Nothing ambiguous about this work; the spirit and attitude in the piece is, uh, easily discerned. And I didn’t even show the NSFW element. And the workmanship! Kudos!
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Nothing ambiguous about this work; the spirit and attitude in the piece is, uh, easily discerned. And I didn’t even show the NSFW element. And the workmanship! Kudos!
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Speaking of “a lifetime together”, this remarkable larger-than-life metal sculpture can be found on the Westminster West Road in Putney, next to High Meadows Farm. It was created by a neighbor who lives completely off the grid; Howard, the co-owner of High Meadows, says you’d want this man by your side if it ever came down to “survival”.
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Four days after anonymously taking (and posting) this photo, I actually met the couple on the Causeway in Old Saybrook, where they were walking and I was photographing. I recognized them immediately as we struck up a conversation, and mentioned taking their picture and subsequently posting it, while possibly (also) taking liberties with the title. Lo and behold, no problem there, as they (Susan and Peter) have been married 48 years, a lifetime of “living, laughing, fighting and loving”, as Susan describes it.
I’m not sure they would have agreed to a portrait out there on the Causeway, but I think it would have been a good one – they are a handsome couple and the late afternoon light was remarkable. Unfortunately I only had a behemoth Sigma 150-600mm rental with me – good for distant birds, not so good for close portraits. And so it goes ..
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This brings to mind Plato’s Allegory of the Caves, expounded some 2500 years ago, and a staple of any Philosophy 101 class since. There’s a good overview here. Ah, the nature of Reality …
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The March full moon is commonly referred to as the Worm Moon, for the earthworms who tend to make their way to the surface around this time. And lo and behold, I saw a robin out in our garden today, tugging on something.
Down here near the coast of CT, the robins tend to stay around all winter. I’ve noticed that they save the red holly berries until January, and then a whole flock will clean out the shrubs over a few days time. They won’t touch them earlier in the winter, and the same goes for other red berries in our neighborhood.
It was interesting to be out after dark on the river. Though I was only about a hundred yards away from the nearest homes, I felt a bit uneasy, like I was out in a wilderness far away from civilization. There were coyotes howling some distance away, and the intermittent calls of waterfowl settling in for the night. But mostly it was quiet, and in the end peaceful, with an occasional lap of waves on the shore.
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