@Lookout
Great pics LO! That Red Buckeye grows here too but we have the yellow-flowered form. Makes ya feel stupid pointing to yellow flowers saying 'this is a Red Buckeye'. LOL. That Cardinal Flower we have here too... I think that is Lobelia cardinalis. Not sure if or how the toxic aspect is present in this type. Gorgeous flowers. Often grows in water here, or at edge of it. Sometimes it is called Fireweed. I don't know that Indian Pink, looks like firecrackers! Awesome flowers. thanks!
...but for some reason I can't find a photo except on the internet.
That's what I get for leaving most of my photos as IMG numbers.
While looking I found one of last months red and greens...
The cardinal flower (these are our photos)
And finally one more from April..The red buckeye
Have a lovely evening or what ever time you're experiencing!
up
5 users have voted.
—
We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them.
Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better.
both - Albert Einstein
We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them.
Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better.
both - Albert Einstein
@Socialprogressive
GREAT pics SP! I LOVE that zebras ass! Awesome photo SP. There's yer pattern right there Janis!
Now all you need is some raspberry vinaigrette dressing to go with your mixed red and green salad.
These are mostly old zoo photos. The Serval is recent the rest are from the wayback machine.
up
5 users have voted.
—
We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them.
Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better.
both - Albert Einstein
My experience of Kiwis is that many still carry a strongly independent nature.
reassuring.
Here's one more NZ movie recommendation - outstanding IMHO but I've given up asking Kiwi's about it as I've asked a bunch and not met one yet that's even heard of it.
The past few days have been cold and rainy, ideal for watching these two films by the fire. The moodiness created by the weather matches very well the atmosphere of Wild Horses.
What did you find so impressionable about the film? I agree that it is a powerful film, looking at a fraught and dark time.
The story takes place in the central North Island, and these two links provide more context, the second one very current …
My experience of Kiwis is that many still carry a strongly independent nature.
reassuring.
Here's one more NZ movie recommendation - outstanding IMHO but I've given up asking Kiwi's about it as I've asked a bunch and not met one yet that's even heard of it.
for some reason or other, Wild Horses is not available for viewing outside NZ.
If you check the one comment at that link, it's something of a review that I wrote
some time back.
I was taken by the opening scene - late night big city taxi cab where the driver picks up a fare, young woman "exotic dancer" IIRC going home - and their realizing that they know one another - as I was driving cab myself at the time. The whole rest of the film revealing the events that led up to that chance meeting resonated as well, partly because I had grown up in small timber dependent town in the PNW (my dad worked as a logger and later the US Forest Service) so could relate to the situation in that respect - even the weather and landscapes were reminiscent of the Cascades or Olympic Peninsula.
The situation of a small resource dependent town having the rug pulled out when its major employer shuts down is familiar, too as there is an unfortunate history of that in Northern Cal, Oregon, Washington... sometimes due to government policy shifts but the result of corporate raiders taking over companies that had been acting fairly responsibly and then looting everything in sight.
As in the film, displaced workers are left with pretty stark choices - how people respond and what happens as a result seem central to the film's story - a large group opts to go to work hunting and processing feral deer for a German company for export. Others try to follow more independent paths - one group opts for trying to capture wild horses. Friction develops between the (former co-worker) deer and horse hunters - the latter have little success until they get some help from some local, umm, hillbillies? Not sure what you'd call those folk in NZ.
Of course, though - the system is stacked against them - the forestry service having secretly decided to wipe out the horses and bringing in some cowboy mercenary types to carry it out.
Am I remembering that correctly? Anyway, the dancer is from the hillbilly family and the cab driver is the leader of the horse-catching faction. Both are surviving, and retaining some independence, but on the margins of urban society, nothing like what they were working towards before and which should have been attainable were it not for the usual forces of darkness working against them.
I might view this differently were I to re-watch it, but I was impressed with their spirit at this point I still rate it as one of my favorite movies ever.
I've only seen the various trailers and some reviews of This Way of Life. They were living something like the protagonists aspired to in Wild Horses, living free and ethically and providing what appears to be a great upbringing for their children. But cannot help thinking how in the US that Children's Services and other authoritarian Nanny State types would likely be claiming that they were unfit parents and be trying to take their kids into foster care...
