Tag Archives: spring

New Life

Following yesterday’s post, some more evidence that spring is definitely here. Not from my back garden this time, but from a recent wander.


Amongst the desolation, there was still the vaguest of hints that something new, something big, was coming. She wandered through the ruins and rubble, and stopped beside a pile of stones. The barest glimpse of colour among the greyness had caught her eye and she had to go back and check.

Yes, there it was, a tiny blossom, subtly pink, tiny yellow stamen that reflected the weak sun’s light.

She felt a tear run trickle down her left cheek, clearing a path through the dust and dirt she new she was covered in. For the first time is weeks, no months, the tear was a happy one. This tiny bloom, this tiniest of blossoms represented something she had not encountered in a long, long time.

Hope.


The World Keeps Turning

With everything going on at the moment, it’s easy to forget that this virus and its complications, while bad enough, is only affecting humans. Mother Nature is still keeping the world going (grateful, I am guessing, that us pesky beings are giving the planet a bit of a break from our pollution), and across the Northern Hemisphere spring is, well, springing…

Three shots, then, from my back garden! (Click on an image to see a larger version.)



Change

One of the things about the current situation we are all finding ourselves in at the moment are the changes that are happening to the way we do things, the way we work, the way we live.

Shops – the few that remain open – are opting for card payments, rather than cash. Businesses are finding ways to work with staff working from home. Television and radio channels are streamlining their workforce (BBC Radio sharing news reports, rather than having individual ones, for example) and using classic television (repeats) as a focus for their prime time programming.

While we are in an emergency situation, I do wonder if the new normal will be a permanent replacement for the old normal when this is all over. Will these emergency changes become commonplace post-Coronavirus?


To take part in the current Mass Observation Project post on ISOLATION:

  • Take a photograph based on the theme of ISOLATION, however you want to interpret it.
  • Email the image to adayinphotographs@outlook.com by Wednesday 1st April 2020.
  • Images should be a maximum of 650 pixels wide.
  • Include your name, website/blog address and a short note about the image, including where it was taken.
  • Come back and see the results on Sunday 5th April!

Calm

Here in the UK, we are in a partial lockdown, and our opportunities to leave our homes are limited. This includes one lot of exercise per day, and this constitutional is something we will be relishing and making the most of while we can.

The bonus for these walks is that the weather has currently taken a big turn towards spring. While I appreciate that this won’t always be the case, it does mean that we have taken a definite move away from the weeks of rain we encountered earlier in the year.

The walk provides us with an opportunity to connect with nature – to reconnect with it. Roads are quieter and the lack or traffic noise means that our ears are more alert to the sounds of nature around us.

Birdsong seems louder than it did before.

The trees rustling in the breeze hits us more than it did before.

The quiet is deafening, but not in a negative way. It is more of a comfort, heightening the connection we have with the world around us, a connection the ‘normal’ world had deprived us of.


To take part in the current Mass Observation Project post on ISOLATION:

  • Take a photograph based on the theme of ISOLATION, however you want to interpret it.
  • Email the image to adayinphotographs@outlook.com by Wednesday 1st April 2020.
  • Images should be a maximum of 650 pixels wide.
  • Include your name, website/blog address and a short note about the image, including where it was taken.
  • Come back and see the results on Sunday 5th April!

Blossom

We all need a bit of peace and harmony at the moment. In a world full of crisis, everybody’s lives have been turned on their heads.

The space we have been granted by the enforced isolation (whether working from home or in quarantine) has enabled us to appreciate the space we inhabit.

The lack of physical contact with others outside of our own households – particularly those we care deeply for – helps us realise how much we might have taken them for granted. When this is all over, I think we are all going to be much more appreciative of the relationships we have, the relationships we will have been isolated from for weeks or months.


To take part in the current Mass Observation Project post on ISOLATION:

  • Take a photograph based on the theme of ISOLATION, however you want to interpret it.
  • Email the image to adayinphotographs@outlook.com by Wednesday 1st April 2020.
  • Images should be a maximum of 650 pixels wide.
  • Include your name, website/blog address and a short note about the image, including where it was taken.
  • Come back and see the results on Sunday 5th April!

Glastonbury Spring

As with much of the UK, Somerset has had a pretty damp start to the year (in fact, it’s chucking it down yet again as I type). But, grey clouds notwithstanding, there are signs that spring is on the horizon, and so for my second ode to my new home, I thought I would post some budding new photographs.

(Click on an image to see a larger version and scroll to the bottom for some information about a new post!)



Even on the darkest of days there is a hint of brighter things to come, and he knew this gave him an advantage he would be able to press home. He could show her that things had changed, that he had changed.

He knew that the temptation he had given into has been ill-advised – no, more than that, it had been the stupidest thing he had ever done! – but she had hinted that there was the slightest of opportunities, the tiniest glimmer of hope that he would be able to rectify the damage he had done.

The “slip” – that was what they had taken to calling it – had happened last autumn, and this new spring gave him the hope, the push to start putting things back together again…


It’s time for a new Mass Observation Project post too! With everything going on in the world at the moment, the next theme is going to be ISOLATION.

The idea, as with previous MO posts is to:

  • Take a photograph based on the theme, however you want to interpret it.
  • Email the image to adayinphotographs@outlook.com by Wednesday 1st April 2020.
  • Include your name, website/blog address and a short note about the image.
  • Come back and see the results on Sunday 5th April!

Images should be a maximum of 650 pixels wide.

Thanks! 🙂

A year in the life of a garden

For the second post on CKPonderingsToo, I am going back in time.

A few years ago, I set myself a project; to take a photo of my back garden every week for a year and see the seasons come and go.

I set myself a couple of aims with the project:

  • Take a shot at around the same time every Sunday morning (or as soon after, if I wasn’t around on the Sunday).
  • Take the photo from the same place.
  • No post-production was allowed – what you see it what you get.

At the time, this was a great project. The only downside was that, after a year of photographing the garden, I was a little fed up with it, so the images never got to see the light of day.

Until now!

We start with a slideshow of the year; below are the 52 clickable images.




The first Mass Observation post got some positive feedback… A new one for February is coming soon, so keep an eye out on CKPonderingsToo to take part!