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Archive for the ‘Nature Notes’ Category

Queen Anne’s Lace, also known as “wild carrot,” grows widely and wildly along the Charles River.  It is so abundant that I sometimes ignore the sprawling plants, pushing it aside to get a glimpse of rarer, more colorful life.  But sometimes the leaves and flowers of this plant catch the light in such a way that I cannot ignore their beauty.

 

 

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Against the wall an Artist to Watch card featuring a tree frog as photographed by Jim Brandenburg.  In the foreground, a crystal unicorn given to me many years ago by my nephew who remembered my love of the mythical beast.  I don’t generally think of frogs and unicorns together but they seem quite a pair this morning.

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While I do  not look forward to summer’s end, one of the things I do like about this time of year is how the light shifts coming in through Steve’s kitchen window.  It creates shadows that make me pause in my day.  Like these “fruity herbal silhouettes.”

What you’re seeing:  At the window there sits a tall glass jar overflowing with thyme.  Beneath the jar sits a small bowl of fruit and chile peppers picked up at the farmer’s market, and next to the bowl sits a small seedless watermelon.  Beautiful colors in light and shadow.

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… and sunflowers …

… and new angles of our friend, the bee. 😉

Photos by Lorraine

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I have written before of my views through various Somerville windows especially the ones in Steve’s kitchen.   From one window in particular I like to stare down into a small garden.  This year the landlord has been preoccupied so the garden is overrun in a beautiful way.  Rose and purple morning glories entwine every surface, including the tall stalks of the sunflowers.

Greek oregano overshadows Thai basil.  Rosemary holds its own against a crumbling retaining wall.  Green tomatoes grow ever larger watched lustfully by gray squirrels that live in the adjacent oak tree and the “rat” whose home is beneath the garden.  I put rat in quotes because there is some disagreement whether the furry fellow is a rat or some other long-nosed, long-whiskered, long-tailed creature. Regardless, I still call him Roscoe Rat when I spy him nibbling on roots.  No names do I give to the sparrows, starlings and sparrows.  There are just too many and while lovely they seem indistinguishable as they skip around for insects and seeds.  Nor do I try to name the most recent visitor, a bright yellow finch.  Each morning for a week it has dropped out of the sky to alight upon the sunflowers.  Each visit is only five seconds or so.  How much longer he will visit before migrating onward I do not know.  Even if he should appear no more the memories of his presence remain indelible.  Two shades of gold together, feathered and petaled, touched by early morning sunlight.

 

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As my cousin stated, it’s “probably not smart to follow bees,” but what beauty she captured by doing so in her back yard. 😉

Pictures by Lorraine

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Well, I must admit, I was surprised to find on the New York Times Style page today the slide show, Beards: Rugged? Trendy? Or Unreliable?  On a day fraught with technical glitches, emergency edits and too many to-do lists, stumbling upon this slide show, not to mention the related article, brought a smile to my face.  I guess, in part, because growing up with three brothers and in close proximity to many male cousins, I quickly learned how important facial hair is to men.  It also reminded me of one of my first portraits to appear in a magazine, of a bearded fellow I like very much.

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