Steven: I've seen your clever and thoughtful comments on a lot of blogs I follow. Finally I've found time to visit. Your posts are outstanding. The photography and poetry of this one carry layers and layers of beauty and meaning. Well done!
hi leenie and welcome!! thankyou very much for your generous comments here. i really enjoy preparing and sharing the posts for this blog and i am always deeply gratfified when i know that the words and images have carried their meaning through their pixillated veil. have a lovely day. steven
We have an abundance of hoar frost here this morning. No sun. Just everything covered with hoar frost. I like the rocks or boulder in this post. It reminds me of where it has been eons ago.
hi bonnie - i couldn't believe it when i found this boulder! surrounded by an easy foot of snow but protected underneath the boughs of a large pine tree. it would have made a really cool place to camp! have a lovely day. steven
barry it's the inspirations my readers provide through their comments and their own blogs that compels me to do my own very best!!!! thankyou for your kind comment. steven
Happy New Year Steven, I've been reading your blog and comments through this past year and am not surprised you were asked that question by Ellen :) I love that we are both reading the Coleman Barks translation of Rumi... it is so perfect that one needs no other source of that Sufi master. But do you ever read Hafiz or Rabia? Or Ghalib? I love the little snowflakes falling down my screen - thankyou!
hey dan! my dad had a huge medicine wheel on his property. he explained the role of each of the rocks and gems but it's all a blur now. it intrigues me that so many people - especially children - gather rocks. my house is filled with them courtesy of me and my girl and boy!!! steven
hello shaista - welcome! there was an inevitability to being asked about serenity. it was a really timely question and i valued the opportunity to reply! yes, i read hafiz and have used his writing here and on my other blog "flow". rabia and ghalib also but i am fairly certain their writing hasn't appeared on the blogs. i'm glad that you enjoyed your visit here. have a peaceful day. steven
Among all the vivid photos f whiteness your green moss stands out! Don't worry, that green will spread all across the land soon. (Not all moss though!)
hello rinkly and welcome!!!! the green of the moss stood out for me also although the evergreen boughs i found it under were deep deep green. moss is a favourite for me among living things and to find it in the winter is a huge bonus!!! thanks for visiting and have a lovely evening. steven
titus i agree that they're filled with memories. about fifty kilometres north of here is part of a massive sheet of rock called the canadian shield. it covers almost half of canada and is four and a half billion years old. it is possible to sit on parts of it that have deep striations caused by the passing of glaciers. i am awestruck even writing that. memories - imagine!!! steven
hope yes i have green eyes and green speaks t me very clearly and deeply. rocks - well i think they can experience all sorts of things - including happiness. rocks on a warm warm day with old pine needles around their base. well they seem happy to me. steven
Steven- YOU ROCK! So do I- Under the bed I have a collection- on the sill I have a collection- everytime I go to a new place- I pocket a stone that agrees to go for a ride in my pocket- I have them from many countries- better than buying do- dah souveniers -probably made in China ...My Dad was a lapidarian in his spare time. Rocks and bugs and snakes fascinate me more than anything, would much rather have a pebble, a beetle or a shed snake skin than a bouquet. Wouldn't anyone?
I like the juxtaposition of the photos here, I've also been noticing certain areas of rock all clear and warm coloured that look so out of place with the snow all around,
Steven: I've seen your clever and thoughtful comments on a lot of blogs I follow. Finally I've found time to visit. Your posts are outstanding. The photography and poetry of this one carry layers and layers of beauty and meaning. Well done!
ReplyDeletehi leenie and welcome!! thankyou very much for your generous comments here. i really enjoy preparing and sharing the posts for this blog and i am always deeply gratfified when i know that the words and images have carried their meaning through their pixillated veil. have a lovely day. steven
ReplyDeleteI am venturing out soon. I wish I could compose such compelling and inspiring words. I just might give it a try. Blessings for this day.
ReplyDeleteQMM
qmm - but you do. enjoy this day. steven
ReplyDeleteYes, as the green fingers of summer's past still rest in my heart.
ReplyDeleteYour work evokes our own creative process steven!
Moss and lichen thriving in the deepest days of winter - Spring promises to be truly glorious!
