Monday, March 28, 2011

Amazon.com: Grow Your Own Gay Best Friend A Joke Gift Present ...

springtime four leaf clover find

Shamrock: Four Leaf Clover - Wager Run News

Shamrock: Four Leaf Clover
Today, March 17th is St. Patrick’s Day and the day that the shamrock gets a lot of attention or at least the four leaf clover. By definition according to answers.com a shamrock is: “Any of several plants, such as a clover or wood sorrel, having compound leaves with three small leaflets, considered the national emblem of Ireland.” A four leaf clover is considerably rare but some people seem to have luck finding them.


shamrockA true four leaf clover usually has leaf number four a little bit smaller than the other three leaves. Each of the leaves of these clovers have a meaning:
  • Faith
  • Hope
  • Love
  • Luck

As you notice the fourth leaf is luck and that is why only four leaf clover are lucky.

There are even websites online where you can buy genuine clovers. Some of the ones that you find are not the true shamrock that you are looking for. The real deal comes from the white clover plant aka trifolium repens. You may find others such as the Pepperwort, Water Clvoer or Oxalis that also produce four leaves but they are not the original shamrock.

Who would have known there was so much to learn about the shamrock?

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Four Leaf Clover Apps - Product Reviews

Many people have different superstitions, whether it’s a rabbit’s foot, walking under a ladder or a four leaf clover. With technology today you can have a four leaf clover always at your side thanks to some fun mobile applications.

Lucky Hunt will bring back memories of childhood as you searched through the grass trying to find those four leaf clovers. This fun little game has users searching for the clover’s before the time runs out. If you manage to find the elusive four leaf clover more plants will grow to make it harder to find next time. This is available on the App Store for $0.99/0.59.

Cloverload is a similar game where you have to search through a field searching for four leaf clovers, but you gather them all up and collect them to increase your luck. This is available free on the App Store.

LuckyClover is a fun game for all ages to enjoy which will really test your hand eye coordination. Players have to quickly find and pick the four leaf clovers which are amongst a changing clover patch. The game starts off easy but gets more difficult as you progress. You can find this on the App Store for $0.99/£0.59.

St. Patrick's Day Celebrated Accross the World

 

 

The London Eye Shrouded in Green Light on St Patrick's Day, March 17, 2011 (Getty Images)

 What connects the four leaf Clover, corned beef and cabbage, Guinness, and the catholic church? Add March 17th to the celebration and you get St. Patrick's day.

It started hundreds of years ago as a religious holiday in Ireland, St. Patrick's day has now become a huge celebration of Irish culture. The holiday is also celebrated in Great Britain, the US, Australia and New Zealand, thanks to Irish immigrants who spread the tradition.

Green clothes are the day's fashion, symbolizing the green shamrock- Ireland’s national's symbol. According to the legend, the shamrock was used by St Patrick to teach the Irish people about the holy trinity of mother, son and the holy spirit. He is considered by the church till this day, to the patron Saint of Ireland.

The traditions took the three leaf clover or Shamrock a step further to a 4 leaf clover – a very rear find. The 3 leaves stand for faith hope and love and the fourth leaf stands for luck.

Not much of the religious day's  character remains in modern times considering the massive consumption of alcohol on St Patrick's day –especially Guinness. It goes together with the Irish blessing Slainte (good health in Irish), Erin Go Bragh (Ireland Forever), special Irish sayings such as "May the Lord keep you in His hand and never close His fist too tight,"  "May the saddest day of your future be no worse than the happiest day of your past," and more.

Colorful parades are held in many counties around the world, one of the biggest is held in New York City –and attracts around 150,000 people every year. Monuments across the world are also lit green to mark the occasion, including the Empire State Building in NYC and the London eye in the UK Capital.

The True Meaning Of The 4 Leaf Clover

shamrock pots The True Meaning Of The 4 Leaf Clover

Each leaf means something.  Check it out on this St. Patrick’s Day!!

The first leaf means: Hope

Second leaf means:   Faith

Third leaf says:           Love

And the fourth:          Luck

I Use More Than the 'Luck of the Irish' to Bring A Change of Fortune

I Use More Than the 'Luck of the Irish' to Bring a Change of Fortune

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Have a happy St. Patrick's Day! Patch
Photos (8)

Photos

Throw a penny in the Getty fountain for good luck.

Credit Getty Images
My sister and I tug on the wishbone, each making a wish. After the wishbone breaks, the person with the bigger piece will have their her granted.

