time of migration
march is the month of migration. everyone is returning, staking out mating territory, and starting to build nests in preparation for spring babies. i saw my first robin yesterday. dnd have had two reports of sandhill crane sighting. the red winged blackbirds should arrive any day. spring is in the air. literally.
varied bird nests
a gift from my mom
my mom saves here spent bouquets for me. it’s such a sweet, thoughtful gesture. i love that she does this. a perfect gift for me.
by the way, i’ve been thinking about what i write in these little daily missives. sometimes i write about my subject and why i chose to photograph it. sometimes i write about the season in general, trying to share details of what’s happening that may otherwise be overlooked. sometimes i write about what’s going on in my life such as dropping my son off at college, or working on my book manuscript. while i have strict rules for my photographs (found nature, no manmade items, natural light, on a white background), i have almost no rules for what i write (except for one: no politics). so…it has got me thinking. are there things you’d like to hear more or less of? I’m very curious to hear your thoughts.
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MJ, I find your current approach to be quite satisfying. A smattering of this and a dab of that… Its all good!
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I love poetry and quotes to accompany photos, and book talk is always enthusiastically received!
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I have been enjoying STILL for years and am always satisfied by your curated words and images…you are doing such a wonderful job.
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Hello! I never comment but read daily and have for a while now. I love seeing whatever image you have come up with and daily comments, whether long or short. Do you have details on your book yet (ie pre-sale) or can you share the publisher? Keep up the work.
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1) Thanks for being a refuge from politics. 2) I’d love to see some types of things you put in your journals, your sketches, etc.
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Thank you for sparing us from the political world that so dominates everything. I like your little sojourns into nature and the beauty of the simplicity.
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far from home
i brought this handful of the joshua tree mojave desert home with me from california. i love the desert palette–the sun bleached colors with the bits of terra cotta earth and quartz that add just the right amount of earthy contrast. but now that these bits have been sitting on my desk for a week, i wonder what i should do with them. most of my subjects come in the house, just long enough to have their portraits taken, and then i return them to the woods surrounding my home. but these desert bits are so foreign to this place, that it feels a bit odd to willy nilly toss them in the woods. i suppose there is a metaphor here. but i am not thinking in metaphors today, i am simply clutter clearing my workspace. i suppose i will save the cactus spines (those crazy star-shaped barbs) lest they turn up in the dogs paws and release the rest. and now my brainless day of cleaning has just gotten complicated as i think through the meaning, desire, and ethics of wanting souvenirs, of taking a bit of one place on earth and transporting it to another. damn it all anyway, it was supposed to be an easy day of mindless clutter clearing and listening to podcasts.
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You think you’ve got a a difficult task, think of my poor children, I want them to scatter my ashes. In all the places I have ever lived during my life. They said they would as long as I left them enough money to fly here there and everywhere.
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spring in name only
march 1st is the beginning of meteorological spring. march 21st (the vernal equinox) is the beginning of astronomical spring. but if you live in the north, both of these dates are “spring” in name only. our spring arrives in late april if we are lucky, but early may is more realistic. in may, the woodlands are dotted with over 20 varieties of woodland wildflowers, the fiddleheads are unfurling, and leaf buds are bursting open. march and april are something else entirely. in march and april we get “signs of spring”; the red osier dogwoods turn scarlet and the willows turn golden yellow (triggered by daylight), the migrating birds start returning (sparrows first), maple sap start running, pussy willow softly explodes, and many mammals begin their mating antics. these are all exciting harbingers of coming warm weather, but here in the north the lakes are still frozen over and the snowpack is still knee deep. it’s slushy, damp, and still quite cold. so, for many critters, this is still a time of hunger. these squirrel chewed black walnut husks show a determination for finding sustenance that i find both heartbreaking and inspiring. clearly, the caloric energy gained has to be higher than the energy expended to get the prize, or they wouldn’t do it. but i’m guessing it’s a pretty small difference. We are all winter weary, but signs of spring are everywhere.
black walnut shells chewed by squirrels
clean-up day
sent my manuscript off at 10 am this morning. spent the rest of the day picking-up. not much housework got done over the last month, but, honestly, my messes are pretty great, i don’t mind living with them at all. i’ve just got to be careful or i’d soon be buried. if i ever send out an s.o.s., please send help.