wingfield unbound


Debbie Ridpath Ohi reads, writes and illustrates for young people.
**PLEASE PARDON THE CONSTRUCTION DUST. My website is in the process of being completely revamped, and my brand new site will be unveiled later in 2021! Stay tuned! **
Every once in a while, Debbie shares new art, writing and resources; subscribe below. Browse the archives here.
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You can also Search Inkygirl.com.
Use this search field to search Blatherings archives, or go back to the Main Blatherings page.
***Please note: You are browsing Debbie's personal blog. For her kidlit/YA writing & illustrating blog, see Inkygirl.com.
You can browse by date or entry title in my Blatherings archives here:
1997 - 1998 - 1999 - 2000 - 2001 - 2002 - 2003 - 2004 - 2005 - 2006 - 2007 - 2008 - 2009 - 2010+ (current archives).
Main Things I Learned On The Trip:
1. Most German tourist books say that everyone in Germany speaks English. This is a Lie.
2. "Sprech sie Englisch?" should be one of the phrases you learn first. If the person answers "a little", this is the equivalent to saying "no". :-)
3. In some public restroom areas, a woman sits outside the doors beside a table with a bowl of change. This is the cleaning woman, and she expects to be tipped 20-50 pfennigs. If you don't tip her, she gives you a dirty look.
4. The bread in Germany is to die for.
5. So is the Goslar jagar schnitzel and Nuremberg bratwurst.
6. Don't jaywalk. (My friend Scott jaywalked in Mainz once, and an old man followed him all the way to the train station just to ream him out about it, calling out "For shame! For shame!")
7. The word for chocolate is "schokolade".
We ended up not going to Zurich, opting instead to stay in Germany and spend a little longer checking out scenic villages and towns. The cathedrals were amazing; it's a wonder my neck didn't get sore from all the gawking up at lofty ceilings and soaring pillars. The language barrier was a fairly big one; if Scott hadn't been with us to translate, it would have been much more difficult to do straightforward things (like order from a menu, for instance). I wish I had done some more language prep before the trip. In just the week we spent in Germany, however, Jeff and I both picked up quite a bit in terms of learning essential phrases (distinguishing between "Men" and "Women" on restroom doors, for instance! Also stuff like "exit", "entry", "one way", "entry forbidden", "old town", "town center", "good morning", "thank you", "please", "I speak no German", that sort of thing) The first part of the trip was spent in smaller villages, where very few people spoke English and there were few foreigners...I didn't see a single non-white person until we went to larger (and more touristy) cities like Nuremberg and Mainz.
Everyone we met was very friendly and helpful with our bumbling about with trying to pronounce things from my phrasebook.
I'll probably go on more about our Germany trip in future blatherings. Came home to 1788 email messages, mostly work-related. Catching up is going to be quite the challenge, I think.
Today's Site: Spam Filter Page. If your email software has filtering capabilities, this might be a solution for you...uses only fifteen filters. I'm going to try this and will report on any noticeable difference.
My Inkspot Online Guidelines Library needs fodder! The Library will eventually be a searchable database of publisher guidelines for writers. The database has been finished and I've started preliminary testing but need a bunch of pseudo-publisher entries to be added. Please pardon the sometimes kludgy-looking user interface screens...I'm working on that now. But you have a spare moment in the next few days, please do add a pseudo book publishing company or pseudo magazine. Here are the instructions:
Basically, you have to pretend to be a publisher of
a magazine or a book wanting to add your market information
listing to Inkspot.
You should first register at:
http://www.inkspot.com/cgi-bin/guidelines/guide.cgi
1. Go to Publisher Registration.
2. Choose either magazine or book publisher, then press "Register >>"
3. For username, please choose something like "yourlastname1"
or "yourlastname2" etc. so I know you created the listing.
For email address, use libadmin@inkspot.com.
Write down your username and password somewhere for reference.
You can make up everything else. When you're done, press "Continue >>"
4. You'll see a verification of the info. Press "Approve >>"
5. Go back to http://www.inkspot.com/cgi-bin/guidelines/guide.cgi
6. Go down to Edit/Add Listing.
7. Login with the username and password you selected earlier.
8. Choose "Add Listing"
9. Fill out the series of forms and keep hitting "Approve >>" until
you get the message "Listing has been entered".
PLEASE don't spend a lot of time filling out the forms. These listings
are dummy listings only and will be eventually deleted. You don't need
to fill out all the fields.
10. If you have time, feel free to add more publications under
this publisher name.
However, please do not add any dummy listings after the end of this month (i.e. after Nov. 30) since I hope to be going semi-live soon after that (adding real publisher guidelines). Thanks VERY much in advance!!!