Category Archives: Nature

POD ~ Giant Swallowtail Butterfly

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A beautiful Giant Swallowtail Butterfly inspecting Bougainvillea blooms in our Tropical Garden on a recent afternoon.

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Tropical Garden ~ Update 3

Several more new images have just been added to the Tropical Garden Print Project Collection. As you recall, this is a gallery of black and white botanical images, most of which will be from the tiny garden around our home. The project is ongoing in that I will be adding images throughout the year as the seasons change.

As I have said previously, this project is finding its own way. Images are added with no predetermined plan. I am enjoying the process and  have received much positive feedback from all of you. Thank you. Please continue to follow along by checking back often.

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Tropical Garden ~ Update 2

Bamboo

Six more images have been added to my Tropical Garden Prints Project. As you recall, this is a gallery of black and white botanical images, most of which will be from the tiny garden around our home. The project is ongoing in that I will be adding images throughout the year as the seasons change.

I don’t know exactly where this project will lead, but I hope you will come along by checking back every now and then.

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Tropical Garden ~ Update

Bamboo

I have just added six new images to my Tropical Garden Prints Project. This is a gallery of black and white botanical images, most of which will be from the tiny garden around our home. The project is ongoing in that I will be adding images throughout the year as the seasons change.

I don’t know exactly where this project will lead, but I hope you will come along by checking back every now and then.

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Anoles Are Everywhere

I was raised by a maid who came from Martinique
She wore geckos around her neck and bracelets on her feet
A superstitious woman from the land of sugar cane
She’d sing the sun to bed and dance out in the rain
Dance out, dance out, dance out in the rain

Jimmy Buffett

Anole

Anole

Anoles seem to be everywhere this time of year. And they are most welcome being our native pest control as they will eat spiders, cockroaches, ants, and other bugs. The brown Cuban anole is by far the most common in our garden. Anole lizards are frequently and incorrectly called American chameleons or geckos, although they are not closely related to either of those groups. In fact, they are more closely related to iguanas.

They are often quite curious. This fellow will watch me as I am taking photographs for the Tropical Garden Prints Project. In the above photo he is resting and watching from a shell fossil. Below, he is sunning on a dendrobium orchid cane.

Anole

Anole

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A Tropical Garden

Bamboo

Much of my photography centers around travel, but there are many interesting subjects to be photographed right here at home. This is the geneses of my new Tropical Garden Prints Project which is starting today. I am creating a gallery of black and white botanical images, most of which will be from the tiny garden around our home. This will be an ongoing project in that I will be adding images throughout the year as plants bloom, bare fruit, and as seasons change.

Archival quality prints will be available in folio form. Details can be found on the introductory page linked above.

I don’t know exactly where this project will lead, but I hope you will come along by checking back every now and then.

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Bonsai in Vietnam ~ They are Really Large

Bonsai is an ancient Japanese art form using miniature trees grown in containers. Similar practices exist in other cultures, including the Chinese tradition of penjing and the miniature living landscapes of Vietnamese hòn non b?. While traveling in Vietnam, I expected to see bonsai, but the size of the plants was unexpected. They, for the most part, were huge. Most I saw were in the eight-handed or Imperial class (60 – 80 inches high) or the six-handed or Hachi-uye class (40 – 60 inches high.) The plants were on display in people’s front yards, as well as Buddhist Temples, and government buildings. Large sized bonsai are evident throughout the country from Hanoi in the north to Saigon and the Mekong Delta in the south. Many of the specimens were not well trained or cared for but the plants seemed quite content in their large pots and tropical setting. Interestingly, were not many bonsai in Cambodia or Laos.

The slide show below has two examples of Hòn Non Bô, the traditional Vietnamese art of making miniature landscapes, imitating the scenery of the islands, mountains and surrounding environment found in nature.

 

Also posted in Asia, Halong Bay, Hanoi, Hoi An, Mekong Delta, Saigon, Travel, Trees, Uncategorized, Vietnam | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

POD ~ Chambered Nautilus

Having one of the most beautiful shapes in all of nature, the Chambered Nautilus is the last surviving genus of the nautiloids. The nautiloids were the largest predators in the seas of the Ordovician period, 450 million years ago. Related to the octopus, the Chambered Nautilus is found at depths of 600 to 800 feet in the tropical waters of the South Pacific.

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