Posts Tagged ‘garden

03
Mar
09

Thinkin’ Spring

Oh…the weather outside’s disgusting,

I can hear my knee-joints rusting,

so it’s here inside I’ll grumpily remain,

let it rain, let it rain, let it rain.

With apologies to Sammy Cahn and Jule Styne for fiddling with their classic.

I’m staring out the window at a medium waterfall that earlier was the downspout-less end of the  eaves trough.  It’s overflowing.  The narcissus and daffodils in front and in back of the house resemble a lost colony of colorful morning-after fraternity row students, crashed face down all over the yard where an overindulgence of rain has left them ’til they dry out a bit.  The last few days of seeing them up and alert seemed to promise a return to getting out into the yard with a camera.  Meanwhile, I’m thinking drab little scattered thoughts, as disciplined as a herd of cats, so I am going to post some spring-like pictures, photographic and fractographic, to keep my anticipation going, although some of these need to be re-taken using  better eyes.

Translucent petals on flowers alway make me want to saturate an image with their color. To that end, closeups taken from in front of (in some cases inside of) the flower with the sun or a pair of flashes lighting it from behind, pastelpollnccan bring out shades not seen in reflected light shots.

Continue reading ‘Thinkin’ Spring’

25
Dec
08

In the Spotlight

 By maple-lightTaking, and retaking, beginning and intermediate photography courses is a fun way to make sure that you find a time to get out, in my case into the yard, to keep in contact with your ‘seeing’ muscles and whatever imagination can be mustered that day. After all, it’s an *assignment*, isn’t it? Unfortunately, Real Life (remember when the internet was young and real life was called the “Meat World”?) has a persistent way of demanding regular chunks of the day which usually leaves me taking images in the hours from the very flat, unattractive, light of noon up to the possibility of the jackpot of ‘sweet’ late afternoon light, depending on the current level of suspended particles in the local atmosphere. During the seemingly interminable hours of flat, contrast-y light it can get too hot, in Summer or Fall, to stay out in the open, practicing honeybee/flower action shots, or what have you, and the heat sends me either inside for a drink or in under the cover of the podocarpus and the split-leaf maple in the courtyard, where it is quite dark and generally cool in comparison. And the breaks in the dense shade spark Ideas.

In under the canopy, in a mini-micro-climate held reasonably comfortable by the dense intergrowing branches overhead, is a great place to watch the shafts of sunlight, shifting like white spotlights across the gloom, picking out forms in that saturated-green of the protected leaves of the split-leaf maple. It was just that sort of day when I was out with my sketching mannequin (my patient, hardworking and *only* cooperative photographic model) to get an assigned shot of a portrait in a natural setting (I got a nice shot of a twenty-inch tall mannequin ‘climbing’ in the maple tree…nice except for a small leaf-hopper which hopped aboard the mannequin while I was working with the camera too far away to see it, and made itself at home where there would normally be a nose on the blank wooden face. Sigh.). After getting my class shot, I couldn’t resist the lovely greens up in the “spotlight” and waited a few minutes until the light worked its way around to this grouping of leaves, which I particularly liked, and made a few exposures of the grouping. I like to put it up on the computer as wallpaper, for a calm influence during hectic days.

May your Holidays be only mildly hectic, if hectic they be, and happy, memorable times!

Cheers,
pete

17
Dec
08

My Hubble Milkweed

My Hubble Milkweed “one failure to seed

haunts the butterflies to come;

my hubble milkweed”

Our front garden sports a number of pots from which rise, each year, true milkweed plants. My mother started the practice sometime during her career as a kindergarten teacher. During the course of the year, the kids would watch the growth processes of stick insects, Monarch butterflies, Silkworms and the beautiful web construction of the garden orb-weaver spider or Golden Argiope which was given an upright frame standing in a basin of water to ensure it wouldn’t wander off somewhere. The spider and its web were very popular with the kids until an arachnophobic visiting parent demanded, ignorantly, that the (beautiful, totally harmless) large, horrible, obviously dangerous spider must be immediately removed from the room and banned from the lessons to keep the children safe. sigh. And so passes the baton of the lack of Understanding Life; but, I digress . Where was I… Ah, so the milkweed-at-home program was started as fodder for the classroom Monarch caterpillars, but soon became a small oasis for the few stragglers from the Monarch migration route, either late-bloomers or blown off-course. Apparently a few liked the local nectar and we eventually had a few homegrown Monarchs. In the last couple of years, however the Monarchs have all but vanished; this year only one appeared in the garden and that one did not stay more than a week. The small grove of eucalyptus trees, about four hours south of here, where they overwinter in tree-coating swarms or flutters (a flutter of butterflies, a murder of crows, a clowder of cats *grin*), was well populated this last season so I guess the winds aren’t blowing many off-course, at least in this direction.

I don’t know what it is lately, whether it be the drought in our area or the lack of a good long string of the hot summer weather that many of the plants thrive in, but the pods of the milkweeds are setting on late and many are failing to open fully, trapping the silky, wind-catching strands that are attached to the top of each seed in the pods’ twisting, drying form. As disappointing as this is from the butterfly-feeding/gardening point of view, it affords me a photographic opportunity.

Have you ever sat low, next to a dandelion and tried to capture the right moment when the wind (or if you are impatient, a sharp exhalation) blows the seeds on their strange little fibrous hang-gliders from the center of the seed-head, sending them off to enhance the dandelion-ness of the world at large? Well, the trapped fibers of the milkweed seeds’ wind-drifting structure affords me the opportunity to try for an image similar to that launch with more than one chance at it; as the wind puffs, the seeds rise and fall with it, but remain ensnared to rise and fall on the next puffs as well.

On the day I stumbled across these, tucked in behind a juniper bush, the late afternoon sunlight was just beginning to get close to grazing across the tops of the coastal hills on the west side of the valley, shattering as it passed through the pine and birch branches in turn. Planting my backside down on the wooden rim (read: torture device) of a planter full of strawberry plants, I set the tripod legs splayed one notch wider than the normal angle between the camera base and vertical, getting them leveled by extending one leg down a foot more into the path way that curves past on the left. Then it was a short game of tag with the gentle breeze gusts to expose an image with the seeds lifting away from the pod. The resulting image above, with it’s muted color from being lit low from the side against the backdrop of the dark juniper came out with a very ‘painterly’ look to it, and immediately reminded me, for some reason, of some of the astro-photographic images taken by the Hubble Space Telescope and put on display at NASA’s web site about the Hubble. I dubbed it, ‘My Hubble Milkweed’ and added it to my favorite recent images. Today, I post it here and hope it is pleasing to your eye.

May good fortune be yours,

Pete S.




Phrases that resonate in my head

Morning comes and morning goes with no regret
And evening brings the memories I can't forget
Empty rooms that echo as I climb the stairs
And empty clothes that drape and fall on empty chairs
.

From ‘Empty Chairs’

By Don McLean

Places to go, things to see…

Theme: Redoable Lite by Dean J Robinson
 All content, text and images, except where credited to other artists, ©2008-2010 Peter M. Spencer; all rights reserved. Use by permission.


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