The past few days have been cold and rainy, ideal for watching these two films by the fire. The moodiness created by the weather matches very well the atmosphere of Wild Horses.
What did you find so impressionable about the film? I agree that it is a powerful film, looking at a fraught and dark time.
The story takes place in the central North Island, and these two links provide more context, the second one very current …
I think I get how strongly you must have related to the content and atmosphere of the film - the displacement of one industry and way of life for another, and the trying conflict between cultures and environmental considerations, along with personal memories.
From my limited experience of the Cascades and Olympic Peninsula, the similarities of landscape seem to be more of mood, especially seen during the scenes of mist and rain. My strongest memory of the Olympic National Forest is of freshwater rivers running through forests of towering conifers and maples, with fern covered floors.
My enjoyment of the film came largely from the recognition of a lasting sense of resilience and integrity that still exists in many here.
I would love sometime to hear a little about your experience of the Japanese culture and people.
for some reason or other, Wild Horses is not available for viewing outside NZ.
If you check the one comment at that link, it's something of a review that I wrote
some time back.
I was taken by the opening scene - late night big city taxi cab where the driver picks up a fare, young woman "exotic dancer" IIRC going home - and their realizing that they know one another - as I was driving cab myself at the time. The whole rest of the film revealing the events that led up to that chance meeting resonated as well, partly because I had grown up in small timber dependent town in the PNW (my dad worked as a logger and later the US Forest Service) so could relate to the situation in that respect - even the weather and landscapes were reminiscent of the Cascades or Olympic Peninsula.
The situation of a small resource dependent town having the rug pulled out when its major employer shuts down is familiar, too as there is an unfortunate history of that in Northern Cal, Oregon, Washington... sometimes due to government policy shifts but the result of corporate raiders taking over companies that had been acting fairly responsibly and then looting everything in sight.
As in the film, displaced workers are left with pretty stark choices - how people respond and what happens as a result seem central to the film's story - a large group opts to go to work hunting and processing feral deer for a German company for export. Others try to follow more independent paths - one group opts for trying to capture wild horses. Friction develops between the (former co-worker) deer and horse hunters - the latter have little success until they get some help from some local, umm, hillbillies? Not sure what you'd call those folk in NZ.
Of course, though - the system is stacked against them - the forestry service having secretly decided to wipe out the horses and bringing in some cowboy mercenary types to carry it out.
Am I remembering that correctly? Anyway, the dancer is from the hillbilly family and the cab driver is the leader of the horse-catching faction. Both are surviving, and retaining some independence, but on the margins of urban society, nothing like what they were working towards before and which should have been attainable were it not for the usual forces of darkness working against them.
I might view this differently were I to re-watch it, but I was impressed with their spirit at this point I still rate it as one of my favorite movies ever.
I've only seen the various trailers and some reviews of This Way of Life. They were living something like the protagonists aspired to in Wild Horses, living free and ethically and providing what appears to be a great upbringing for their children. But cannot help thinking how in the US that Children's Services and other authoritarian Nanny State types would likely be claiming that they were unfit parents and be trying to take their kids into foster care...
help but wonder what has that serval's attention. Also can't resist posting this series of one in its natural habitat:
be well and have a good one
Now all you need is some raspberry vinaigrette dressing to go with your mixed red and green salad.
These are mostly old zoo photos. The Serval is recent the rest are from the wayback machine.
up
8 users have voted.
—
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
@enhydra lutris
awesome shots EL! So interesting a number of cats have those same white spots on the back of the ears. I wonder if it is a 'fake eyes' effect it is shooting for?
help but wonder what has that serval's attention. Also can't resist posting this series of one in its natural habitat:
be well and have a good one
up
4 users have voted.
—
We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them.
Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better.
both - Albert Einstein
#2.5 awesome shots EL! So interesting a number of cats have those same white spots on the back of the ears. I wonder if it is a 'fake eyes' effect it is shooting for?
up
2 users have voted.
—
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
Tanzania border. If that is no help, think Serengeti, which is what it is called in Tanzania. Shot from a slight elevation sitting in an open top custom Land Rover, probably 6 to 8 feet above the ground, otherwise I doubt we would have seen it at all.
be well and have a good one
#2.5
That Serval blends into it's natural habitat real well. Where did you take them?
up
4 users have voted.
