to others the gifts of friendship, tradition, comfort, celebration, and imagination...all with a cup of tea.

Those who have already made this beautiful book a part of their teatime traditions will now be eager to introduce this dear old friend to others in their lives.



Author: Emilie Barnes
Hardcover:  72 pages
Company: Harvest House Publishers  (2003-01-01)
ISBN: 0736903836
List Price: $16.99
Amazon Price: $9.77
Used Price: $6.94
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Grandma, Do You Remember When?: Sharing a Lifetime of Loving Memories--A Keepsake Journal
Grandma, Do You Remember When?: Sharing a Lifetime of Loving Memories--A Keepsake Journal

In this keepsake journal for grandma to fill out, grandchildren can discover the experiences, happy moments, and cherished events that shaped their grandmother’s legacy. Old–fashioned paintings by Jim Daly will sweeten every grandmother’s stroll down memory lane as she shares her thoughts on the lined pages filled with questions including: tell me your favorite story about our family, what is your prayer for me, and what makes you happiest about being a grandmother?

This hardcover treasury–in–the–making is a wonderful present for families to give to grandmothers or for grandmothers to give their loved ones. The best gift of all will be the recorded memories that represent a the hopes and dreams women want to pass along to their beloved grandchildren.



Hardcover:  48 pages
Company: Harvest House Publishers  (2003-06-01)
ISBN: 0736910506
List Price: $15.99
Amazon Price: $8.83
Used Price: $2.85
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Sharing the Harvest: A Citizen's Guide to Community Supported Agriculture, Revised and Expanded
Sharing the Harvest: A Citizen's Guide to Community Supported Agriculture, Revised and Expanded To an increasing number of American families the CSA (community supported agriculture) is the answer to the globalization of our food supply. The premise is simple: create a partnership between local farmers and nearby consumers, who become members or subscribers in support of the farm. In exchange for paying in advance—at the beginning of the growing season, when the farm needs financing—CSA members receive the freshest, healthiest produce throughout the season and keep money, jobs, and farms in their own community.
In this thoroughly revised and expanded edition of a Chelsea Green classic, authors Henderson and Van En provide new insight into making CSA not only a viable economic model, but the right choice for food lovers and farmers alike. Thinking and buying local is quickly moving from a novel idea to a mainstream activity. The groundbreaking first edition helped spark a movement and, with this revised edition, Sharing the Harvest is poised to lead the way toward a revitalized agriculture.

Author: Elizabeth Henderson, Robyn Van En
Paperback:  320 pages
Company: Chelsea Green Publishing  (2007-11-01)
ISBN: 193339210X
List Price: $35.00
Amazon Price: $21.82
Used Price: $20.44
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Sharing The Harvest - Russel May Art Print Poster 8 x 8 i
Sharing The Harvest - Russel May Art Print Poster 8 x 8 i Brand New Officially Licensed Guaranteed to Arrive Safe Paper Size: 8 x 8 inches / Image Size: 8 x 8 inches

:  Brand New Officially Licensed, Guaranteed to Arrive Safe, Paper Size: 8 x 8 inches / Image Size: 8 x 8 inches
Company: FramingMOVIES.com 
List Price: 
Amazon Price: 
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Harvest Sharing Aquires SHARE Colorado | KansasCity.com Press Release ...
Would you like your news or event published in The Kansas City Star or on KansasCity.com? We?d be glad to consider it. Details here; Press Release Tips (more...)

Hunters Sharing the Harvest
The primary objective of Hunters Sharing the Harvest is to coordinate the distribution of venison from hunters to hungry people via an integrated network of ... (more...)

Berks deer harvest sharing is even more welcome this year
Hunters sharing the harvest Started in 1991 by Pennsylvania hunters, the organization donates deer meat to local food pantries and soup kitchens. (more...)

Classroom Connections > Sharing The Harvest
No individual or nation can stand out boasting of being independent. We are all interdependent." Martin Luther King (more...)

The Harvest Project Sharing the Vision and Strategy of Churches ...
Welcome to the Harvest Project website!  This site contains a compilation of photos and stories from around the world.  The goal of the Harvest Project is to tell the stories of ... (more...)

Rotary First Harvest : What is SFH?
What is Sharing First Harvest? Sharing First Harvest is the work of a dedicated group of Rotarians who created a strategic plan of action ... (more...)
Tags:   Rotary Harvest SFH

Welcome to Christian Harvest International
November 20-23, 2008 Harvest Sharing! Harvest Sharing is the Christian Harvest International Newsletter that will provide you with teaching, equipping, insights ... (more...)

Harvest Women's Ministry ::: Sharing Our Father's Likeness
Then those who feared the LORD spoke to one another, and the LORD listened and heard them; So a book of remembrance was written before Him for those who fear the LORD and who ... (more...)

Harvest of sharing | KLEW CBS 3 - News, Weather and Sports ...
The Community Action Partnership Food Bank helps distribute food from Backyard Harvest. (more...)

Harvest Moon Society » Sharing Stories
Rural Communities are strong vibrant places, where people strive to make their communities strong, and a vibrant places to live and work. This is an interactive space for learning ... (more...)

