Showing posts with label change. Show all posts
Showing posts with label change. Show all posts

Saturday, January 5, 2019


“I believe in movement. I believe in that lighthearted balloon, the world. I believe in midnight and the hour of noon. But what else do I believe in? Sometimes everything. Sometimes nothing. It fluctuates like light flitting over a pond.” 

from M-Train
by Patti Smith

Thursday, November 22, 2018

“Perhaps home is not a place but simply an irrevocable condition.” 

from Giovanni's Room
by James Baldwin

"He understood the need for love because he understood what hate had accomplished.


from The Fire This Time: James Baldwin and the Civil Rights Movement

by Robert Pfeffer
https://leo.stcloudstate.edu/kaleidoscope/volume4/fire.html

Sunday, November 22, 2015

" Is the soul solid, like iron?
Or is it tender and breakable, like
the wings of a moth in the beak of the owl?"

from Some Questions You Might Ask
by Mary Oliver





" But in memory, the safe places never fall into themselves. They 
remain warmly lit by lantern. Burlap bags always full of potatoes, 
 damp wooden shelves jewelled with jars of preserves." 

from Winter Morning Walks, february 24
 by Ted Kooser

Saturday, July 18, 2015

"My soul would sing of metamorphoses.
But since, o gods, you were the source of these
bodies becoming other bodies, breathe
your breath into my book of changes: may
the song I sing be seamless as its way
weaves from the world's beginning to our day."

                     from The Metamorphoses of Ovid
                             translated by Allen Mandelbaum

I have posted photos of the vixen and her three cubs at the farm
previously this summer. Thursday my mother in law mentioned she
had found a fox tail in garden, and we wondered who might have been
responsible Willow the farm dog or possibly a coyote, who do prey on
foxes. Friday morning my wife and I drove past the farm lane and 
encountered four foxes. seemed to have tails so we have no idea
whose was in the garden.




"In a cave somewhere they carved an animal 
jumping: that leap stayed."

             from They Carved An Animal
           by William Stafford

Saturday, October 19, 2013


“That country where it is always turning late in the year. 
That country where the hills are fog and the rivers are mist; 
where noons go quickly, dusks and twilights linger, and
 midnights stay. That country composed in the main of 
cellars, sub-cellars, coal-bins, closets, attics, and pantries 
faced away from the sun. That country whose people are 
autumn people, thinking only autumn thoughts. Whose people 
passing at night on the empty walks sound like rain.”

Ray Bradbury

The quotes present two views of autumn. The pond two
weeks ago, drained for the winter there were large numbers
of robins and a few ducks taking advantage of the food 
exposed by the expanse of mud this revealed.













"Though we have not yet had a frost, the chill of early
autumn has come into the house, perhaps in the tattered
carpet bags of the field mice moving into the the cellar for 
the winter. Falling leaves have begun to blow past the window,
the lovely yellow leaves of time."

                   Local Wonders
                                        Seasons in the Bohemian Alps

           Ted Kooser




Monday, February 18, 2013

"Emancipate yourselves from mental slavery;
None but ourselves can free our minds.
Have no fear for atomic energy,
'Cause none of them can stop the time."



"Redemption Song" is a song by Bob Marley.
 Based in part on a speech given by Marcus Garvey
 in Nova Scotia in October 1937 ( Wikipedia)


I have not had as much time or energy to take
a lot of photos lately and to tell the truth Helen
and I hibernate a bit in the winter. Even though
we bought our first car a couple of years ago after
20 plus years without one we still do not tend to take
road trips in the winter.

So some photos from the last couple of weeks.









Helen noticed this Waxwing feather while we were
walking Shaun and Whateley




“The Holy Land is everywhere”
Black Elk Medicine Man
Oglala  Lakota  (Sioux)

Sunday, January 13, 2013


"He disappeared in the dead of winter: 
The brooks were frozen, the airports 
almost deserted, And snow disfigured 
the public statues; The mercury sank in 
the mouth of the dying day. What instruments 
we have agree The day of his death was a 
dark cold day.