—
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
@Bollox Ref
My that is serene. Is that Bubo plasticus? Great pic, you could just stare at that and calm down and relax. Most excellent work!
Extremely hot here, so a shot from a cooler time.
up
5 users have voted.
—
We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them.
Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better.
both - Albert Einstein
Great pics Janis! I can't believe that color, maroon on the upper surface of the leaves, and then backlit that weird orange-red. What a combo. Great light. Beautiful as always. Thanks for bein' here!
up
5 users have voted.
—
We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them.
Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better.
both - Albert Einstein
Great pics Janis! I can't believe that color, maroon on the upper surface of the leaves, and then backlit that weird orange-red. What a combo. Great light. Beautiful as always. Thanks for bein' here!
Here's something a bit red(ish) and green from spring 2019
and a couple more
probably none of them would be good salad material, however
be well and have a good one
up
5 users have voted.
—
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
Superlative work, janis. The first photo, magenta spread across its prism in virtual depth unmatched--on a black background--an amazing capture of light.
Take a bow, dear old friend.
Imagine all the moments of your long life which enabled you to see and click this masterpiece.
"Imagine all the moments of your long life which enabled you to see and click this masterpiece."
Absolutely, your words describe my experience perfectly. I gladly take a bow to your honour and appreciation. Thank you.
...
Superlative work, janis. The first photo, magenta spread across its prism in virtual depth unmatched--on a black background--an amazing capture of light.
Take a bow, dear old friend.
Imagine all the moments of your long life which enabled you to see and click this masterpiece.
red and green huh... I have been on Texas time for a couple decades now and it is so hard to react quickly to anything, at my age...
I raise my claret cup cactus to you all.
Pyracantha
and here is a pattern from whenever you mentioned those...
That is Spiny or Sugar Hackberry, known as both. The berry seems just a pit with a husk but incredibly valuable wildlife and bird food. Lots of sugar in the thin bit of pulp.
be well!
up
7 users have voted.
—
We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them.
Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better.
both - Albert Einstein
red and green huh... I have been on Texas time for a couple decades now and it is so hard to react quickly to anything, at my age...
I raise my claret cup cactus to you all.
Pyracantha
and here is a pattern from whenever you mentioned those...
That is Spiny or Sugar Hackberry, known as both. The berry seems just a pit with a husk but incredibly valuable wildlife and bird food. Lots of sugar in the thin bit of pulp.
see, and, it's everywhere; the rest is dramatic. Been reading about our latest understanding of atoms,lately, and how they like and avoid; as humans do. Fascinating.
Listening to Les Miserables as i write, so my thoughts may be colored.
Comments
Right now we have the indian pink in bloom...
...but for some reason I can't find a photo except on the internet.
That's what I get for leaving most of my photos as IMG numbers.
While looking I found one of last months red and greens...
The cardinal flower (these are our photos)
And finally one more from April..The red buckeye
Have a lovely evening or what ever time you're experiencing!
“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”
Hi Lookout
The red Buckeye is stunning against the grey trunks of the background. Thank you.
It's midday here, cold and rainy.
Great pics LO!
We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them.
Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better.
both - Albert Einstein
Thanks for Friday Photos tonight, Janis.
Now all you need is some raspberry vinaigrette dressing to go with your mixed red and green salad.
These are mostly old zoo photos. The Serval is recent the rest are from the wayback machine.
I'm great at multi-tasking. I can waste time, be unproductive, and procrastinate all at the same time.
That last shot
reminds me of Fred waiting for his tea.
Gëzuar!!
from a reasonably stable genius.
I miss Fred
and you. I'm happy you're here now.
Earl Grey?
I'm great at multi-tasking. I can waste time, be unproductive, and procrastinate all at the same time.
Did someone say...
We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them.
Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better.
both - Albert Einstein
Oh great, dystopian, music time.
What a wonderful opening piece. It fits your savannah visuals beautifully.
Let me think ...
...
[video:https://youtu.be/71Gt46aX9Z4]
Awesome shots SP!
We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them.
Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better.
both - Albert Einstein
Thank you, dystopian.
I'm great at multi-tasking. I can waste time, be unproductive, and procrastinate all at the same time.