Credit Getty Images
If a stray eyelash falls upon your cheek, place it on your finger, make a wish, then blow  the eyelash away.

Credit Getty/Freudenthal Verhagen
I keep three stalks of lucky bamboo in my apartment.

Credit Getty Images

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Here are the seven good-luck charms that I swear by.

By Lauren Rosenblum | Email the author | March 16, 2011

My family is not Irish, but what my mother lacks in Irish roots she makes up for in superstitious beliefs. Besides the whole broken-mirror-seven-years-bad-luck thing, I also couldn’t walk under a ladder or open an umbrella indoors.

My Jewish mom, who flips homes as a hobby, buries St. Joseph statues in the front lawn of her listings. She figuratively spits by saying “pooh, pooh” in reaction to something especially evil. She knocks on wood to keep something bad from happening when she thinks she might’ve jinxed herself. She says she gets all of this from her grandmother.

Without fail she says “God bless you” when someone sneezes. But she also believes that when a person sneezes during a conversation, whatever has just been said "is the truth." 

And, though superstitions aren’t logical, I've grown up believing that the idea of luck can be comforting—especially when we’re so often reminded that life is fragile and things are beyond our control.

Perhaps that is what family traditions are all about, anyway. They call to mind tender memories of times gone by and quirky great-grandmothers whom we dearly  miss. There is nothing silly or superstitious about that.

In honor of St. Patrick’s Day and the "luck of the Irish," I wanted to share seven of my lucky charms with you.

1. Thomas Jefferson's Impassive Stare
The rarely used $2 bill, which occasionally turns up in birthday cards and souvenir drawers, is my No. 1 lucky charm. Since I turned 16, I’ve kept a crisp $2 bill folded in my wallet under my driver’s license. My mom gave me the 2005 bill and told me to carry it with me always. 

2. Penny in the Getty
While tossing a coin into a fountain for good luck is a custom undertaken in many parts of the world, it is most common to watch this practice at the Trevi Fountain in Rome, Italy. Unfortunately, I don't live in Rome. I live here in Encino. So I like to carry on the tradition here and throw a penny in the Getty fountain upon every visit.

3. Lucky 7:11
The time 7:11 is considered lucky in my household. I have no idea why, and we don’t even make a wish. We just scream “7:11!” and look at our clocks to note the time. If we catch it in the morning and in the evening, it’s a doubly lucky day. You can't set an alarm clock or timer though; that's cheating.

4. Broken Breastbone
When my Dad carved a turkey or chicken, he’d always leave the dried breastbone for me and my younger sister when we were kids. We would tug on the wishbone, each making a wish. After the bone broke, the person with the bigger piece would have her wish granted.

5. Fallen Eyelashes
A stray eyelash is seen as a wish maker, much like the wishbone. If an eyelash falls on my cheek, I always put it on my finger, make a wish and blow it away.

6. Zen Bamboo
When I first moved out on my own, my mom bought me three stalks of bamboo. She said it was lucky. The vase has moved with me from apartment to apartment, and so far, it's the only plant my black thumb has been able to keep alive!

7. When You Wish Upon a Star
A person lucky enough to see a shooting star is supposed to make a secret wish.

And speaking of secret wishes, my mother always told me that you’re never supposed to tell anyone else what you’ve wished for. But today, I'll make an exception.

I wish Encino Patch readers a happy, healthy St. Patrick's Day. Have fun Thursday, be safe and good luck to you all!

So much of life is luck


Photo of Ken Burger

St. Patrick's Day is the perfect time to consider luck, good and bad.

While people talk about the luck of the Irish in a whimsical, mythological way, you have to wonder if there's anything to it.

Ireland was, after all, invaded by the Vikings, plundered by Cromwell's army, subjected to a plantation system, stripped of its native tongue and suffered through a terrible famine.

It was, alas, a potato famine in the 1800s that drove millions from that country to America, where they were lucky enough to start over in a land of plenty and promise.

Bad luck therefore led to good luck.

Or was it just fate?

Rabbit's foot

I have a friend who has carried a rabbit's foot for several decades and considers it a good luck charm.

It was not so lucky, however, for the rabbit.

People have all kinds of talismans hanging around their necks, from their rearview mirrors, tucked inside clothing or hidden in their houses to protect them from bad luck.

