Twitter Guide For Bloggers

Get clear tips on using Twitter for business with this FREE guide from social media experts.

If you aren't using Twitter to maximize your blog, you're way way way behind the curve. Get up to speed with this easy-to-consume introductory guide on using Twitter for bloggers provided
by HubSpot.

You'll get inside information about leveraging the popular microblogging site, including insights into:
  • Twitter 101
  • How Twitter can answer business objectives
  • Creating buzz around your brand
  • Interacting and supporting your customer base

2 Blog or Not 2 Blog

Once before, the twitterer almost kissed blogging goodbye..

i almost kissed blogging goodbye, but now that i have a new phone that is capable of many tricks, you will see more here!

i am using my new toy to type and upload this post

i have accounts with t-mobile, AT&T and Net10 all on this phone..

i have one number for business, one for my friends & fam, one for just my hubby and someday the kids..

This is a warning!

i am getting tired of being a patron of other peoples blogs. i am beginning to feel like a homeless person roaming virtual reality. The comments section is nice, but do i really wanna be some one's marginalia? Or can i be my own information age whore? i think it's time to get blogging..

Rose Wines

Rose Wines
Rose Wines

I can't think of a great meal without a great wine to accompany. Hubby and I enjoy red wines, particularly port and rose. Wine brings out the flavour in foods (and sometimes adds zest to your guests!) A rose wine has some of the color typical of a red wine, but only enough to turn it pink. The pink color can range from a pale orange to a vivid near-purple, depending on the grapes and wine making techniques


The first is used when rose wine is the primary product. Red-skinned grapes are crushed and the skins are allowed to remain in contact with the juice for a short period, typically two or three days. The grapes are then pressed, and the skins are discarded rather than left in contact throughout fermentation (as with red wine making). The skins contain much of the strongly flavored tannin and other compounds, which leaves the taste more similar to a white wine. The longer that the skins are left in contact with the juice, the more intense the color of the final wine.

Saignée, or bleeding, is used when the winemaker desires to impart more tannin and color to a red wine, and removes some pink juice from the must at an early stage, in a process known as bleeding the vats. The removed juice is then fermented separately, producing the rose as a by-product of the red wine, which is intensified as a result of the bleeding, because the volume of juice in the must is reduced, and the must involved in the maceration is concentrated.

Blending, the simple mixing of red wine to a white to impart color, is uncommon. This method is discouraged in most wine growing regions now except for Champagne. Even in Champagne, many producers do not use this method.

Historically rose was quite a delicate, dry wine, exemplified by Anjou rose from the Loire. In fact the original claret was a pale ('clairet') wine from Bordeaux that would probably now be described as a rose. Weißherbst is a type of German rose made from only one variety of grape.

After the Second World War, there was a fashion for medium-sweet roses for mass-market consumption, the classic examples being Mateus rose and the American "blush" wines of the 1970's. The pendulum now seems to be swinging back towards a drier, 'bigger' style. These wines are made from Rhone grapes like Syrah, Grenache and Carignan in hotter regions such as Provence, the Languedoc and Australia. In France, rose has now exceeded white wines in sales. In the United States a record 2005 California crop has resulted in an increased production and proliferation of varietals used for roses, as winemakers chose to make rose rather than leave their reds unsold.

In the early 1970s, demand for white wine exceeded the availability of white wine grapes, so many California producers made "white" wine from red grapes, in a form of saignée production with minimal skin contact, the "whiter" the better. In 1975 Sutter Home's "White Zinfandel" wine experienced a stuck fermentation, a problem in which the yeast dies off before all the sugar is turned to alcohol. Winemaker Bob Trinchero put it aside for two weeks, then upon tasting it he decided to sell this pinker, sweeter wine.

In 1976, wine writer Jerry D. Mead visited Mill Creek Vineyards in Sonoma County, California. Charlie Kreck had been one of the first to plant Cabernet Sauvignon vines in California, and offered Mead a wine made from Cabernet that was a pale pink and as yet unnamed. Kreck would not call it "White Cabernet" as it was much darker in colour than red grape "white" wines of the time, yet it was not as dark as the roses he had known. Mead jokingly suggested the name "Cabernet Blush", then that evening phoned Kreck to say that he no longer thought the name a joke.[8] In 1978 Kreck trademarked the word "Blush". The name caught on as a marketing name for the semi-sweet wines from producers such as Sutter Home and Beringer, although Mill Creek no longer produce any rose wine.

The term "blush" is generally restricted to wines sold in North America, although it is sometimes used in Australia and by Italian Primitivo wines hoping to cash in on the recently discovered genetic links between Primitivo and Zinfandel. Although "blush" originally referred to a colour (pale pink), it now tends to indicate a relatively sweet pink wine, typically with 2.5% residual sugar; in North America dry pink wines are usually marketed as rose but sometimes as blush. In Europe almost all pink wines are referred to as rose regardless of sugar levels, even semi-sweet ones from California.

World of Problems

Hello again , today guess what I did!..... absouletely nothing... lol... just got done eating a burrito yum.... Hey I take that back... I went over to my cousin's house...

It absolutely amazes me how the EMTs' and the "cops" continue to try to help all the idiots running around loose. They go out of their way to help the stinkin' drug addicts, drunks and domestic disputers. There seems to be no solution as this has been going on forever. This costs millions of dollars and all we do is build more jails. I think we are all aware that most of the problems happens in the home environment. Poor neighbourhoods, where the schooling is also poor and most feel what good is an education if no one will hire them. The gangs are their family and there is no fear of dying. To die so young and yet is there any future for them?

Checking In

A lot of emails - asking me where the twitterer has been. She has been waiting for the right moment to come back and blog. Nothing's really been going on. I wish I could update everyday and write all kinds of fascinating things. But I can't. All I can really say that's worth hearing is that I have some bitchin' writer's block right now. Everything I try to write comes out wrong. I've been listening to CDs and devouring books and magazines in hopes I'll find some inspiration. Just that one thing to get me started, to make me think. But alas, whether that mysterious 'thing' is locked up in a song or in a book, I've yet to find it.

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