Colorado, August 2012
If
I were a magpie I would certainly fly, away from the man with the stone-brown
tan, away from the man with the camera.
Black-billed magpie (Pica hudsonia)
Black-billed magpie (Pica hudsonia)
A rose is a rose along any road.
Across
the flat, in brights and blacks, we took in late morning hues in a ramshackle
shed sown together with threads, holding implements not often used.
I
found love in Loveland. It appeared behind the window of a small restaurant at
the corner of Cleveland and Fourth, in shapely form and sipping a cold drink on
a blistering day. I waited until love glanced and smiled, then went in for
lunch.
It is a place where something intriguing always seems to be on the horizon.
added 9/8/2012
At the edge of a vast field, which was the beginning of rattlesnake country, I happened upon two small dogs. They were thirsty and I gave them water. Then they wanted to follow me into the hazardous place. I took from my pocket a small red globe and placed the dogs in it for their safety. I was able to see where they two lived and took them there later.
The season for growing is short, one has to race the birds and bees to get the best fruit.
I think I could live along the St. Vrain, with its daffodils in spring and summertime flow of melted snow draining from cold elevations.
Loneliness is only a spit away, depending on the speed of the wind.
Mule deer (Odocoileus hemionus)
Black bear (Ursus americanus)
Nature is repairing the fire damage in Poudre canyon quickly.I was surprised at how the fire destroyed small pockets of areas, sometimes only a couple acres, then left the next acreage untouched. We did not get into the areas that were total loss.
added 9/11
Mule deer (Odocoileus hemionus)
Black bear (Ursus americanus)
Nature is repairing the fire damage in Poudre canyon quickly.I was surprised at how the fire destroyed small pockets of areas, sometimes only a couple acres, then left the next acreage untouched. We did not get into the areas that were total loss.
The banks of the Poudre river were generously littered with charred debris, nearly weightless and easy to crush into powder.
Great mid-air catch! I love it when I can nail a bird with wings spread. Don't know how to do this profile thing, so I'd just join the ranks of the anonymous. Nancy Johnson
ReplyDeleteAPU brilliant captures, Master Steve! T Spurgeon
ReplyDeleteBeautiful shots. But, I know you......There have got to be some shots of the devastation that the fires left behind. Looking forward to seeing those, too. You and your camera seem to find beauty in the ashes of disaster.
ReplyDeleteThe crystal ball,I have seen in the refection gazing into the perfect sky as I caught my future in a blink of
ReplyDeletean eye