Lens-Artists Challenge #372 – Ephemeral

Tina‘s theme for the week is Ephemeral – “lasting for a very short time“. A wonderful challenge, so, please visit her beautiful site and get inspired!

Beauty consists of its own passing, just as we reach for it. It’s the ephemeral configuration of things in the moment, when you see both their beauty and their death.
— Muriel Barbery

Autumn is the season with ephemeral written all over it. We are reminded every day, every hour every minute – Of Life and Death, and the short moments of beauty, joy and sorrow.

Mother Nature is the gentle reminder of how short our time here is. She speaks to us in every detail, telling us we should treasure every moment we get.

Something as simple as a frosty day – I love those days – but when the sun reaches that first frosty straw, its white crystals will be gone within minutes. Before our very eyes.

A misty Autumn morning and its special light doesn’t last more than minutes. I still want to capture that moment, but it gets harder as I age and no longer spring that happily out of bed early mornings.

We all need Beauty – but beauty is always ephemeral, so we portray it with our cameras, pencils and paint. Nature, sunsets and sunrises…the serenity. Futile, but still, that is what little we can do to make it stay, make it last, make us remember.

Finally, a butterfly – the epitome of ephemeral. In Sweden we say guldvinge – golden wing. This beauty was captured in the Pyrenees some 15 years ago when hiking a dewy morning in the mountain valleys.

Thank you, Tina – and be sure to link your post to Tina’s original post and to use the Lens-Artists Tag to help us find you. Many thanks to Ritva and to all of her respondents for last week’s Street Details challenge. A fun theme that I really liked! Finally we hope you’ll join us next week when Egidio will lead us once again on his Through Brazilian Eyes site. Until then, as always please stay safe, be kind and enjoy the moment.

Thursday Thoughts on a Friday…

Noticed that this wasn’t posted as I had forgotten to schedule it – hopefully you will enjoy an early morning walk among the birds in the wetlands! I have a moderate lens length only, but still ok.

Thursday Thoughts – Frosty Nights

They are here – the frosty nights and glorious days. Usually they will last for a couple of days only, if it doesn’t start raining or gets windy. Enjoying it to the full!

I go visit my favourite spots and I go alone…

Sometimes you find new places, new paths, but I always start where I know what I can find. Time is short before the sun – and the temperature – rises too high.

No wind, only the clear sky and the beautiful sun trying its best to melt the frosty stems and restore the colours.

The magic of cold and warm colours together!

Lens-Artists Challenge #369 – Dreamy

A lot of people tell me I’m a bit dreamy, but I like the idea of that. Of being somewhere else.

– Alex Turner

A cake to die for…a dream! In Sweden we would call this one dreamy. But, it does not fit in to the dictionary description…but why should it?

So, what is ”dreamy” for you, and how do you create a dreamy picture? According to the dictionary it is ”having a magical or pleasantly unreal quality; dreamlike.” Soft dreamy photography is one that uses soft light, soft focus, delicate tones, and other gentle aspects to produce ethereal pictures. A blurred, or hazy feel is typical to the images – an almost surreal or unearthly effect.

Frost and close-up with a dreamy bouquet.

Fog is perfect too – as is the fragile larch twigs to frame the glowing leaves.

ICM can easily transport me…to a dreamy world.

Art – a dreamy ship in the sky by Polish artist Yacek Yerka. Surrealism often has a dreamy quality.

If you like to play, you have many possibilities – like ICM, changing the colours, cropping or double exposure – just to mention a few.

A late summer evening on a country road undoubtedly gives to everything a dreamy quality. An old favourite – I can still feel the magic.

Dreamy in winter – evening light and haze in Southern Iceland.

A tropical night some years ago…adds an abstract quality to the dream.

There are many possibilities hidden in Dreamy – maybe you are given to or indulging in daydreaming? You might even want to illustrate one of your own dreams? Now we are looking forward to Your interpretation of the theme Dreamy!

Thank you to John for a very colourful and uplifting challenge – Autumn – that made us all a bit lighter and brighter in mood!

Next week, it is Sofia who is our guide – please visit her lovely site for inspiration!

Until next time – remember to take care and be nice.

Thursday Thoughts – Dear Jane,

I was thinking of how easily our safe world is shaken. We, who live in a ”safe” part of the world cannot understand the horrors of those in unstable countries with war, devastation, starvation. Where people, nature and wild animals pay a high price every day. But we can imagine. We see it every day in the media. It is not easy to turn it off, to fend it off, to ignore it.