ReplyDeleteWe have an abundance of hoar frost here this morning. No sun. Just everything covered with hoar frost. I like the rocks or boulder in this post. It reminds me of where it has been eons ago.
ReplyDeleteInsightful words and beautiful photos Steven. Your ability to marry the two week after week amazes me.
ReplyDeletehi bonnie - i couldn't believe it when i found this boulder! surrounded by an easy foot of snow but protected underneath the boughs of a large pine tree. it would have made a really cool place to camp! have a lovely day. steven
ReplyDeleteabe - that's what i tell my kids! imagine the journey of this boulder!!! have a peaceful day. steven
ReplyDeletegoldenw est - now that's true optimism and hope! lovely. have a great day on the coast! steven
ReplyDeletebarry it's the inspirations my readers provide through their comments and their own blogs that compels me to do my own very best!!!! thankyou for your kind comment. steven
ReplyDeleteRocks, in my view, have sentience, are sentient beings. They respond to heat, cold, pressure, motion. Your post is a good reminder.
ReplyDeleteSummer is there, buried under the frost waiting for it's turn again.
ReplyDeleteHappy New Year Steven, I've been reading your blog and comments through this past year and am not surprised you were asked that question by Ellen :)
ReplyDeleteI love that we are both reading the Coleman Barks translation of Rumi... it is so perfect that one needs no other source of that Sufi master.
But do you ever read Hafiz or Rabia? Or Ghalib?
I love the little snowflakes falling down my screen - thankyou!
hey dan! my dad had a huge medicine wheel on his property. he explained the role of each of the rocks and gems but it's all a blur now. it intrigues me that so many people - especially children - gather rocks. my house is filled with them courtesy of me and my girl and boy!!! steven
ReplyDeletei'm glad you believe that ellen as texas appears to be suffering with such cold wintry weather!!!! have a warm day. steven
ReplyDeletehello shaista - welcome! there was an inevitability to being asked about serenity. it was a really timely question and i valued the opportunity to reply! yes, i read hafiz and have used his writing here and on my other blog "flow". rabia and ghalib also but i am fairly certain their writing hasn't appeared on the blogs. i'm glad that you enjoyed your visit here. have a peaceful day. steven
ReplyDeleteAmong all the vivid photos f whiteness your green moss stands out! Don't worry, that green will spread all across the land soon. (Not all moss though!)
ReplyDeletethank you steven...all guests always welcome! xx
ReplyDeleteWhat beautifully contrasting pictures and words. I think I'm with Dan on rocks seeming sentient - or at least, filled with ancient memories.
ReplyDeleteAh, we green eyed folks know that green is tenacious, yet life affirming. How else can you make rocks look happy? :)
ReplyDeletehello rinkly and welcome!!!! the green of the moss stood out for me also although the evergreen boughs i found it under were deep deep green. moss is a favourite for me among living things and to find it in the winter is a huge bonus!!! thanks for visiting and have a lovely evening. steven
ReplyDeletethankyou kay!!! steven
ReplyDeletetitus i agree that they're filled with memories. about fifty kilometres north of here is part of a massive sheet of rock called the canadian shield. it covers almost half of canada and is four and a half billion years old. it is possible to sit on parts of it that have deep striations caused by the passing of glaciers. i am awestruck even writing that. memories - imagine!!! steven
ReplyDeletehope yes i have green eyes and green speaks t me very clearly and deeply. rocks - well i think they can experience all sorts of things - including happiness. rocks on a warm warm day with old pine needles around their base. well they seem happy to me. steven
ReplyDeleteSteven- YOU ROCK! So do I- Under the bed I have a collection- on the sill I have a collection- everytime I go to a new place- I pocket a stone that agrees to go for a ride in my pocket- I have them from many countries- better than buying do- dah souveniers -probably made in China ...My Dad was a lapidarian in his spare time. Rocks and bugs and snakes fascinate me more than anything, would much rather have a pebble, a beetle or a shed snake skin than a bouquet. Wouldn't anyone?
ReplyDeleteSighhhh, i love your eye X:-)
ReplyDeleteI like the juxtaposition of the photos here, I've also been noticing certain areas of rock all clear and warm coloured that look so out of place with the snow all around,
ReplyDelete