Some of the usual good luck omens include horseshoes, four-leaf clovers, piebald horses, coins found heads up, numbers like seven, ladybugs, and the unexplainable tradition of actors telling one another to "break a leg" just before going on stage.

All of which proves they don't have to make sense. They just have to be believed.

Luck, it seems, is a state of mind, a belief that something good will happen.

Unless, of course, it doesn't.

You don't have to be a physicist to conclude that if there is good luck there is also an equal amount of bad luck.

In the old West, aces and eights were considered a dead-man's hand in poker. If a black cat crosses your path, surely something bad is about to happen. Or not.

Lucky charms are just that, charming, if not ridiculous.

Half a chance

And yet we cling to luck like a life raft in the turbulent ocean of life.

Mainly because we need to believe we have half a chance to be successful, whether we deserve it or not.

That you were born in this country to nice people who fed you and educated you and protected you from bad things might be, at best, a statistical miracle.

That you met your soul mate in a library on a rainy afternoon because she was studying and you were looking for shelter could have been a happy happenstance.

That you barely missed being hit by a bus because you stopped to help a little old lady pick up her handkerchief could be considered a chivalrous coincidence.

Life, it seems, is as fickle as a coin toss.

So be careful out there today, look both ways for leprechauns, and may the luck of the Irish be with you. The good luck, that is.

Reach Ken Burger at 937-5598 or follow him on Twitter at @Ken_Burger.

Mississippians find luck with shamrocks

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St. Patrick's Day triggers increased interest in bringing home from the garden center a three-leafed shamrock. In addition to the traditional green, more and more varieties are showing up with gorgeous purple to almost black foliage.

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The Charmed series offers Velvet and Wine varieties, both with black/purple foliage and pink flowers. During the summer months, place shamrocks outside in full shade as the sun will bleach the leaves. These plants will get 12 to 16 inches tall and wide. Velvet and Wine make good planting partners in shade containers. As filler plants, they will mingle and poke out between the other plants in the container.

Shamrocks, sometimes called clovers, are part of the oxalis family. They make great houseplants, but there are some outstanding oxalis selections for the landscape. These sterile and noninvasive landscape varieties are not the weedy scourges we battle each year. Known botanically as Oxalis vulcanicola, these landscape oxalis grow about 6 inches tall and have a spreading habit of a foot or greater. They can be planted in full to partial sun.

Zinfandel is a purple/black selection with bright yellow flowers, but my favorite shamrock is Molten Lava. The foliage is primarily chartreuse when planted in partial shade, but in full sun, it lives up to its name, becoming a bright lime tinged with fiery yellow/orange. You might want to label these in your landscape, as they do look like the weedy species of oxalis. Labels will stop someone from thinking they are doing you a favor by pulling them up.

In Mississippi we do have a little native oxalis called cottage pink wood sorrel. I always enjoy seeing the cheery clear pink flowers in the springtime. They bloom much of the summer in a shady part of my yard. In full sun, the blossoms are spring visitors that go to sleep in the summer when the temperature get too high, then awaken when cooler weather returns the next spring.

Once established, oxalis species are drought tolerant when grown in the landscape. In containers, they will need to be watered.

So why are shamrocks and oxalis associated with St. Patrick's Day? Patrick returned to Ireland to spread the gospel of the Holy Trinity, but the congregations were having difficulty understanding the concept. He went to the garden and selected a three-leafed shamrock to show the three leaflets on one leaf.

While they normally have three leaves, sometimes there is a mutation that produces a fourth leaf. Finding the rare four-leafed clover was considered an omen of good fortune by the ancient Celtic people. Children still spend enjoyable summer afternoons looking through patches of clover for that lucky four-leafed clover.

So try some of these oxalis -- they just may turn out to be a good-luck charm in your garden and landscape this year.



Gary Bachman is an assistant Extension research professor of horticulture at the Coastal Research and Extension Center in Biloxi.

Harder to Find than a Four-Leaf Clover: 9 of Ireland's Most ...

ireland barn owl threatened photo
In honor of St. Patrick's Day, we decided to take a look at creatures just as elusive as that pot of gold.

The lush green landscapes of the Emerald Isle look calm and peaceful from far away -- but Ireland's species -- from a gorgeous barn owl to a toad that runs instead of hops, to a bat no longer found in the rest of Europe -- are in as much danger as those in the rest of the world. Conservation efforts (and a little luck o' the Irish) could still save some of them from extinction.

