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Archive for the ‘Nature Notes’ Category

One night, feeling restless, I went for a walk.  Along a quiet stretch of road I found a bench where I sat for a while, head bowed with thoughts. Finally, I looked up into the night sky and that is where I beheld something I’d never seen before — the full moon surrounded by a rainbow.

Soft rich reds and blues framed a large golden orb.  My spirit lifted at such an unexpected sight.  I wanted to share the experience so I whipped out my very first cell phone and called a new friend in my life, Steve. It was late.  I certainly woke him up but he was polite and simply said, “Hello.  Is something wrong?”

I replied, “No, not at all. There’s a rainbow around the moon.”  I described the cool lunar light, the rich colors saturating the clouds, the magical picture painted against the sky.  “How wonderful is that?”

I expected him to be as awed as I, and perhaps he was, but Steve as I was still learning at the time is a scientist who studies light. There was no exclamation of awe.  He made a thoughtful “hmmmm” sound and then proceeded to explain the mechanics behind the rainbow’s appearance using clear, straightforward textbook language about angles and wavelengths and light distribution.   Finally, as he grew aware of the sounds I was making, he asked, “Why are you laughing?”

“Well,” I said, “All I was trying to convey to you was the beauty of a rare sight.”  With perplexity quite clear in his tone, he replied, “But so was I.”

 

 

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An Autumn Rose

Tree Bark

Stone

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The Harvard Museum of Natural History is one of my favorite places to visit when I am in need of some indoor inspiration from nature.  Established in 1998 as the university’s public face for its three research museums, I find the place to be a bit of a beautiful maze.  Located near Harvard Yard at 26 Oxford Street, you pay for admission on the first floor, then walk up to the third floor to access the exhibits.  There are rooms filled with glass flowers, bright hued minerals, prehistoric bones, and stuffed wild beasts.  There’s nothing quite like looking over your shoulder and then up into the eyes of an elephant.  The exhibits don’t seem to change much though there is currently a new exhibit on antlers (with signs saying “please touch”) and a Harry Potter scavenger hunt.  My favorite exhibit remains the one on color where I am inspired by nature’s color combinations in the feathers of birds and especially in the wings of the butterflies.

 

For more information about the Harvard Museum of Natural History, click here.

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With few exceptions, noone seems to mind as I walk through my neighborhood with my camera snapping photos of fading yet still quite beautiful gardens. 

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