Resolved Question: Millsberry Trophy and Certificates!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?
Hi there Millsberry fans! I want to ask if you can share or give me some rare trophies or certificates like: Cinnamon Toast Crunch® Master Trophy Peanut Butter Toast Crunch® Master Trophy Reese's® Puffs® Snowboard Slalom Master Trophy America's Second Harvest Food Drive Trophy Choose Breakfast Challenge 1st Place Trophy Bronze Halloween Trophy Bronze Skull Bronze Junior Astronomer Trophy Orange Belt Certificate Yellow Belt Certificate Nutrition Month Certificate ....or if you know any cheap yard sales who sell those...pls. infom me.. try visiting my house..username: danadelfierro / 63309-E Triumph Boulevard, Metro Park i will expect to your active response.......THANKS! I LUV MILLSBERRY! (more...)

Resolved Question: Have you met "The Spindle"?
Now penitent at river's edge Half way along a dead end street There waits a soul behind his hedge Whose days are but the winding-sheet That gather, as in Passiontide, What Time and Fate could not elide And reckon there, in interpledge, The toll of dreams now obsolete. In brighter days of sunlit skies He'd schemed, and dreamed of ripe renown And plotted his path penny-wise To breach the boundaries of the town That all the world might know his name And in the radiance of his flame Know all his sight transmogrifies -- And then his dreams would tumble down. A mind so keen and resolute Seemed guaranteed its treasured goal, But Destiny's forbidden fruit Grew dark beside the wassail bowl And so instead perfection's fool Does penance on his ducking stool And waits, a latter-day Canute, For tides to turn on sandy shoal. His blessed dream was but to teach The majesty of Euclid's mind But passion made him overreach And thus repel those disinclined To plumb in thoughts uncircumcised Malignancies to be dispised; But time and tide could not impeach One disillusioned, left behind. And so he traveled here and there To share the shimmering of his grace And then, in dark, the solitaire Would twisted trails of doubt retrace And find, in Saturn's harvest home, The scythe, that like a metronome, Would mark, for it could not repair, What Atropos would soon erase. And in the tumbling of Time's sands Their reigned two sorts of gravity, In marching spectral second hands A chastening indignity -- And there can be no recompense For debtors of improvidence Whose tapestries' neat wefted strands Ensnare all petty vanity. (more...)

Voting Question: Harvest moon tree of tranquility?
How many people can play, what I mean is can you have more then one town or is it like animal crossing you have to share a town. (more...)

Resolved Question: please tell me this about our government?
ok there was this old old farm in georgia and there were the steriotypical animals on the farm cow,pig,chicken,horse.etc. so one day they found out they could communicate with one another and solve there differences amoung the "races" so a few months went by everything was good but the cold seasons was coming and the chicken knew what to do so the chicken asked the cow and horse to help him plow up a feild for a garden to prepare for the winter but they said no we are to tired and sleepy from eating all day . so the chicken plowed the feild it self another day went by and the chicken asked the pig to help him plant the seeds then water them the pig replied no i am to tired and hungry to work so the chicken did the planting it self. weeks went by and it was harvesting time and the chicken ased the pig,horse,cow to help out but they all said no so the chicken harvested the garden of goods by himself. when the chicken got back to the farm with the food the animals wanted the food and wanted the chicken to share but the chicken said no he said he did all the wortk and is not sharing what they did not help to make he worked hard for it so why should he give what wasnt worked for .. do you think what the chicken did was right and if you reply please write your answer and your party like democrat or republuican. and check back in and i will have writen somthing else oh and im just a kid ok so dont be mean im 13 years of age ..thanks. in response i think it is wronge that barack obama wants to take the wealth that others worked so hard to achieve and if i was to label my self somthing it would be a constitutionalist to i follow the constitution till it dies "which mabey very soon" i think if people are going to be lazy and not want to work but want the government to suppply with other hard working peoples money it is wornge super wronge (more...)

