Tuesday 30 June 2020

fruit trees in public spaces...


I feel that this apparently laudable concept needs to be very carefully thought through first...thinking of possible repercussions...We are talking of humanity here in all its moods and attitudes...especially the moods that emerge when under pressure of some kind...

spiky balls of fluff...

a covid-19 hermit...

'The Nut'...

swirling waters...

where the wild ones...

nettles of life...

my quieter self...


Not my words...but they very easily could be... I have finally been exploring my quieter self recently...Thank you covid-19 lockdown...

The Marble Collector...

Monday 29 June 2020

the Aussie motel comeback...

Boat Harbour...

Piccaninny Creek...

Piccaninny Creek at dawn...

Phillip Island gems...

'The Marble Collector' quotes...


bringing nature back to healthy life...

This project represents a wonderful role model of what can be done to assist promoting a healthy environment...from abandoned sugar cane field + eroding river embankment to a wildlife corridor... 

Sunday 28 June 2020

2020 the worst year?

This was a Twitter question...

Interestingly, people mainly answered NO...citing personal experiences in previous years being worse...


https://twitter.com/DestryBrod/status/1277050248205082626


two views in one...

poverty...

yellow-tailed black cockatoos...


These are yellow-tailed black cockatoos...
Apparently, they are thriving in Centennial Park, Sydney where there is an abundance of pine cones for them to feast on...
In recent years, loss of habit means that this species is in rapid decline...

sailing with the winds...

flowers...

bleaching...

the moment...

We are all made of Stars...

ancient glaciers...

Tasmania - a place with soul... Sadly, this area I did not visit...but I was not living too far away... 

book a date with the universe...

My new self these days is rapidly becoming the old self I loved...the one who rejoiced in the world of books...In recent years...for many years, actually... I used the excuse of  'no time'...now, that excuse has evaporated...I am reading quite voraciously...books, articles, poems, comments... any collection of words... It's inspiring...In some strange way, reading connects with the universe... and sometimes, if you are open...the universe gives you answers that may have been elusive for a long, long time...

below zero today...

And now, just 10 minutes later, the temperature has dropped back to -1 degrees... And bravely, I have not yet put the ducted heating on... Very brave...or a bit crazy????

Saturday 27 June 2020

don't be fooled...

silos and the Milky Way...

sail colours...

a shower of morning light...

impromptu 'dance'...

mystical, magical sanctuary...

still unique...



no 'go-go'...

a passing gull...

NOTE: Interesting how the blue of the sea in this image is not the soft blue of the earlier one in the last post...The earlier one faces east, whereas this image is leaning to a westerly direction where there are a few smatterings of darker clouds...

change direction...

a world within worlds...

Books are far more than an escape...An escape implies running from... But rather, books are a running to... satisfying a yearning to know and feel and understand... a running to the deep mysteries of life...

ANOTHER NOTE TO SELF: I think it's time to read The Solitary Summer by Elizabeth von Arnim

how I survive...

***The following, brilliant article was written by Australian columnist and teacher, Tim Mallon. The article may have been penned 3 years ago, but it continues to be relevant... For me, it nails how I view the world ...not from an indifferent distance, but rather from an awareness, necessary for the mind's mental safety.  
Meantime, the intimate treasures of life, the soul foods continue on...and it's these that I value the most...


Grapes, choc tops, and the joy of a good book - January 18, 2017 

- Tim Mallon Maitland Mercury

They’re picking the grapes again dear reader. Out in yonder vineyards, below that beautiful curving crooked range, it’s harvest time out there.

And the way things come round again - the way life has a cycle.

Soon enough those sweet soft marbles will become wine, become part of the human story: civilising us, unifying us, perhaps even inducing us to a state of romantic readiness. Such is the power of the grape.

And I like the seasonal things of the world, like how the simple perennials of life continue discreetly, while the big mad stuff blunders brazenly across our screens and pages, the little intimacies persist …
We could, however, easily be excused of believing that nothing happens and matters in the world but misery and super-power cyber-hacking shenanigans, or what ‘the Donald’ tweeted, or that another politician claimed a work expense that wasn’t really a work expense.

But thankfully, there’s more, much more than all that. And it’s uncomplicated stuff and it’s right here and all around us.

Take summer reading for instance.

People reading books on back veranda chairs, in holiday tents, under shady trees and beach umbrellas, in bed and on the dunny too – it’s a sweet seasonal ritual that enriches and soothes the mind.

Yes, while Mr Putin was scheming in the Kremlin on how to subvert Hillary, in Maitland a young girl hired The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes from the library and dreamt of sleuthing and hounds and the red-headed league.

And down the road in the greatest bookstore of them all, a man purchased the novel Cloudstreet at McDonald’s, and the vividness and beauty of the words illuminated the dim corners of his own history. A novel containing sentences so wonderful, that at their completion, he could only sigh and smile and walk awhile, and think on how magnificent a thing it is to read a story about Australia and life back then...