Barn Owl

Listed as Amber on the Ireland Environmental Protection Agency list, the barn owl is fighting major breeding decline.

The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds has been setting up nestboxes to encourage the owls' breeding habits, and also offers tips for combating the habitat loss and agricultural changes that threaten their survival.


Photo: Iain Lees/Creative Commons


By Blythe Copeland, Great Neck, New York
on March 17, 2011

http://www.treehugger.com/galleries/2011/03/harder-to-find-than-a-four-leaf-c...">

Clovers: Lucky for the Environment - GreenAnswers (blog)

red-clover-flowerClovers are a popular symbol of Ireland and figure prominently in St. Patrick’s Day celebrations around the world. However, clovers are more than just a symbol; they can also provide various environmental benefits.

One of the most important environmental benefits clovers have is that they can hold soil in place through a deep root system. This prevents erosion, which means the soil can keep the nutrients it already has and provide a secure place for other plants to grow. It is hard for plants to grow on soil that has been eroded away. If plants cannot grow, then species that eat plants will not want to live there and the climate of the area will eventually be affected. Clovers also prevent nutrients in the soil from going into rivers and streams.  

Clovers can be particularly useful for organic farming, where crop rotation is used in place of fertilizers. In crop rotation, crops that restore nutrients to the soil are planted for a few years after crops that drain nutrients from it. Clovers may also be eaten by animals such as cows and horses on farms which practice crop rotation. These animals produce manure from it, which naturally fertilizes soil.

Clovers can restore the soil’s nutrients through nitrogen fixation. In this process, bacteria on a plant’s roots convert atmospheric nitrogen (N²) into ammonium (NH₄+) or nitrate (NO₃-) ions which can be used by plants. All plants need nitrogen to grow; too little of it can stunt their growth. As mentioned above, plants’ nitrogen fixation also reduces the need for fertilizers, which add nitrogen to the soil artificially.

But did you know that clovers are also used as food for a variety of bug species? Indeed, having a diverse variety of bug species in your yard can help keep the overall insect population down. This is because a wider variety of predators will be attracted as well as prey. Clearly, clovers are a more sustainable choice for a lawn than grass because it creates a more diverse habitat for bugs to live in.

Some bugs which are attracted by clovers include parasitoid wasps. These wasps normally do not sting people; instead, their larvae feed off of insects which are destructive to plants such as aphids, scales, and whiteflies. White sweet clovers and red clovers can also provide food for certain species of ladybugs. Ladybugs love to eat aphids; in fact, one ladybug can eat up to 1000 aphids a day!

four-leaf-cloverAlthough bees can and do feed off clovers, they rarely sting outside of their hive, and you can limit the amount of bees in your clover by mowing your lawn more often when your clovers are flowering. Another good reason to consider clovers for your yard is that they can remain green even when pets urinate on it. And in case you are wondering, clovers are not weeds; rather, they are harmless plants that can easily be damaged by weed killers.

Speaking of bees, clover honey can also be made when bees turn the nectar from clover flowers into honey. Beekeepers may place their hives in areas where many clovers grow or plant more clovers around their hives to maximize the amount of clover nectar available to the bees. But since bees often travel for long distances, there is no guarantee that their honey comes entirely from clover flowers. This kind of honey may range in color from pale amber to nearly white, and large quantities of it are produced in the U.S., Canada, and New Zealand.   

And for the record, four-leaf clovers exist. However, they only occur at a rate of 1 in 10,000, so you have to be really lucky to find one!

Photo sources: Tony Willis, Phyzome

Saturday, March 26, 2011

Son buys Alamogordo mom $200000 lottery ticket

Jackie Hunt's son Jimmy has the magic touch.

On Wednesday evening, the Alamogordo resident asked her 18-year-old son to pick up some New Mexico Lottery tickets for her.

"He's my good luck charm," Jackie Hunt said. "Whenever he gets the tickets, I always win my money back."

And then some. The $20 "Diamond Explosion" Scratcher that Jimmy Hunt left for his mother on the kitchen counter concealed a six-figure prize.

"I said, 'Oh my gosh, Jimmy, I think I've won $200,000,'" Hunt recalled for lottery officials in Albuquerque.

"She was giddy," Jimmy Hunt said.

Mother and son spent the rest of their evening emailing photos of the winning ticket to family and friends.

After getting something special for her son, Jackie Hunt said she plans to invest the prize to help secure her retirement.

