January 6. Lovely, gentle, but not tentative rain, since around midnight continues. It's good for the soul. I ended up not going outside yesterday, so, no weeding, nor new planting, (just a big salad,) and I won't have to contemplate it today.
But I took a few photos of the red lettuce leaves because I was getting close to panicking that I was not getting anything visual or inspirational from my lettuce patch.
I am a details person. Not only do I never see the forest for the trees, I seldom see the trees for the leaves, and sometimes even the whole leaf for a lovely curve on the perimeter or an interesting patterns of the veins. Maybe it's partially due to my extreme near-sidedness. So choosing a lettuce patch turned out to be a good choice because it is a whole area, albeit tiny, and within it a whole lot of things are happening, both on the surface and underneath, both in what I can see and what I can't; nutrients for example. (Wow, I wasn't planning on going there when I started that sentence! The unseen??)
And here are a couple of other images I found recently.
We went to see bone carver and Maori musical instrument maker Brian Flintoff
on Tuesday after I finished weeding. Among other things, he talked
about how wind and water makes marks and carves stones. (Stones shaped
by wind is called, by the way, ventifacts; I like that word.)
He found the base stone near Kaikoura, southeast of Nelson, famous for whale watching. Because it's a soft rock, water has made detailed tracks rather than simply washing over and smoothing
the stone. Now that I have a closer look, I wished I asked if he
found it in a river or the sea, but would I be right in guessing it
probably was in a pool or some place similar where water flows in all direction?
The other image I found is, believe it or not, a photo of human bones from a person who had bad osteoporosis. I was flipping through magazines while working on the Sketchbook Project, and saw this and thought it was pretty. After reading the caption I was alarmed, but if I didn't know it was osteoporosis, if I can ignore the fact, I still find the image intriguing.
2 comments:
Oh, I didn't know that was what osteoporosis does! My Grandma had it badly and got very fragile. I prefer the carved bone, that is beautiful.
Amazing, isn't it? So brittle. First I thought it was some kind of a 3D lace!
Post a Comment