Hi Social
Your tiger reminded me of this ..
A new and strange association, since tigers are totally absent from Maori culture as far as I know.
A most formidable looking warrior
I'm great at multi-tasking. I can waste time, be unproductive, and procrastinate all at the same time.
Bet the Maori
Didn't give up their guns.
Jacinda Ardern notwithstanding.
May they haka in her general direction.
Any room in a woke, 'vax em' all' NZ for This Way of Life?
There's still room,
despite the call for more uniformity. My experience of Kiwis is that many still carry a strongly independent nature.
I have started watching the full documentary. Thank you for the reference.
That is
reassuring.
Here's one more NZ movie recommendation - outstanding IMHO but I've given up asking Kiwi's about it as I've asked a bunch and not met one yet that's even heard of it.
Wild Horses (1984)
Thanks again Blue Republic
The past few days have been cold and rainy, ideal for watching these two films by the fire. The moodiness created by the weather matches very well the atmosphere of Wild Horses.
What did you find so impressionable about the film? I agree that it is a powerful film, looking at a fraught and dark time.
The story takes place in the central North Island, and these two links provide more context, the second one very current …
https://www.nzgeo.com/stories/wild-horses/
https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/national/439325/homes-still-sought-for-150-ka...
If you would like to see the film again you can watch it here …
https://www.nzonscreen.com/title/wild-horses-1984/availability
Unfortunately...
for some reason or other, Wild Horses is not available for viewing outside NZ.
If you check the one comment at that link, it's something of a review that I wrote
some time back.
I was taken by the opening scene - late night big city taxi cab where the driver picks up a fare, young woman "exotic dancer" IIRC going home - and their realizing that they know one another - as I was driving cab myself at the time. The whole rest of the film revealing the events that led up to that chance meeting resonated as well, partly because I had grown up in small timber dependent town in the PNW (my dad worked as a logger and later the US Forest Service) so could relate to the situation in that respect - even the weather and landscapes were reminiscent of the Cascades or Olympic Peninsula.
The situation of a small resource dependent town having the rug pulled out when its major employer shuts down is familiar, too as there is an unfortunate history of that in Northern Cal, Oregon, Washington... sometimes due to government policy shifts but the result of corporate raiders taking over companies that had been acting fairly responsibly and then looting everything in sight.
As in the film, displaced workers are left with pretty stark choices - how people respond and what happens as a result seem central to the film's story - a large group opts to go to work hunting and processing feral deer for a German company for export. Others try to follow more independent paths - one group opts for trying to capture wild horses. Friction develops between the (former co-worker) deer and horse hunters - the latter have little success until they get some help from some local, umm, hillbillies? Not sure what you'd call those folk in NZ.
Of course, though - the system is stacked against them - the forestry service having secretly decided to wipe out the horses and bringing in some cowboy mercenary types to carry it out.
Am I remembering that correctly? Anyway, the dancer is from the hillbilly family and the cab driver is the leader of the horse-catching faction. Both are surviving, and retaining some independence, but on the margins of urban society, nothing like what they were working towards before and which should have been attainable were it not for the usual forces of darkness working against them.
I might view this differently were I to re-watch it, but I was impressed with their spirit at this point I still rate it as one of my favorite movies ever.
I've only seen the various trailers and some reviews of This Way of Life. They were living something like the protagonists aspired to in Wild Horses, living free and ethically and providing what appears to be a great upbringing for their children. But cannot help thinking how in the US that Children's Services and other authoritarian Nanny State types would likely be claiming that they were unfit parents and be trying to take their kids into foster care...
What was your take on these?
From your description
I think I get how strongly you must have related to the content and atmosphere of the film - the displacement of one industry and way of life for another, and the trying conflict between cultures and environmental considerations, along with personal memories.
From my limited experience of the Cascades and Olympic Peninsula, the similarities of landscape seem to be more of mood, especially seen during the scenes of mist and rain. My strongest memory of the Olympic National Forest is of freshwater rivers running through forests of towering conifers and maples, with fern covered floors.
My enjoyment of the film came largely from the recognition of a lasting sense of resilience and integrity that still exists in many here.
I would love sometime to hear a little about your experience of the Japanese culture and people.
