fauna and flora

Wow! This is the tenth Sunday Selections post, the time has gone really quickly.

I am really enjoying this meme, though I must admit that sometimes I get stuck in my photo archives daydreaming away for ages.

So without further ado, here are my photos this week.

 

Anyone can join in with this Photo Meme, “Sunday Selections” but I do ask that you only add your link if you are joining in with Sunday Selections, as links that are off topic or spam will be removed. Also be careful when you are adding your URL as the Mr Linky will remember your old URL and we will click onto an old post.

Here is the weekly blurb.

I take a lot of photos and most of them are just sitting around in folders on my desktop not doing anything. I thought that a dedicated post once a week would be a good way to share some of these photos that  otherwise wouldn’t be seen by anyone other than me.

I am also remarkably absent minded and I put photos into folders and think  that I will publish them later on and then then I never do.

So I  have started a photo meme that anyone can join in and play as well. The rules are so simple as to be virtually non existent.

Just add your name and URL to the Mr Linky.

Publish your photos on your blog using the “Sunday Selection” title.

Link back here to me.

Easy Peasy.


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There is no rhyme or reason to these photos this week. I was just clicking through the folders and randomly grabbing out photos that I liked or that I responded to emotionally.

 

 

 

 

Anyone can join in with this Photo Meme, “Sunday Selections” but I do ask that you only add your link if you are joining in with Sunday Selections, as links that are off topic or spam will be removed. Also be careful when you are adding your URL as the Mr Linky will remember your old URL and we will click onto an old post.

Here is the weekly blurb.

I take a lot of photos and most of them are just sitting around in folders on my desktop not doing anything. I thought that a dedicated post once a week would be a good way to share some of these photos that  otherwise wouldn’t be seen by anyone other than me.

I am also remarkably absent minded and I put photos into folders and think  that I will publish them later on and then then I never do.

So I  have started a photo meme that anyone can join in and play as well. The rules are so simple as to be virtually non existent.

Just add your name and URL to the Mr Linky.

Publish your photos on your blog using the “Sunday Selection” title.

Link back here to me.

Easy Peasy.


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This week my daughter Veronica announced her engagement and within a matter of moments of that announcement, my inbox was full of congratulatory messages from my online friends. Thank you all very much.

It has been a busy week this week, I have been taming the chaos in my own studio as well as helping to organise the polytechnic ceramics space, down at the Art school in Hobart. I will be in at the Art School one day a week as a senior polytechnic student for all of this year and I have already started to make new friends.

As I was walking up to my studio yesterday there were a pair of yellow tailed black cockatoos in the yard. The Black Cockies are a frequent visitor to my place as I live in the hills, in the middle of a dry sclerophyll forest. What was very unusual about this visit was the fact that there were only two cockatoos, normally they are in a family group of between 7 and 11 birds.

We had to cut a tree down to make way for my studio, The Spouse, David and a friend milled the tree into timber that The Spouse is now using to make my work benches. What we couldn’t mill up, the boys cut into firewood. The black cockatoos are eating the grubs in the firewood.

One bird always acts as a sentry and keeps  a look out while the other birds feed.

Here are my photos, I hope you enjoy them.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Anyone can join in with this Photo Meme, “Sunday Selections” but I do ask that you only add your link if you are joining in with Sunday Selections, as links that are off topic or spam will be removed. Also be careful when you are adding your URL as the Mr Linky will remember your old URL and we will click onto an old post.

Here is the weekly blurb.

I take a lot of photos and most of them are just sitting around in folders on my desktop not doing anything. I thought that a dedicated post once a week would be a good way to share some of these photos that  otherwise wouldn’t be seen by anyone other than me.

I am also remarkably absent minded and I put photos into folders and think  that I will publish them later on and then then I never do.

So I  have started a photo meme that anyone can join in and play as well. The rules are so simple as to be virtually non existent.

Just add your name and URL to the Mr Linky.

Publish your photos on your blog using the “Sunday Selection” title.

Link back here to me.

Easy Peasy.


 

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Remarkably like the softest velvet in fact but more about the snake I was stroking later in this post.

I haven’t had the time to respond to your emails and comments yet as time just slips through my fingers lately and I think, “I will answer them in a minute,” and then pffft it is suddenly two days later. So I wanted to take the time to say thank you to you all here.  All your comments made me smile and they have also made me realise that you actually do like what I am doing so thanks heaps for cheering me up.

Your response was just the kick up the bum I needed to make me realise that my words are important and if I say just one thing that touches one person then that has to be a good thing.

Now back to the story of the snake.

We live on a sloping block of land in the hills above a small Southern midlands town. Tasmania is unlike anywhere else in the world in that we still have most of our natural assets left, even though there are those in power who would like to cut down every tree on the island and flog them off as woodchips.

This is the view from the back of my house looking down towards the bush. You can see the young cherry tree is missing all its lower branches. That was the damage from those bloody cows a few weeks ago.

So you can see that I dont  live in suburbia even though I am only 45 minutes or so from the capital city Hobart. So snakes are part of my environment and I am sure my daughter Veronica can tell you a couple of snake stories of her own as well.

I had been helping The Spouse put a window in my studio.

As I walked back down to the house there was a tiny snake curled up, upside down in the middle of the driveway. I called The Spouse over to check it out because even though I was pretty sure the snake was dead, poking it to check, definitely fell in the category of  “jobs just for husbands”. After The spouse had confirmed that the snake was really dead and not just pretending, he picked it up and carried it down to the house for me to photograph.

I was really interested in the patterns of the snake’s skin and once I realized that the snake wasn’t going to come back to life and go for my throat I took lots of photos and daydreamed away about snake skin patterned pots.