The lucky ticket was purchased at J &J Mini Market No. 35 at 700 1st St. in Alamogordo. Previously, the store has sold two large prize-winning tickets paying $1,000 and $30,000.

In recent weeks, six other Alamogordo residents have won top-tier lottery prizes. Scratcher players Tamatha Boles won $5,000; Andre Levesque and Mary Leon, $2,000 each; and Gilbert Vigil, $1,000. Jose Ortega won a $1,500 Hot Lotto prize while Matilda Telles won $870 playing Pick 3. Rita Smith of Bent won a $30,000 Scratcher prize on a ticket she purchased in Alamogordo.

All net revenues from the sale of New Mexico Lottery games benefit a tuition-assistance program for New Mexico residents

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attending the state's public colleges and universities. Since 1996, the lottery has raised $473 million for education and more than 68,000 students have attended college on Legislative Lottery Scholarships.

As of the Spring 2010 semester, 2,120 students from Otero County have received $9.6 million in Legislative Lottery Scholarships. More information about Legislative Lottery Scholarships is available at www.nmlottery.com.


Son buys Alamogordo mom $200000 lottery ticket

Jackie Hunt's son Jimmy has the magic touch.

On Wednesday evening, the Alamogordo resident asked her 18-year-old son to pick up some New Mexico Lottery tickets for her.

"He's my good luck charm," Jackie Hunt said. "Whenever he gets the tickets, I always win my money back."

And then some. The $20 "Diamond Explosion" Scratcher that Jimmy Hunt left for his mother on the kitchen counter concealed a six-figure prize.

"I said, 'Oh my gosh, Jimmy, I think I've won $200,000,'" Hunt recalled for lottery officials in Albuquerque.

"She was giddy," Jimmy Hunt said.

Mother and son spent the rest of their evening emailing photos of the winning ticket to family and friends.

After getting something special for her son, Jackie Hunt said she plans to invest the prize to help secure her retirement.

The lucky ticket was purchased at J &J Mini Market No. 35 at 700 1st St. in Alamogordo. Previously, the store has sold two large prize-winning tickets paying $1,000 and $30,000.

In recent weeks, six other Alamogordo residents have won top-tier lottery prizes. Scratcher players Tamatha Boles won $5,000; Andre Levesque and Mary Leon, $2,000 each; and Gilbert Vigil, $1,000. Jose Ortega won a $1,500 Hot Lotto prize while Matilda Telles won $870 playing Pick 3. Rita Smith of Bent won a $30,000 Scratcher prize on a ticket she purchased in Alamogordo.

All net revenues from the sale of New Mexico Lottery games benefit a tuition-assistance program for New Mexico residents

Advertisement
attending the state's public colleges and universities. Since 1996, the lottery has raised $473 million for education and more than 68,000 students have attended college on Legislative Lottery Scholarships.

As of the Spring 2010 semester, 2,120 students from Otero County have received $9.6 million in Legislative Lottery Scholarships. More information about Legislative Lottery Scholarships is available at www.nmlottery.com.


Thursday, March 17, 2011

Irish Sayings

The Irish are known for their sayings. Most just seem like something to drink to, but these 10 sayings could apply to relationships and friendships. Some are even useful!

  • "There are fish in the sea better than have ever been caught."
  • "Where the tongue slips, it speaks the truth."
  • "Here's to me, and here's to you. And here's to love and laughter. I'll be true as long as you. And not one moment after."
  • "Who gossips with you will gossip of you."
  • "A good laugh and a long sleep are the two best cures."

To see the rest, read more.

  • "Beware of people who dislike cats."
  • "Great hate follows great love."
  • "Three people can keep a secret, if two of them are dead."
  • "Better 50 enemies outside the house than one within."
  • "May all who love the Lord, love you, and those who don’t love you, may the Lord give them a limp so you can see them coming."

Source: Flickr User jek in the box

HAPPY ST. PATRICK'S DAY!!


 

 

Happy St. Paddy's Day to You!!!
       

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Wednesday, March 16, 2011

World’s Biggest Lucky Charm for Student Exam Fortunes

This time of year is tough for Japanese students looking to enter universities, marked by lots of intense exams. It also sees a lot of companies marketing services that ostensibly assist and support these suffering scholars.

If you’re preparing to take tests in Sapporo you might want to pay a visit to the station and view the latest “power spot”, which is dedicated to good fortune in exams. Phone carrier au has created what is apparently the world’s largest version of an omamori, the talismans that students (and others) customarily buy at Shinto shrines for luck.