Something like this dressing?
Yum.
Sorry Social
I forgot the recipe ...
https://www.nzherald.co.nz/eatwell/recipes/raspberry-vinaigrette/R3KDHKF...
Good evening Social. Wonderful pictures. Can't
help but wonder what has that serval's attention. Also can't resist posting this series of one in its natural habitat:
be well and have a good one
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
Wow, el
That last one of s/he twisting all the way back to have a look, wonderful!
* edited to respond to el, who posted these photos.
wow EL!
We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them.
Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better.
both - Albert Einstein
Could be, like the eye spots on the back of
a pygmy owl's head.
be well and have a good one
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
Thank you, EL
That Serval blends into it's natural habitat real well. Where did you take them?
I'm great at multi-tasking. I can waste time, be unproductive, and procrastinate all at the same time.
In the Maasi Mara, SW Kenya near the
Tanzania border. If that is no help, think Serengeti, which is what it is called in Tanzania. Shot from a slight elevation sitting in an open top custom Land Rover, probably 6 to 8 feet above the ground, otherwise I doubt we would have seen it at all.
be well and have a good one
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
Nice salad Janis
Extremely hot here, so a shot from a cooler time.
Gëzuar!!
from a reasonably stable genius.
great pic BR!
We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them.
Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better.
both - Albert Einstein
We were told that it was
a Norwegian Blue. Very much alive, just in stasis.
Gëzuar!!
from a reasonably stable genius.
Hi Bollox
I'd love to be that at that time. The stillness is palpable.
Is that owl for real?
Nice shot, BR
Looks like a really good place to sit down with Fred and that cup of tea.
I'm great at multi-tasking. I can waste time, be unproductive, and procrastinate all at the same time.
great greens Janis!
Great pics Janis! I can't believe that color, maroon on the upper surface of the leaves, and then backlit that weird orange-red. What a combo. Great light. Beautiful as always. Thanks for bein' here!
We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them.
Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better.
both - Albert Einstein
Hi dystopian
I'm glad to share this space with you.
Good evening Janis. Fantastic photos, especially
that top one. Definitely gallery material.
Here's something a bit red(ish) and green from spring 2019
and a couple more
probably none of them would be good salad material, however
be well and have a good one
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
Hi el
So many leaf and flower, green and red combinations, delicious even if inedible.
I am happy to participate in the c99 gallery here.
Whoa, c99 must live for this photography alone, if needs be.
...
Superlative work, janis. The first photo, magenta spread across its prism in virtual depth unmatched--on a black background--an amazing capture of light.
Take a bow, dear old friend.
Imagine all the moments of your long life which enabled you to see and click this masterpiece.
Marvelous.
Thank you.
Hi smiley ; )!
"Imagine all the moments of your long life which enabled you to see and click this masterpiece."
Absolutely, your words describe my experience perfectly. I gladly take a bow to your honour and appreciation. Thank you.
a quick one - gotta fly
red and green huh... I have been on Texas time for a couple decades now and it is so hard to react quickly to anything, at my age...
I raise my claret cup cactus to you all.
Pyracantha
and here is a pattern from whenever you mentioned those...
That is Spiny or Sugar Hackberry, known as both. The berry seems just a pit with a husk but incredibly valuable wildlife and bird food. Lots of sugar in the thin bit of pulp.
be well!
We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them.
Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better.
both - Albert Einstein
Cheers
Thanks for the introduction to the Hackberry. It's interesting and sounds like it's bi-botanical.
https://www.gardeningknowhow.com/ornamental/trees/hackberry/sugar-hackbe...
The balance in my view rests upon the green
fern, the other colors making black; superb visual to use in an a fine art class.
Thank you smiley, for putting in words and poetry
your impressions. They are valuable to my understanding of my photography.
It makes sense on the colour scale that green and orange are balancing, and a black background makes it more dramatic, I think.
Color in life makes the difference, magenta only exists when we
see, and, it's everywhere; the rest is dramatic. Been reading about our latest understanding of atoms,lately, and how they like and avoid; as humans do. Fascinating.
Listening to Les Miserables as i write, so my thoughts may be colored.
Happy day/evening.
Rec’d and thanks you all!
Inner and Outer Space: the Final Frontiers.