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ardysez

~ surrender to yourself

ardysez

Tag Archives: Spring

Spring in arid country

15 Sunday Sep 2013

Posted by Ardys in Alice Springs, nature

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

Alice Springs, arid country, arid zone, Australia, nature, Spring

paper daisy

paper daisy

A few weeks ago, Spring was suddenly upon us.  Technically it was still Winter.  And then Spring was gone. It appears it will be a long, hot summer (remember the movie? with that spunk, Paul Newman? Now I’m showing my age!).  For about 10 days I snapped every growing thing in my garden and on my walks. ( I have heavily edited things for you!)  What is the exact time when the early flush of spring stops and summer settles in? We are not quite there, but not far from it as summer has arrived in such a hurry this year.  So here are the results of that very brief, developing period of time, to share with you the excitement of spring in arid country.

(My new masthead photo came from this same period, of our neighbour’s tree.)cropped-img_5757.jpg

29 August, end of winter

29 August, end of winter

On my walk...

On my walk…

The morning light is the best time so see colours.  It warms things but doesn’t wash them out.

The early light makes the gum trees look majestic, as if they need any help!

Morning light on gum trunk

Morning light on gum trunk

Morning light with fading moon amongst the gums

Morning light with fading moon amongst the gums

natives along roadside

natives along roadside

Near the Olive Pink Botanic garden, some of the specimens have ‘escaped’ and give a sneak preview of what lay inside the gates.

Geralton Wax

Geraldton Wax

Isn’t this Geraldton Wax just gorgeous? Can you see the tiny little touch of yellow Acacia, hiding behind it off to the right in the background? Purple and yellow play off each other so well.

The neighbours have a self sewn hillside of acacia that positively glows when the first rays of sun hit it, as on this day.

Hillside of Acacia

Hillside of Acacia

I know you will want to see the progress Fiona Fig is making this season.  Isn’t she gorgeous?  My friend tells me fruit trees need to grow before they can produce fruit, and even though Fiona is 10 years old, she has only been in this position for a year, so we may give her some leeway before pronouncing her a failure.  She is almost smiling at me this Spring, having given her fresh compost and mulch to assist her efforts.

Fiona Fig

Fiona Fig

And last, but not least… a cheat’s photo that was taken only four days ago… The Calistemon tree has been so beautiful this year, I couldn’t reisist showing you.  Cally was only this way for a few days, though, alive with bees and boasting her blossoms.  She is in decline now, but you can see her at her best. Whatever season you are celebrating, enjoy. X

Callistemon

Callistemon

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The Little Desert Pea

01 Sunday Sep 2013

Posted by Ardys in gardening, Inspiration, nature

≈ 9 Comments

Tags

Alice Springs, first day of spring, gardening, inspiration, Spring, Sturt Desert Pea

Sturt Desert Pea

Sturt Desert Pea

There is much to learn in nature. Possibly the only thing Nature can’t teach us is how to get on with other humans… or how to repair a motorcycle. Still, there is much to learn.  What doesn’t kill us makes us strong, it is said. And what does it take to be strong? Resiliance, perseverance, growth, being true to ourselves while still being flexible, honouring our own innate and individual beauty… I’m sure you can name more…

The little Desert Pea that 'could'

The little Desert Pea that ‘could’

So here is the story, of the Desert Pea who grew voluntarily, and with no water to encourage it.  It shone its beauty and was admired.  Greatly.

The giant's path

The giant’s path

And then the giants came. For days they were jack hammering, digging, and shaking the earth  until it seemed everything would fall apart.  But the little Desert Pea was saved. The nice workmen honoured it and protected it, as if it was their own.

Saved

Saved

Giant prints

Giant prints

The giants did their job, and leaving behind their prints on the ground, they went away.

Spring was approaching and it was time to mulch the garden.  The men delivering the mulch didn’t know about the little Desert Pea….and it was buried alive!

Buried alive

Buried alive

There is hope

There is hope

Soon it was uncovered, bit by bit, leaf by leaf.  It was broken and battered from life, and near death experience, but it was alive.

Saved!

Saved!

And on this first day of Spring, it is reborn, much admired…and very well mulched.

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‘Love birds’ camp

29 Wednesday May 2013

Posted by Ardys in Animals, nature

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

birds, humming birds, robins, Spring, Washington, Wyoming

This is a follow up to the recent ‘Bird Camps’ post because a couple of my devoted blog readers and friends, sent me their gorgeous photos to share with you!

Nest and surrounds

Nest and surrounds

The first three photos are from my friend Barbara who lives in a beautifully wooded area, surprisingly close to Washington DC.  She is an amateur photographer whose photos I have often admired.  How she managed to get these photos of the Robin’s eggs and chicks I have no idea, but kudos to her! How exquisite is that Robin’s egg blue colour?

What colour is Robin's egg blue???

What colour is Robin’s egg blue???

Getting a little crowded in here...

Getting a little crowded in here…

The last photo is one of many wonderful wildlife photos my cousin, Donna, in Wyoming has taken.  They live up high in the mountains, just a little way from the timberline, in a very small community that was originally established for logging.  It is a gorgeous area with lots of wildlife, but this time of year it is the return of the hummingbirds that she loves because it means summer is nearly there.  They have about a week of summer (just kidding) so they enjoy it intensely.  She tells me…

Hummer in Wyoming

Hummer in Wyoming

“They put themselves in a state of torpor at night in the spring here.  It’s the only way for them to survive the night time lows.  Also they eat gnats like crazy not just nectar from flowers and feeders.  I could go on and on, they are a great source of enjoyment to me.  In the winter, of course, I love the chicadee best, but hummers rule in the summer.”

