Showing posts with label drive. Show all posts
Showing posts with label drive. Show all posts

Friday, May 15, 2026

Faded Beauty

 


This is kinda where its at, where I'm at...walking in the building and seeing the above roses out front...I was sent down the thought trail of noticing fading beauty. The pale, yellowing & fading color, the fact that these roses are in some form of dying, decaying...coming to the end of their life cycle...AND are so very beautiful. Gosh I loved falling into this moment. 
I've long seen the beauty in such lifespans of plants and people. I have photographed dying pomegranates still on the tree and flopped over sunflowers - hanging on to their last moments...dried up thistles, still standing tall. Beautiful.




We finally stopped in time for me to grab a photo of the profusely blooming purple sage on our Thursday short drive. The hills have held so much purple sage recently. On this Thursday, there was a large hawk in a small tree too.


The Siddis of Karnataka and the dying art of making Kawandi quilts | Documentary Film | THE WEEK

LINK 9:50 minutes


The little bridge compass was still there, just over the railing, on the ledge. It still works.



I opted not to photograph the empty nest. But, I also opted to bring the binoculars with me to check the nearby trees for owl relocation. I could not see anything to suggest owl life in the dense oaks and cottonwoods near to their old home. The bridge felt a bit emptier knowing this time is over. 

It was also quite empty of people today. We had a lazy stroll to the 'fence change', counting lizards as we went. There were also many swallows, busy ants, crying hawks and a very low flying turkey vulture. The temperature was perfect for a walk.

Here is some owl information I found after Tina suggested that maybe the owls had moved to a new spot.

*Owls generally do not change nests during the same breeding season once eggs are laid, but they often leave or change nests if they are forced out due to safety issues, such as a falling, deteriorated nest. While they typically reuse successful sites over multiple years, they often relocate if the nest falls apart or is destroyed.

*Forced Relocation: Because many owls (like Great Horned Owls) do not build their own nests, they use old, repurposed nests from hawks or crows. If these nests fall due to wind or damage, the parents are forced to abandon them, sometimes requiring human intervention for "re-nesting"

*Fledging Behavior: As owlets grow and become more active, they may "tumble out" of their nests before they can fly, causing them to move from the original nesting spot to branches nearby.

*Yearly Reuse: Owls tend to return to the same successful nesting territory year after year, but not necessarily the exact same nest structure if it has deteriorated.

*Parents often push their young out of the nest through passive neglect after a few weeks, encouraging them to fledge. 

~ All sourced from google AI, which links to FB groups or Reddit conversations...because I'm too tired or lazy to do this any better than that today. The same is true of the info below.

I also learned that owls can recognize faces (people), so I thought of Grace's comment that they know me 🙂 Perhaps.

*Yes, owls can recognize individual humans. They are highly perceptive birds that distinguish between trusted people (like regular caretakers or local residents) and strangers. They rely on facial features, posture, voice, and overall silhouette to identify individuals

*Key Details on Owl Recognition

  • Facial Memory: Owls can memorize specific human faces and associate them with past experiences. If a person is calm and non-threatening, an owl may tolerate their presence or even allow closer approaches.
  • Visual Triggers: Because their eyes are fixed in their sockets, they rely heavily on the whole picture. Drastic visual changes, like a sudden haircut or a massive change in clothing silhouette, can confuse an owl and make you look like a stranger to them
    .
  • Vocal Recognition: Owls can learn and respond to the specific voices of people who interact with them frequently






We saw a very cool old Ford pick up truck. A 1954 or perhaps 1956? I love this color blue! When I was a young mom, we had one from one of those years (I never can remember). It was bare bones, sitting out front in various stages of rusting & refurbishing - that would never be even close to complete. Never. If it had become something, we planned for it to be for our son, who is now 45 and has not known or sat in it since he was 5 months old. Time is like that.


I've cleaned out and shredded some old paperwork, installed a new shower liner curtain and done more work in the new glue book...I've been listening to music of the 1970's which makes me want to weep with the memories of days gone by.

These are just a few pages. I'm not ready to post the others yet. Each of them has a story. A good, or at least decent enough story. I'm enjoying finding them.




I'm just finding my way this week. Good enough. How was your week?

Where do you want to go this next week? 

 

May you hear the stories

May you find your way

May you recalculate as needed

xo

Photos by NAE @pomegranatetrail ©2026

Thursday, April 9, 2026

Quiet

 




LINK 33:29 minutes



While out running errands, I noticed that the Circus is in town! Oh, how many years it has been since I went to a circus. I think my children were 3 and 6 at the time and they still used elephants in the act. From what I read online, this one is all tricks, no animals and I am grateful for that. I'm so glad some things have changed. When the 3 of us did go to that old circus, I took them up the day before to watch them raise the tent. They had advertised this event, inviting the community to come and witness it. It was hot and a very, very slow process. The kids and those of my friend who went with us, fidgeted, sitting in the dusty dry dirt. Not exactly the thrill I thought it would be, but an experience nonetheless.

I passed by the new Yard House restaurant where a large group of new employees were lined up to go in. Their line reached the whole length of the building and then some. There all were in their all black outfits, chatting and preparing for something new. I could feel their excitement a parking lot away in my car with the windows up! haha I immediately felt happy for them, as it is hard for folks to get jobs these days and there they all were, so many of them! I tried to steer away from the assumption that there was so many new employees so they can have them work part time and not pay benefits for them, but I obviously was not successful in that. Anyway, good for them!