And while Julian Assange has been unhappily ensconced in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London for 1673 days, and while the police and world have watched and forgotten and remembered the whole ordeal, at the Maitland Reading Cinema 32,879 choc tops have been happily licked and inhaled in the cool celluloid darkness.

An unremarkable but important statistic which points to how life goes on; how despite the bizarre madness of the world, we find simple ways to carry on, ways to live ...

And so it goes …

While organised crime rings were staging workshops on how to separate people from their funds, while cartels cartelled and Barons baronned, Maitland families took multiple hour Australian summer drives.

They saw the hot country fill up the windows, they sang and ate Minties and chips a played the ‘spotto’ game and ‘how many windmills can you see between Jindabyne and Cooma’.

 And it’s a way of persevering, despite the horrors of the news, it’s our own harvest, our own grapes of living, and not wrath …

 And so it goes.

 Goodnight.


P.S. Perhaps Tim should publish a book of his stories including his Twitter moments... They are timeless...

NOTE TO SELF: I think it's time to read The Solitary Summer by Elizabeth von Arnim

my day, a blank page...

Strange how, early morning, the possible events of the day stream through the mind...like a fast forward movie...

the night is deepening...

Last night....my night deepened quite early...for me, 9:30pm...Sleep insistently beckoned...tired from doing the little things...cleaning window ledges...shaking out the rug...sweeping leaves...Those little things matter to me because they keep my world comfortable and clear, so I can focus on important writing and dreaming...

Friday 26 June 2020

toilet paper again...

Over the last several days, the panic buying of toilet paper has started again...as fears of a 2nd wave of covid-19 rise in Victoria. But this ne3ws is current in the U.S. They are still embroiled in a rising 1st wave.

up late...

I too was up late last night...I smiled when I read this...It was like a telecommunication reminding me that my indoor plants are due for watering...

procrastination kinda...

questions...

shark teeth...

'matchboxes'...

bog turtle...

One Hundred Great Books in Haiku...

One Hundred Great Books in Haiku: Popular Penguins
One Hundred Great Books in Haiku (2005) - David Bader


*SOME EXCERPTS*

Remembrance of Things Past - Marcel Proust
Tea-soaked madeleine -
a childhood recalled. I had
brownies like that once

Pride and Prejudice - Jane Austen
Single white lass seeks
landed gent for marriage, whist.
No parsons, thank you

The Histories - Herodotus
Go tell the Spartans -
the Persian hordes are fierce and
wear funny slippers

Gulliver's Travels - Jonathan Swift
Thus I was first great,
then small, and much vexed to learn
that size does matter

Wuthering Heights - Emily Bronte
Wild. Strange. A bit damp.
Heathcliff waits for Cathy's ghost.
Women. Always late.

The Call of the Wild - Jack London
Alaskan tundra -
a dog finds his inner wolf.
White snows turn yellow.

Middlemarch - George Eliot
Stifling social roles,
small-town gossip - beware the
eyes of Middlemarch


*MY THOUGHTS*

yesterday's landscapes
jostle for identity
in our tomorrows

medieval worlds
a cathedral symbolised
frail hope and despair

Hardy's countryside
where youthful innocence
damned experience

Shakespeare understood
that tomorrow is a dream
grounded in today

Thursday 25 June 2020

bounty...


American Gothic (1930)
Grant Wood is the painter of the renowned American Gothic (1930)
The woman portrayed in this painting is Grant Wood's sister, Nan Wood Graham. She spent her life as a historian for her brother's work.

Most of Grant Wood's paintings depict the rural American Midwest.

mountainside...

radiating lines...

a simple life...


Sunrise by the river 01-100x100cm
Dan Van Can's paintings capture the life of those living around the Mekong delta.

scattered randoms...

The scattered randoms of early morning - light and sounds and colours - are like the tuning of an orchestra...and no one tuning is ever the same...for so much depends on the weather conductor...

in the mists of golden light...

trembling, crushed ice...

rain in lamplight...

Wlodzimierz Czurawski is a Belarusian painter who paints mainly smoky landscapes and still life.

pebble memorial...

wind-blown grasses...

a small, anxious walk...

a shy patch of water...


Had to add another post...The colour of the water is like liquid sapphires... Stunning...

a child's steady gaze...

Wednesday 24 June 2020

fragmented...

a curved trail...

wildlife on the wander...

the stairway to heaven...

a baby squirrel...

somewhere...

the bookstore...

from a filtered, comfortable space...

oasis...

Muhcine Ennou was born in Morocco but lives in Holland...The image above was generated in 2020...Most of Ennou's images are part of a series he calls Melting Pot - where identity and culture, old and new clash...His images are more than a photo, they are a narrative of the moment...

crazy paving...

great books in haiku...