Usually an omamori, which looks like a kind of flat pouch, is small enough to fit easily in your hand and often attached to your phone or bag. This giant red amulet, though, stands at 2.3 meters tall and there’s even a mammoth ema plaque — the small wooden boards that people write wishes on and leave at shrines — measuring 1.5 meters.

au-sapporo-omamori-ema-paseo-talisman-students[Images via WalkerPlus]

au has made the talisman to promote their mobile phone services for students, which include providing free pop music ringtones. This may be a marketing set piece but there has been an attempt to add authenticity to proceedings, with the talisman even being blessed by priests from Hokkaido Shrine (pictured above). There’s also a bit CSR going on here; au will donate money to Sapporo City’s sakura park based on the access rate to the campaign website.

The amulet on display until the end of February, surrounded by fake pink cherry blossom, in the Paseo mall at Sapporo station, so if you’re in the north of Japan be sure to check it out…and maybe make a wish for good fortune.

Animoto - unique wedding anniversary present

four leaf clover luck charm, an unique wedding anniversary present

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Animoto - thank you gift ideas

Here are some teacher appreciation ideas. The purpose of the teacher thank you gift ideas is to show appreciation for the special teacher who has spent the year making a difference. Show your gratitude with a simple unforgettable good luck gift.

teacher appreciation gift

thank you gift ideasfor all the time when you need to show your appreciation and gratitude
A makes a perfect good luck gift idea for times when you want to wish someone good luck

Wednesday, March 09, 2011

Catch him if you can

Our last name is “Mccuiston” so it is only the natural order of things in our household that we love St. Patrick’s day…well that and my husband loves to home-brew beer. Each year we wake up on St.Patty’s day to find our house is a big old mess. The toilet water has been turned green, Lucky Charms can be found in the strangest of places, cabinet doors are left open, and once in a while these little mischievous Leprechauns even leave behind a chocolate gold piece or two. Perhaps in payment for the clean up I have ahead?

The kids wake up and promptly start running all over the house trying to catch them, because everyone knows if you actually catch a Leprechaun he has to grant you three wishes! This year we have a plan. The kids decided we needed to build a Leprechaun trap — I of course thought this would be a fantastic idea! I could use a wish or two granted after all myself.

The great thing about this project is the kids were all about it. I love projects that get their brain thinking and coming up with great ideas. So the theory in our house ended up as follows: Leprechauns like gold and they know that a pot of gold is always supposed to be at the end of a rainbow. Why not make a box disguised as a rainbow, throw some gold under there and see if we can catch him?

A+ plan!

1. Start by finding an old box. A shoe box, cigar box, or even a craft box from Michael’s will work great.

2. With plain white poster board we measure out the width of the box to become our “cloud” and hide the base of the box. Simply free hand a fluffy cloud and cut it out.

3. Grab some cotton balls and add some glue! Let the kids go to town adding them to the cloud.

4. For the rainbow the key was keeping the weight down. We could have taken the easy route and used good old fashioned construction paper, but fluffy tissue paper was so much fun for them! Start by drawing half of a rainbow onto the poster board and cutting it out.

5. Start adding the tissue paper! I simply cut tissue paper into squares about 1-2 inches and showed the kids how to use the end of a pencil to make little tissue “flowers”. Put the eraser in the center of the square and fold the paper all around it.

6. I poured a line of glue for them to show where to place the tissue paper. They thought it was the most fun ever. The joy of glue and a mess.

7. Allow everything to dry and then glue the rainbow to the cloud and the cloud to the box.

8. Once everything has dried take a pencil and wrap some fun green ribbon or even paint it green…or just leave it as is. The pencil is a great way to hold your “trap” up: the eraser end will keep it from slipping.

9. Be sure to add some gold! We picked up our “gold coins” at Michaels craft store but I am pretty sure you can find them at just about all of the stores in town that sell St. Patty’s day goodies.

10. Set the trap and watch your kids run to bed in hopes of waking up the next morning to have their wishes granted! So fun!

Happy St. Patrick’s Day!

Tisha Mccuiston refers to herself as "the most non-traditional Traditionalist" she knows -- she blogs and owns a photography studio, but she also homeschools her children, cooks about everything from scratch, gardens, sews, crafts, and cans her family's food. You can follow her adventures over at Life on Bramble Hill.