Thursday, June 30, 2011

Peonies…

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When we bought our house in Arcadia 34 years ago I had fallen in love with the apple tree and day lilies growing in the backyard.  I didn’t notice the deep green leaves surrounded by weeds growing next to the shed which spring revealed to be a fragrant, light pink peony. 

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Today the apple tree is gone, blown over in a storm, and the lilies  struggle to bloom in the deepening shade of trees 30 years older but that little patch of dark green has never failed in its beautiful but short lived bloom every spring.

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  Every year I say I am going to cut the blooms and enjoy them indoors before the rain knocks them down…but every year I wait just a little too long and the petals are scattered everywhere. 

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Every year I also said I was going to plant more peonies…but every year I forgot until it was too late.  This year one chilly, drizzly day in May, Mr O and I went to Peony’s Envy, a New Jersey peony garden and nursery which I heard of at a winter garden show exhibit.  

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The name alone made me smile but the photos of their flowers made the smile bigger.  We wandered the wet grounds and took photos of soggy peonies and bought some plants. 

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I hope my new plants thrive as well in my backyard as my inherited plant has .

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With their beauty and hardiness it is no wonder that so many photographs are taken of peonies…and so many poems written with them in mind.  I read this on The Writer’s Almanac long ago…

Peonies

Grandma called them pineys, and I didn't know why.
They smelled so good, the full lush petals
crowded thick, the whole flower heavy on its stem,
the leaves dark and rich and green as shade in Chatauqua Woods
where each spring I hunted for violets. What could there be
to pine for on this earth? Now I think maybe it was Missouri
she missed, and maybe that was what somebody she knew
called peonies there, before she traveled to Ohio,
a sixteen-year-old bride whose children came on as fast
as field crops and housework. Her flowers saved her,
the way they came up year after year and with only a bit of care
lived tender and pretty, each kind surprising,
keeping its own sweet secret: lily-of-the-valley, iris,
the feathery-leaved cosmos, lilacs in their white and purple curls,
flamboyant sweet peas and zinnias, the bright four o'clocks
and delphinium, blue as her eyes, and the soft peony flowers
edged deep pink. In her next life I want my grandmother
to walk slowly through the gardens in England and Kyoto.
I want to be there when she recognizes the flowers

"Peonies" by Jeanne Lohmann, from Calls from a Lighted House. © Fithian Press, 2007

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…and the second I recently discovered on the beautiful blog third-storey window and fell deeply in love with it.

Peonies at Dusk

White peonies blooming along the porch
send out light
while the rest of the yard grows dim.


Outrageous flowers as big as human
heads! They’re staggered
by their own luxuriance: I had
to prop them up with stakes and twine.

The moist air intensifies the scent,
and the moon moves around the barn
to find out what it’s coming from.

In the darkening June evening
I draw a blossom near, and bending close
search it as a woman searches
a loved one’s face.


Kenyon, Jane. “Peonies at Dusk” from Otherwise: New & Selected Poems (St. Paul, MN: Graywolf Press, 1996), p.207.

All photos are of flowers from my old, inherited peony plant either this year or last.

Sunday, June 19, 2011

Friendship…

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Two years ago I started a photography based blog and wandered over the internet looking for inspiration and help with my photography.   One site would lead to another and I grew to truly understand why this world was called “the web”.  Every once and awhile I would timidly reach out with a comment to a photographer that I particularly liked and wanted to emulate.  Char was one of those photographers that not only inspired me but reached back out to me and encouraged me in many gentle ways.  When her sudden and untimely death was reported and discussed throughout the blogging world I was stuck with sadness as many others were…In fact I was surprised how deeply saddened I was, after all I had never met her face to face nor seen a picture of her.  This led me to think about the nature of these internet friendships…what are they made of…what makes us connect?  I have learned that these friendships are real enough to suffer loss when a tie is broken.  Char made it easy to connect to because she wrote so well that her kindness and humor stood out and because she made an extra effort to do so.  Like many others I will miss her and will try to remember her through the words she used on her profile…

”life is too short to waste a single day: eat cookies, dance when no one is looking, and try to be as happy as you can.”

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…and I will think of her every time I take a photo of flowers in an old blue jar.

Monday, May 30, 2011

A Memorial Day Parade…

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From childhood on,  The 4th of July meant family picnics and Memorial Day meant small town parades.  I marched as a child with the Brownies and Girl Scouts…I watched as my children marched with the school bands and movement centers…Soon I will probably watch as my grandchildren march.  This year we watched from the sidelines and caught lots of candy…

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I hope the sun was shining on everyone’s parade this Memorial Day.

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

What to do on a Rainy Day…

Partly because my computer is getting old and slow I haven’t been playing with textures on my photos recently.  Photoshop especially slows the whole thing down so I need plenty of time if I am going to bother with it.  This is when this persistently rainy weather comes in handy.   These dark and rainy days have not been inspiring for taking walks or taking photos or cleaning the house so I have had extra time to spend with PS and decided to enter Kim Klassen’s Cafe Texture Tuesday this week.  The photo used had to include at least one layer of her texture “Yesteryear” which was offered as a free download…she is very generous like that….and it will be fun to see all the many different uses it will inspire.  Mine are very simple with one layer of texture and the texture brushed away from the flowers. I am still very fearful of overdoing it.  I find that half the battle seems to be in finding the right photo to go with the texture. 
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Next I will try to learn how to apply a “rollover” to show the original as well as the processed photo….That is for another rainy Monday.

Tuesday night addendum....The Rollover!!
Roll your mouse over the photo to see my goldfinch photo with and without an added texture.




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Saturday, May 21, 2011

Spring is so Fleeting…

The only time of the year my yard looks halfway decent is during spring when the crabapple and cherry and dogwood trees are blooming.  This year our spring has been chilly and the trees and flowers in the yard were late to flower but have lasted a little longer. Still, I have found that the only real way to prolong the life of the blossoms is to preserve them in photos.IMG_8753-1

Glory of the Snow growing in the walk…

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Magnolias in the park…

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Pansies on the steps…

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Violets in the kitchen…

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Crabapple buds outside the window…

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Hearts under the maples…

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Cherry blossoms at a plant sale…

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Crabapple in the front yard…

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Azaleas along the walk…

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Even candy on the windowsill…It all lasts longer in a photo.

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Saturday, May 14, 2011

Our Puerto Rico Vacation – Day 7 – Old San Juan

Our group spent the last full day in Puerto Rico walking up and down and all around Old San Juan.  I am in love with the old city, its walls, its forts, its statues, its food, and its spectacular views.  Rather than try and describe what I loved I will just share some of my favorite photos. 

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At the beginning of our vacation we were unsure if we would enjoy traveling in a group but by the end of vacation we had decided it was a great way to get an introduction to a new place.  It was nice not to have to worry about making plans and reservations. It was nice to have different knowledgeable local experts guide us on each leg of the trip.  It was nice to get so much accomplished in each day.   And it was nice to get to know some very nice fellow travelers.  We would do it again.