Voting Question: is it legal? is it balanced? how does it make you feel?
Imagine hearing the following financial news; "Today, the market in sow bellies is down, soybeans are stable, and the market in human embryos is up." Recent developments in embryonic research have moved us one step closer to that scenario. The Jones Institute for Reproductive Medicine in Virginia announced last week that they intentionally created human embryos from donor eggs and sperm with the sole purpose of conducting destructive research on nascent humans. The twelve egg donors were paid $1500 to $2000 each, about what the average egg donor receives. The sperm donors were paid about $50 each. So, that means that the money earned from the destruction of human offspring can pay a month's house mortgage for a woman and dinner for two for a man. In a second case, Massachusetts-based company Advanced Cell Technology (ACT) admitted it was attempting to clone human embryos for the purposes of harvesting stem cells from those embryos. ACT is a privately-funded, for-profit biotechnology industry leader. Associated Press biotechnology writer Paul Elias broke the story on Friday, July 13th, that the Jones Institute, ACT, and Geron Inc., a Menlo Park, California, biotechnology company are racing to develop large numbers of embryonic stem cells to supply a market they hope will open up as soon as President Bush makes up his mind about federal funding for embryonic stem cell research. Elias claims that "Geron buys leftover frozen embryos from fertility clinics and cracks them open to obtain the stem cells." A market in human beings is not a future possibility, it is a present reality. What these companies are doing can only be described as human embryo farming: producing human embryos for a biotechnological research harvest. Only, instead of "farming," we really ought to call it "pharming" since what they hope to do is to be the first to make a claim on a pharmaceutical treatment that will earn huge profits. Of course the morning "pharm report" won't be announcing that the market in embryos is gaining strength-that would be too traumatic for most Americans. Instead, ACT's ethics committee suggests that a human embryo cloned for research purposes should be called an "activated egg" or "ovasome." What they call their "crop" or "product" is a very important marketing decision. The fertility drug Pergonal, for instance, would not likely be as popular if it were called what it is, "Derivative of Urine." Market share will not rise as high if their product's name is off-putting or offensive. "Ovasome" sounds like a breakfast drink to be mixed with milk. "I'll just have 'Ovasome'," you can imagine Dad saying as he comes down the stairs in the morning. Make no mistake about it, this is not silly, it's dangerous. Human beings and their body parts are being bought and sold, created and destroyed, planted and harvested, for profit or potential profit. Human beings and their parts have become commodities, like sow bellies, corn and soybeans. In their recent book, Body Bazaar: The Market for Human Tissues in the Biotechnology Age, Lori Andrews and Dorothy Nelkin argue that the value of human body tissue in the biotechnology age--and the potential for profitable patents derived from it--encourages doctors and researchers to think about people differently . . . Body parts are extracted like a mineral, harvested like a crop, or mined like a resource." Do we really want to view human embryos as either farms or pharms, especially when the harvesting requires the destruction of the embryo? It's one thing to use umbilical cords retrieved after the birth of a baby for research, it's another thing to remove the baby's life-giving tissues for potential profitable pharmaceuticals. Yet the "pharmers" at Jones Institute, ACT and Geron are encouraging us to commodify tiny humans. These nascent human beings are being imperiled by our own biotechnological avarice. "Biotechnological uses," say Andrews and Nelkin, "risk running roughshod over social values and personal beliefs." Indeed. Americans should repudiate the commodification of human embryos. They are not crops to be harvested. They are not "pharms" to be cultivated. After all, hard as it is to believe, you and I were once tiny human embryos. Didn't we have a right not to be bought and sold at the "pharmers market?" (more...)

Resolved Question: Do you think Alaska should be encouraged/mandated to secede from the union?
Gov. Palin's "Dude" (husband) belonged to a group that Sarah had spoke at, that was promoting secession so they wouldn't have to share the oil money windfall. If they were to succeed that would make Sarah a foreign national who would be unable to run for office in the U.S. wouldn't it be worth it? her only followers, the Evangelicals could then all move, making it easier for God to harvest for the rapture (more...)

Resolved Question: Wiccans/Pagans, "out of curiousity" Part Three, the Finale.?
I will be speaking to my daughter's 1st and 2nd grade class about the Winter Solstice. I want to be as gentle and noninflammatory as possible while at the same time representing the beauty of the Winter Solstice celebrations. I guess that I am kinda weary, due to the hoopla of last year, when my daughter got in trouble for saying that Santa isn't real. I am want to educate people about other belief systems, to promote tolerance, however, I don't want my daughter to be ostracized. (That might be a little extreme, but still.) I also don't want to raise too many uncomfortable questions, where the primarily Christian parents of the kids become offended, making school and friendships more difficult. I think I am sounding like a pansy, and should have pleasure at sharing my beliefs, but I have also experienced a lot of pain and don't want to indirectly inflict it on my little girl. So I guess that I wanted some really "P/C" ideas on what to discuss, what to skip, what to focus on, etc. I already have some ideas, I want to show a variety of Winter Solstice celebrations from around Europe and Greece, talk about the importance of the harvest and the sun in the lives of agricultural peoples....... If you could throw in a cool craft idea for 26 kids, that could be accomplished in about 20 minutes that would be awesome. Thank you for your input. She didn't run around announcing that Santa didn't exist. She was asked if she believed in Santa because the was a JW in the class so it became a hot topic. I told her not to bring it up, but not to lie, either. (more...)

Resolved Question: hunters, out of all the game you've harvested...?
what animal are you most proud of? if you have pic's please share. *warning* any and all bunny humping tree hugging democrap voting idiots well be reported. (more...)

Resolved Question: Potato plow use question?
In crusing eBay I have seen listed what are called "potato plows". I was brought up that a plow is a plow. Are potato plows called this because they are used to "dig up" potatoes in large quantity at harvest time? Or are they called this because of the shape of the plow share? Thank you! (more...)

Resolved Question: What is YOUR meaning for Thanksgiving?
In 1621, the Plymouth colonists and Wampanoag Indians shared an autumn harvest feast which is acknowledged today as the first Thanksgiving celebration in the colonies. The colonists came from overseas and the Indians ( Original Americans ) receive them as friends. That should be the original American attitude to those coming from other countries, but unfortunately there are some people that is still racist. So, What do you think about this and the real meaning of Thanksgiving ? (more...)


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