I have been working with a glaze this year that is quite similar to the soft muted colours of the snakes belly. All I will have to do is change the amount of copper oxide in the glaze and add a bit of cobalt and it will be easy enough to reproduce the lovely muted colours of the snakes belly.

Once I had finished taking photos I placed the snake on a log near my frog pond, hoping that a bird would fly down and eat it so that it hadn’t died in vain. Two hours later the snake was gone.

You can see how small this little white lipped whip tail snake is by comparing it to the blades of grass in the photo. It was strange that even though I knew the snake was dead I was still quite hesitant about touching it. Our primal fears are really strongly ingrained aren’t they. Its skin was really like the softest suede and I was quite sad that it had died but at least I took some photographs and a bird had a free lunch.

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Alternate titles could be. “This is why I don’t get any housework done” or “The Spouse is grumpy with me again.”

Time has a habit of quietly slipping through my fingers, when you couple this with the fact that I am very easily distracted it can quickly add up. A lost morning here, a wasted afternoon there but luckily time is relative and a wasted morning in the The Spouses eyes is time well spent in mine.

I went outside to start a load of washing, (yes my washing machine is still outside) and as I walked down the steps to the water tank to turn the tap on, the ducks peeped at me, reminding me that I hadn’t fed them. So I changed course and fed the ducks and wandered around in the veggie garden for a bit looking for hidden nests. The ducks have a pen off to the side of the veggie garden and I pulled down part of the fence so that they had access to all of the garden.

On the way out of the garden I noticed that the new growth on my cherry trees was a bit curly and deformed. The damage wasn’t that widespread so I nipped back inside, (walking straight past the empty washing machine) to grab the secataurs and a bucket so that I could snip off all the diseased parts of the tree to stop it spreading.

Once I started to snip off the leaves I could see that the curling was caused by clusters of little black sap suckers that looked like a cross between a flea and an aphid. The weather has been quite humid here lately with lots of rain so I am on the lookout for mould in the garden as well. Aphids produce a honeydew, which the ants love to eat and the sight of ants crawling all over a plant is often the first sign that aphids are about (see I am getting distracted again) The sticky honeydew is also the perfect environment for  black sooty mould to appear and  cause the leaves to shrivel and die as well.

The cherry trees had already been well chomped on by the stray cows that wreaked bovine havoc the other day and now aphids were chomping on the new growth. It isn’t looking good for cherries here this year at all.

As I was busily snipping away at the tips of the tree I noticed that the ladybirds were all over the tree as well, hiding in the folds of the leaves eating aphids and having ladybird sex.

So there I was mid-snip faced with a dilemma, did I stop removing the leaves full of aphids and let the ladybirds do their job or did I keep on snipping?

I kept on snipping.

Normally I would burn the diseased leaves of a plant but that was impossible as these leaves were also covered with ladybirds, ants and small spiders. So I emptied the leaves out onto  a tray and grabbed my camera instead. I also started to worry that the ladybirds would lay their eggs on these soon to be dead leaves, thinking that their babies would hatch out to a feast of aphids, so I moved all the ladybirds that were having sex onto the honeysuckle, as that still had pockets of aphids chomping away on it.


When I came inside to edit the photos I could hear The spouse banging away rebuilding parts of the balcony, the guilt got the better of me and I thought I better go and offer to help before I got sprung sitting in front of the computer. Again. The Spouse didn’t need me getting in the way my help so I wandered off up the driveway to my unfinished studio.

I have been watching the swallows zooming in and out of my studio for days now I hadn’t seen any signs of a nest or any swallow poo, so I assumed that they were just hunting the trapped insects that were flying around the ceiling. I went and sat quietly in the back of the shed watching them as I daydreamed about shelves and worktables instead of bare concrete floors.

As I was quietly sitting there one of the swallows flew in underneath a piece of loose sisalation in the ceiling. I was quite surprised by this as swallows make mud nests on the  side of buildings under the eaves, so I traipsed back down to the house to grab my camera and before “The Spouse could say I thought you were doing laundry” I had lost another hour.

The swallows are definitely making a nest in the ceiling of my studio and that makes me inordinately happy.

But.

There will be a couple of small problems, like not being able to close the front roller door of my studio for a couple of months so that the swallows can fly in and out but I am sure I can work around that. The Spouse isn’t impressed but he will humour me and will bide his time to say I told you so when my work space is full of swallow shit.

Unfortunately when I began to edit the ladybird photos, as I am still learning how to use the macro lens, most of them were crap. The depth of field was wrong, or the photos weren’t as crisp as I liked and shots that looked ok in camera were blurry on the screen. So skilfully avoiding The Spouse I went back outside with my camera and took some more photos. A lot more.

I was much happier with these and before I knew it most of the day had vanished and I still hadn’t done any laundry.

Fast forward four days and I am still messing about with the same batch of ladybirds and cherry leaves. I left the leaves in a container on the table outside so that any ladybirds could fly away before I burned the leaves. As per usual I forgot about them and only went back to check on them yesterday. The leaves were shrivelling up and the aphids are dying but the ladybirds are still madly crawling all over the leaves chomping away and mating.

This reinforces my belief that I should just leave things alone. If I had not snipped the leaves, the ladybirds would have done the job for me and cleaned up most of the aphids. As it is by being a hasty human and interfering with the natural order of things here I have mucked up a mini eco-system.I have moved most of the ladybirds down to the cherry tree which still has some aphids left on it. I found a leaf with ladybird eggs on it so I have wedged that into a nook in the middle of the honeysuckle and I am keeping an eye on it. The Spouse cracked the shits and ended up doing the laundry himself, making me eligible for worst housekeeper of the year award again and finally five days later I am pressing publish.

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