 Far from his illness The wolves ran on through 
the evergreen forests, The peasant river was 
untempted by the fashionable quays; By 
mourning tongues The death of the poet 
was kept from his poems" 

                   from  In Memory of W. B. Yeats
            W. H. Auden

Today as we took our long suffering dogs for their
walk I noticed bird calls from the spruce in front of
the house. Normally I post pictures of birds in the
spruce taken from our front window so I was happy
I had taken my camera with the chance at something 
different. Upon seeing this was a mixed flock
feeding at the top of the spruce I began snapping 
wildly and Helen graciously left me to it while
she was pulled around the block by two small white 
dogs. On November 24th I posted shots of a flock
of Red Crossbills and Red Breasted Nuthatches. This
flock contained Red Crossbills, White Winged 
Crossbills and Red Polls. It was great to see them
right outside our door, now I can think of them perched
there sheltering from the cold night air while I lay in bed.
( even if they are actually miles away )

The photos are not quite as good as the Nov
photos, our spruce is taller and today was overcast.














Lately I have been somewhat depressed by
the news I read and despite Robert Burton's 
warning about melancholy it is hard not to get 
caught up in it. While many people still seem 
to be in the rather childish stage of blaming
everyone but themselves for the broken vase, 
indeed they are still arguing about whether the vase 
( planet )  is broken, it is obvious that things are
changing. In Canada we have always taken a perverse
pride in our cold weather. Compared to the disasters taking
place around the world getting warmer is good. Except
that new pests will move north. Melting permafrost will 
disrupt communities and change the landscape. Insects that 
normally freeze will over winter, increase and spread. 
Climate changes and many animals will not adapt. A warmer 
north will open the Northwest passage to shipping and the tundra 
to increasing resource exploitation. I see no signs that we will 
distribute this new wealth more equitably  or extract it more 
responsibly than we did in the past. We will simply repeat the 
excesses and mistakes of the past, just as Auden said "For 
poetry makes nothing happen" ( In Memory of W. B. Yeats ) 
we seem to learn nothing from the lessons of history.

Possibly it is a universal that everyone, as they age sees 
the world they knew, believed existed,  (even if only in a 
somewhat romanticized world view), chance into something 
they barely recognize. To be realistic in many cases these 
changes are good. But still there are so many other things 
that are lost along the way.

Perhaps that is why I can still cherish the poems that mark 
the changing seasons by the calls of geese passing overhead 
a sound I can still hear today. And perhaps that is why tonight 
I will pretend that I can hear the drowsy cheep and muted rustling 
of the birds sheltering against the cold in the spruce at my front door.


"Then one day I was walking along Tinker Creek thinking 
of nothing at all and I saw the tree with lights in it. I saw 
the backyard cedar where. the mourning doves roost 
charged and transfigured, each cell buzzing with flame. 
I stood on the grass with the lights in it, grass that was 
wholly fire, utterly focused and utterly dreamed. 
It was less like seeing than like being for the first time seen, 
knocked breathless by a powerful glance"

    from Pilgrim at Tinkers Creek
     Annie Dillard

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Science Books

As a child I loved science books especially anything dealing with nature.
Two of my favourites were the The How and Why Wonder Books, and
A Golden Science Guide series from Golden Press I still pick them
up whenever I see them and one day I will have to sit down order
a few more. I still like to flip through them. I understand that the
information is out of date and that the internet has lots of sources.
But for me books will always be key and I still have many books I
pored through as a child. Also the internet has perhaps too much
information. Talking to a friend the other day we reminisced
about the eye popping pictures that could be provided by a
National Geographic article on New Guinea. For children with
no internet and 2  or 3 TV channels showing westerns, musical
variety shows and hockey this was a real revelation.

Remembering my love of these books and some of my other
much loved toys (a favourite memory is a birthday cake covered
with plastic dinosaurs) I now give family children Papo Dinosaurs
( these are great, really detailed ) and the book Dinosaurs by John Long.



My old friend the White-Tailed Jack Rabbit.


When the information is out dated because of recent discoveries
I can take it in stride. When the changes are the results of our
own diminishing of the world we live in I have more trouble
accepting it. I think, in my childhood I perceived may things as eternal
at least for my life time. It appears that will not be the case.



"Summer fading, winter comes--
Frosty mornings, tingling thumbs,
Window robins, winter rooks,
And the picture story-books.

Water now is turned to stone
Nurse and I can walk upon;
Still we find the flowing brooks
In the picture story-books.

All the pretty things put by,
Wait upon the children's eye,
Sheep and shepherds, trees and crooks,
In the picture story-books.

We may see how all things are
Seas and cities, near and far,
And the flying fairies' looks,
In the picture story-books.

How am I to sing your praise,
Happy chimney-corner days,
Sitting safe in nursery nooks,
Reading picture story-books?"
 
                                                  Picture-books in Winter
                                                                    Robert Louis Stevenson