Enjoy y’all.

(PS. Just learned something new today from my friend Joanna’s post on the English Robin which is different from the North American one.  We have both coincidentally posted something about Robins on the same day!)

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The Happiness One Suffers

20 Friday Apr 2012

Posted by Ardys in Inspiration, Life, Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Amalia Rodriguez, dogwoods, Henri Robert, inspiration, lilacs, Ohio, opposites, Spring

White lilac blossoms

The tentative newness of early Spring blossoms in Ohio is transforming now into early summer leaves.  The heavenly scent of lilac mingles… with the wild garlic and dog shit… up and down the drive where I find myself walking.  It reminds me that we are much happier in life if we can accept those two things simultaneously and with equal gratitude.  One cannot exist without the other.  Lilac without dog shit?  For example, if I smell the lilac once it is so delicious I want to take a bite of the blossom, but if I smell again very quickly it is not quite so intense, and if I have the blossom in a vase next to me, pretty soon I don’t smell it at all until I leave the room and come back again.  So, one must experience the lack of the scent (or another contrasting one) so that the perfume of the flower can be experienced.  Of course I struggle with this concept as much as anyone else and have had many opportunities in recent times to examine both sides of the coin.

If all the colours are bright, there is no brightness. – Henri Robert

Wild violets

Joni Mitchell sang… “I’ve looked at Life from both sides now, from win and lose and still somehow, it’s life’s illusions I recall, I really don’t know Life at all”.  I guess I don’t agree that I don’t know Life at all, but I would certainly agree the more I learn the less I am certain of!  Still, occasionally I do have a new insight to add to my short list of ‘Things I know for sure’.  Many of those insights have been a result of people who have influenced my life.  Today came another insight, by way of a friend who shared with me an apt quotation to describe this dichotomy in life, that moment when we realize that what makes us happy also has the power to make us sad, and vice versa.

Pink Dogwood blossoms

Of course it is we who ultimately have the choice of how we react to the two sides of everything.  We can succumb to misery in a difficult moment or we can feel the truth of it and know that without it we would not know the beauty of its opposite.

A happiness that one suffers, a pain that one loves – Amalia Rodriguez

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Springtime in Bethel

28 Wednesday Mar 2012

Posted by Ardys in Inspiration, Life, Uncategorized

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

baseball, Bethel, France, French, home, inspiration, Ohio, Paris, Reds, Spring

I confess the inspiration for this post is from another blog I follow called ‘Becoming Madame’ (becomingmadame.wordpress.com/).  She writes about all things French, and particularly Parisian.  If you are a Francophile, or just an armchair traveler, you will enjoy it.  However, I have just taken an afternoon walk on a gorgeous Ohio spring day. It may not be Paris, but it is no less magical.

Flowering Crabapple

Blossoming cherry and pear trees hummed from bees stealing their share from nectar filled blossoms.  Local inhabitants echoed the busy bees, matching their industrious buzzing with droaning lawn mowers. The smell of freshly mown grass made me ‘heady’ as if I’d just drunk some magical elixir meant to help relive a perfect spring day from childhood. (All you skeptics may say it is the high pollen count, but leave me to my own delusions).

Poplar Ridge Drive

I have flown from halfway around the world so that I could visit my parents and walk the lazy lane from  their house, curving toward the highway, in the glory of Spring.  Robin Red Breasts bounced along in front of me, looking for earthworms and other tasty morsels.  Jonquils, daffodils and tulips nodded their greetings to me as I meandered along.  Red bud trees and weeping cherries modeled their Victoria’s Secret lacy apparel on the runway of Poplar Ridge.  Optimistic August lilies  pushed through the earth toward their flowering mission late in summer.  An uncontrollable urge paused me for a few moments in the storm of snowing petals, and I rejoiced in their satin softness in my hair and on my shoulders.  It is a fairyland.  Perhaps the contrast to the dusty, red arid climate in which I live has magnified the experience, but who cares?  Every texture and color conspired for equal attention to inspire this artist’s creative urges.

Cherry blossoms

And if there was any doubt that spring was truly here, the little squirrel that scampered across the road and brought my eyes to rest on the man mowing his lawn confirmed it.  He was dressed in jeans (the man, not the squirrel!), a Cincinnati Reds baseball cap and t-shirt!  The beginning of baseball season is the surest sign of spring known to a girl from Southern Ohio!!

A sprig of pink tinged Viburnum from the yard adorns a bud vase beside me. Its spicy, intoxicating perfume nearly overwhelms me, alluring, no, mesmerizing me into a kind of spring fever haze (ok, coupled with remaining effects of jet lag!)  I feel almost giddy!  If only someone could bottle this! No wonder so many songs have been written about Spring time.  Join me in celebrating the affirming rebirth of Mother Earth, one of life’s true joys.

(And anyway, here is the chainsaw sculpture of Charles de Gaulle that resides here on Poplar Ridge, so really, what has France got in Springtime that Bethel hasn’t?)

Chainsaw sculpture of Charles de Gaulle by Ralph Silvis

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