Back at the bridge, 5 lizards between the car and the bridge (where we usually only see one maybe). One had been hit on the bike path. We've noticed that they have not been skittering away quickly on our past few visits. The ones on the bridge have practically refused to move, digging in their little lizard heels. as J. tries to encourage them out of harms way. Oh you lizards you. A
s I sat on a rock in the rock circle, I noticed the orange butterfly, or "an" orange butterfly flying in the same place, near the same flowers as yesterday. How curious. 





There were great clouds rolling in over the mountains from the north. I love seeing this. We are supposed to get some rain Sunday morning after two partly cloudy days. 

The crows were not home, but Owly was. I wonder if Owls recognize certain faces the way crows do. Ya know that old experiment with the mask and the crows? Yeah. I talk to her and tell her I won't hurt her, that I love her. She sits up there staring me down with pure 'stink eye' expression on her broad face. I hope stink eye does not mean I am stressing her out. The dangling feather was gone.

I saw a young woman arrive with her big, zoom lens camera. I told her about the owl and she tried to get a photo. Later as we were walking towards leaving, very slowly that is, she told me that her camera does not zoom as well as she thought it would. This was valuable information for me, as I sometimes wish for a camera that could capture what my eyes see. I'm not looking to spend money for that...not looking to embrace a learning curve for that...not looking to carry around the actual weight of that...but sometimes I dream whrn I am not thinking 'good enough' about my wacky wildlife photos. 

Anyway, I shared other information about what she may see at the bridge and other places she could hike out here & where to find information about that. She repeated my words as if making a mental note. Ambassador to the trails, that's me. I figure I am able to share what I've learned over time, even if my pace has slowed. She works at a local pizza place. Maybe J. wants pizza for his birthday? heehee




I wonder if the river will flow all year long again in 2026? The fallen tree with its root ball is not even near the water today.





What kind of weather excites you?

 

May you float with the clouds

May you flit with the butterflies

May you and be still with the lizards and owls

xo

Photos by NAE @pomegranatetrail ©2026

Thursday, March 5, 2026

Short Drive, Still Undulating

 


A new tradition was borne a while back, a weekly short drive after grocery shopping. Just up the road to where freedom lives.

Today it was bright and breezy, 61 degrees. The grasses, the ridges and the tree tops were undulating. Even the pattern on some Milk Thistle looked to be undulating too. 

I was tempted to sing "green, green (amber) waves of grass (grain)!



Screenshot from an episode of Brokenwood Mysteries
Undulating road and power lines! I can't stop seeing it! 


So many flowers dance and sway...poppies, lupines, tiny daisies and another yellow flower...along with the rusty orange of witches hair - lighting up the far off hillsides and the roadside at our feet.





I did a lot more stitching, which was (of course) undulating as well! More stitching, weaving and paper play to come.


What do you notice again and again? Does it last for brief periods or does it extend over time?

 

May you notice til your heart is full

May you embrace both the familiar and the new

May you travel merrily along

xo

Photos by NAE @pomegranatetrail ©2026

Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Undulating

 

undulate

1 of 2

adjective

un·​du·​late ˈən-jə-lət  ˈən-dyə-  
ˈən-də-
 -ˌlāt 
variants or undulated 
ˈən-jə-ˌlā-təd  
ˈən-dyə-
 
ˈən-də-
Synonyms of undulate
having a wavy surface, edge, or markings
the undulate margin of a leaf

undulate

2 of 2

verb

un·​du·​late ˈən-jə-ˌlāt  
ˈən-dyə-
 
ˈən-də-
undulatedundulating

intransitive verb

1
to form or move in waves fluctuate
2
to rise and fall in volume, pitch, or cadence
3
to present a wavy appearance

transitive verb

to cause to move in a wavy, sinuous, or flowing manner

I've been poking around a lot, learning about "undulating"...looking at plenty of images like THESE. This all started with my desire to attempt weaving in an truly undulating way. When I found the image below, I discovered that in a sense I had been weaving in a "single step" undulation all along. That helped me feel free to continue on and play with this idea some more.

I looked up synonyms for UNDULATING.


 LINK for "Generalized Models for Rock Joint Surface Shapes"



We took a drive, first up to "the pines" and then off to someplace we'd not been since 2021! Can it have been that long?! Along with the many other things I search for (clouds, Hawks & other birds, wide swaths of sky, cloud life...), I was ultra-focused on "Undulating". Boy, did I find it!


I claimed my drawing was very simple, just symbolic and he said it was: "simplebolic". Yep, that sounds about right.




We wound through the mountains and ended up in the wide-open cattle country...undulating all the way!



I like the bottom two pics (above) for showing the undulating I had in mind as I wove. It's not the best, but we were going 55 MPH. haha 

The images at the link above (THESE) offer more than I can. But, I have to say as we traveled between the undulating masses of green, my head swiveling in every direction...when we got to a body of water, even the whitecaps on the moving surface were undulating! I think my exploration of undulating will stick with me for a long while.

I ultimately exclaimed that "Everything is undulating everywhere!!"




Along with all of the "undulating" I noticed, we saw lots of cattle and many birds. There was a ridiculous amount of crows everywhere...one egret, standing between two stretches of fencing, where water for it was not noticeable and a few hawks, soaring or perched.





What do you like to explore?

 

May you investigate things of interest to you

May you explore in different ways

May you grow your mind

xo

Photos by NAE @pomegranatetrail ©2026