Monday, November 25, 2019

Where Are All the Flowers?

Red Rose

Last blog was about winter scenes and this is about flowers. When I used to do a photo a day and a weekly post here I had my photographic efforts organized by those blogs. I stopped that in 2018 and so 2019 is a jumble of dated uploads on my hard drive.

Not a problem for me until the time comes around for garden club photographic entries or a friend asks for three flower photographs as a Christmas gift for a mutual friend. Easy, huh? Just go to the summer months. It snowed the 23 of May and nothing bloomed in June because it was too cool. And the lead photo is from a green house, and the last one from my studio in February.


Yellow Banded Bumble Bees in a sunflower

Fall redeemed the season which seemed all too in a rush to bloom and seed and go away before winter returned. Summer 2018 had been a great year for flower photography but all my best flower photos of 2019 seemed to be in chasing the insects in a frenzy to get all the pollen they could while it lasted.


Fly in a Hollyhock

The star of the summer

And oh, the Painted Ladies. They were just everywhere. One of the largest migrations going of these butterflies this summer.  And I never seemed to have passed up an opportunity to attempt a photographic capture from their first appearance on milk thistle through yellow cone flowers.

Danse Pour Deux

Solo Performance

As a gardener disappointed by my hollyhocks, poppies, and sunflowers I found solace in the wonderful return blooms of my orchids in the studio. They are preparing to do it yet again.

Return Performance 

Georgia O'Keeffe is quoted as saying she didn't much like flowers but painted them because they were cheap models. I hardly ever paint time but I love to photograph them.

Saturday, November 23, 2019

Winter Scenes

Through the Woods

Stopping by the Woods on a Snowy Evening

Whose woods these are I think I know.
His house is in the village thought;
He will not see me stopping here
To watch his woods fill up with snow.

My little horse must think it queer
To stop without a farmhouse near
Between the woods and frozen lake
The darkest evening of the year.

He gives his harness bells a shake
To ask if there is some mistake.
The only other sound's the sweep
Of Easy wind and downy flake.

The woods are lovely, dark and deep,
But I have promises to keep,
And miles to go before I sleep,
And Miles to go before I sleep.

Robert Frost

My father used to hold forth reciting poetry. And he encouraged us to read and memorize poems. Stopping in the Woods on a Snowy Evening was one of the first I learned. Mom had poetry books and this one was short. Because of how the book opened itself to this page I assumed it was a favorite. I first recited it for her on a Christmas Eve, which is otherwise lost in my memory.

Yes, these photographs are not of taken on a dark evening but usually in early hours of morning so the snow isn't messed up with car tracks other than mine. Yes, no little horse either.  But I seldom stop and focus my camera on the snowy scene before me without lines of Mr. Frost's poem repeating in my head.

And these days, since my mother's death on a distant, but not forgotten, Thanksgiving not without tears.

The Fence Line


Through the Woods

Mother was a big believer in written correspondence. And picking out Hallmark cards to send for every occasion. I was expected by my Uncle Ray to take up that mantle of family communicator. And by fits and starts I tried. But I was definitely a disappointment to my mother's brothers.

And when holidays appear on the calendar I am disappointed too. Mother never let one pass without the appropriate Hallmark sentiment and handwritten note. I think of such things as I return, at the gentle urging of a friend, to not just email or personal message on a social platform but write a note with pen and paper and United States Postal Service stamp. And now, as preparations for the holiday market quicken, to make my own note cards.

Some are hand painted with watercolors, and some like those featured here, utilize my photography. I see the labor involved almost as my poor equivalent of a Navajo sand painting, or Tibetan mandala: a prayer or meditation as an apology for the past or wish for the future.

But they are just note cards. These are just a few of my favorite winter scenes.


Fresh Tracks

Picnic Cancelled 

Freezing Pond

May you have treasured memories which withstand the test of time and events.