3rd book of Goodreads Reading Challenge 2020...

not another yesterday?...

tiny tiles of living...

is this the way the world ends...

in the quiet place...

Tuesday 23 June 2020

a tree and Dorothy...



reading...

Now up to page 301 of 'A Blade of Grass' - learning about a farm caught in the cross-fire of an Africa in turmoil... 

Nabta Playa...

snow in Africa...

pebble graffiti?...

abandoned...

'Melbourne-itis'...

break of day...

I am...

Monday 22 June 2020

snow on stage...

on the edge...

sunset drama...

the hills are alive...

bush tucker...

peace patterns...

snow at dawn...

fire pit...

Cluckingham Palace...


Diane lives in Campaspe, central Victoria.

It seems that the chicken palace is quite a popular concept.
More chicken palaces HERE 

rural letterbox...

king parrot and bees...

kelpie and Shaun...

a ,message?...

mixed blessings of covid...

I am currently at the beginning of the school holidays...promised myself to try to get out...But it's cold and grey and raining...My 'out' will be my escape into the novel 'A Blade of Grass' by Lewis deSoto...At least I am reading far more than I have in a long, long time...

'The Australian Health Protection Principal Committee said in a statement that it "strongly discourages" travel to and from Hume, Casey, Brimbank, Moreland, Cardinia and Darebin for non-essential reasons until the Victorian government can suppress the spread of community transmission in those municipalities.' - 'Sydney Morning Herald' - Sunday 21st June, 2020 - 7.02pm

my home cave...

Aislarse...


NOTE: Aislarse (Spanish) = isolation

arced earth...

Basil Bunting...

shout out from the Mornington Peninsula...

marketplace...

The painter = Richard Hart-Jackson

Sunday 21 June 2020

shearwaters and plastic...

advertising issues...

Mount Hotham today...

Falls Creek today...

bactrian camel...

hatching pebble chef...

bogged wheels...

bark tones...

education is...

Saturday 20 June 2020

lone turret...

carrier pigeons?...

feathery wisps...

boatshed shadow...

if we winter this one out...

belonging...

in praise of books...

colonial painting in Tasmania...

pixie and a pebble...

inside out...

all the world's great work...

the burugun...

in the neophyte hours...

'A Blade of Grass' ...

how old...

Friday 19 June 2020

pole shifts...

living on the edge...

desert dust...

singing bridge...

giant squid...

Paris in July...

'The Rain Heron' ...again...

'The Rain Heron'...

Thursday 18 June 2020

gifts from the sea...

a tale of pegs...



urban template...

Forgotten Songs...

Apparently, there are 180 cages here...

a memory passed by...


More details of Paisley, aka Jodi Herman, aka Jodi Herman Dority, on my blog Veiled Songlines HERE  

One of her blogs was called Why-Paisley????  many posts are there from 2006-2013...
It is clear that she had an ongoing struggle with major health issues... but she kept writing and writing... I always loved the raw, unpretentious art of her words in action...

***Here is one of her posts from 2006...a non-poetic one and yet...still poetic...

a dignity i never had

“Sometimes people spend a lifetime protecting a dignity they never had.”
i have fought the fine fight to the finish as they say… and in this instant in time,.,, i feel as if i am winning.
today i am no longer interested in controlling anything or anyone. i am guilty instead, of falling far left of that and not even attempting to control anything. i have become quite lax in many areas, but i feel free some how for the first time in my life.
i am 45, not a hollywood 45,,, but 45,, like our mothers were supposed to be…you know, cute, plump, funny, loving and all because i can be. i am under no pressure to be anything other than that which i feel i am,,, and let me tell you ,,, this is a great feeling.
i know a lot of people my age,,, older even,,, who feel that have to struggle,, to fight,, to maintain their youth,, i give mine freely to anyone that wants it. i am soooo much happier. i am sooo much more at ease with myself, my life, my exsistence i ever was… and most of it has to do with letting go.
no way do i feel that i am supposed to be upholding a vision that was cast for me by people that actually chose not to know me. no.
no more do i feel closeted in by the confines of family,. heritage, society, media.. no.
i lost many years of my life,, my youth, and many people in my desire to create a dignity i thought i had or could force someone into believing ,,, and for what!!!!!!!!! for scars that will never go away,,, for hurts that will never really heal… for nothing of any value…nothing…
and yet, i am not bitter, i am greatful.. i am thrilled to be 45 , and have the opportunity to discard that which kept me bound in so many ways for so many years to something that never belonged to me….
tonight i can sit here in my country home,, dogs in the bed, fire in the fireplace, and know,,, i am happy i am alive, , and i am alone….

** Here is her response to the novel 'How Fear Moves'  - by Eugene Jackson. It is a memoir of an African American who had a tumultuous childhood and becomes a marine and officer in the Far East, the Gulf War, and multiple duty stations across America. His journey is one of self-discovery.

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