HigherGround
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Well, slept maybe an hour and a half
||October 11, 2009|122 reads
 

To add a comment to "Well, slept maybe an hour and a half"
The Cathedralfolk
October 11, 2009
Blessings Juanita!
Joyful Servant
October 11, 2009
Hugs xx
The Talking Mule
October 11, 2009
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Steve Dunning
October 11, 2009
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Hugs
Sis Cece
October 11, 2009
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Your still in my thoughts and prayers. I like the shower. Good place to have a chat with the Lord or sing to Him. 
How wonderful!! The Lord speaks and comforts our weary souls.
Of course I love you. Here's a BIG HUG!!
Tim
October 11, 2009
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Blessings to you Juanita. Like the tree planted by the water..........
HigherGround
October 11, 2009
Tim, you have no way of knowing this but I often refer to myself as drinking up the word so that I can be like that tree planted by the (living) water. Thank you brother. Thank you all for your faithfulness to me with love and hugs.
Prophet Jay
October 11, 2009
Juanita, try doing a search on "Mangrove Forest" and look at any pics of it and you will see how those thick roots are impenetrable.
Liz Bell
October 11, 2009
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PTL for His faithfulness  (((((((HUGS)))))))
Mike n Laura
October 11, 2009
Juanita, your last comment (and Tim's) remind me of Jeremiah 17 (used to have this memorized)...

7 "But blessed is the man who trusts in the LORD,
       whose confidence is in him.

 8 He will be like a tree planted by the water
       that sends out its roots by the stream.
       It does not fear when heat comes;
       its leaves are always green.
       It has no worries in a year of drought
       and never fails to bear fruit."

That's you - a fruit bearing tree!

HigherGround
October 11, 2009

Thanks, I thought I posted ths. I took Prophet Jay's advise and looked them up and got this. I was very blessed byall these comments. Thanks again

http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2007/02/mangroves/warne-text



Mangroves live life on the edge. With one foot on land and one in the sea, these botanical amphibians occupy a zone of desiccating heat, choking mud, and salt levels that would kill an ordinary plant within hours. Yet the forests mangroves form are among the most productive and biologically complex ecosystems on Earth. Birds roost in the canopy, shellfish attach themselves to the roots, and snakes and crocodiles come to hunt. Mangroves provide nursery grounds for fish; a food source for monkeys, deer, tree-climbing crabs, even kangaroos; and a nectar source for bats and honeybees.

As a group, mangroves can't be defined too closely. There are some 70 species from two dozen families—among them palm, hibiscus, holly, plumbago, acanthus, legumes, and myrtle. They range from prostrate shrubs to 200-foot-high (60 meters) timber trees. Though most prolific in Southeast Asia, where they are thought to have originated, mangroves circle the globe. Most live within 30 degrees of the Equator, but a few hardy types have adapted to temperate climates, and one lives as far from the tropical sun as New Zealand. Wherever they live, they share one thing in common: They're brilliant adapters. Each mangrove has an ultrafiltration system to keep much of the salt out and a complex root system that allows it to survive in the intertidal zone. Some have snorkel-like roots called pneumatophores that stick out of the mud to help them take in air; others use prop roots or buttresses to keep their trunks upright in the soft sediments at tide's edge.

These plants are also landbuilders par excellence. Some Aborigines in northern Australia believe one mangrove species resembles their primal ancestor, Giyapara, who walked across the mudflats and brought the tree into existence. The plants' interlocking roots stop riverborne sediments from coursing out to sea, and their trunks and branches serve as a palisade that diminishes the erosive power of waves.

pandabear
October 11, 2009
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Continuing to keep you in prayer, Juanita, in the MIGHTY name of JESUS.  Amen.  Love you, lady.