In my blog, as in my life, I try to focus on beauty and harmony. It makes me feel better, and I believe it makes others feel better too. Our children and grandchildren need us to be strong and calm. Here are only a couple of great quotes of yours that I often use:

“Here we are, the most clever species ever to have lived. So how is it we can destroy the only planet we have?”
― Jane Goodall

You urge us not to lose hope. ”If you lose hope, you become apathetic and do nothing. And if you want to save what is still beautiful in this world – if you want to save the planet for the future generations, your grandchildren, their grandchildren – then think about the actions you take each day.”

“Every individual matters. Every individual has a role to play. Every individual makes a difference.”

So, remember –

“What you do makes a difference, and you have to decide what kind of difference you want to make.”

Dear Jane, with you, one of our brightest lights is gone. Thank you for everything you have given to us. Your kind eyes, soft voice and clear wisdom will stay with us – a legacy that will last forever. I am grateful to have lived in a time when you were here too. On planet Earth.

Love, Ann-Christine. Emma and David

Lens-Artists Challenge #368, Looking Back to #106 – Autumn

John leads us through this magical season!

When everything looks like a magical oil painting, you know you are in Autumn!
― Mehmet Murat ildan 

Not here yet though…but I have thousands of Autumn pictures in my archives – what to choose?

For the dogs – Autumn is the best season. Many scents, cool temps and easy to dig around! Unfortunately Milo is still not ready to enjoy, not yet recovered, but in a month he will be ready for Autumn fun.

The galleries speak for themselves – some of my favourites. The perfect plate, magnificent mushrooms, splendid golden gates, water, birds and flowers. And the crisp light and air – Hope you enjoy!

Last week, our guest host, Joanna Mason, challenged us with “Everyone Should See This,” which brought many unique images in the responses. As I had some traumatical days and a severely injured dog, I will have to try visiting you this week instead.

Next week, the Lens-Artists Challenge is hosted by me, Ann-Christine/Leya. Be sure to visit my blog here so you don’t miss the challenge published on Saturday, October 11. To find out more about the Lens-Artists Challenge, click here.

Lens-Artists Challenge #365 – Longing

Egidio and Sofia both has introduced to me a wonderful and sensitive word: saudade.

Wikipedia defines saudade as

an emotional state of melancholic or profoundly nostalgic longing for a beloved yet absent someone or something. It is a recollection of feelings, experiences, places, or events, often elusive, that cause a sense of separation from the exciting, pleasant, or joyous sensations they once caused.

The word Saudade might translate ”longing”, but it holds so much more… and that is what I feel for the place where I grew up. Everything was sold and lost to us when my grandmother died in 1988. The piece of land where my grandparents worked so hard, the fruit trees, the raspberry field, the strawberry fields and all the vegetables. The gravel road leading up to the house – how many times have I walked it? I used to go there every day, before school and after school. Helping them with the picking, and packing the harvest to be sold.

Looking through some old photo albums for this challenge, I found these precious photos that I want to share with you. They are marked with time and were sitting in pressed plastic folders, so the quality is not that good. But they hold so much of my life, my gratefulness and saudade…

This is the house, and grandmother and grandfather picking black currants. They had hundreds of those bushes. I remember every piece of that path around the orchards, and the joy ( and sometimes tough work) of helping my grandparents. My mother and her brothers all helped out during harvest times. After we had finished for the day, we were rewarded with coffee and cake in the garden – and strawberries with creme of course.

Those where times when the sun seemed to shine every day and life was easy being surrounded by loving people. I only wish I had some more photos from when I was a child.

There is also another kind of longing – where we can return to the place we long for, even if we cannot go back to what it was the first time. Because everything changes, and so do we. Sometimes maybe the change is bigger within than in the particular place we are longing for.

The Azores is a place for much saudade. Faial, Flores and Corvo occupy many rooms in my heart.

When we hiked the island of Flores, in 2007, we were looking for the valley with eleven water falls. We could see it from afar, immersed in the lush greenery.

And when we finally reached it, we were all alone and could totally immerse ourselves too. Body and soul.

It was really an otherworldly place. Still today, I think of it as a Paradise.

The island of Faial is renowned, among other things, for its Hydrangea hedges. Instead of fences for the cattle, they have 3-5 meter high hedges.

Finally, the island floating in the sky and sea – Corvo. My heart aches for it.

Now, we are curious about what You are longing for! When you join the challenge and share your saudade, don’t forget to use the “lens-artists” hashtag so we can find your post in the Reader.

Your responses to Ritva’s challenge were wonderful last week. It was what we all needed – Next week, Tina returns with a new challenge. It will go live at noon EST in the USA. Tune in to find out more about the challenge then. Until then, take care and be kind.

Thursday Thoughts – Our Favourite Walk: Levada do Furado.

Time for our old favourite: Ribeiro Frio – Portela. The good old ”Landscapes of Madeira” book was in my pocket again.

Last time I walked this levada was when my mother was still with us and we decided to go to Madeira for a revival of good old hiking times. She was 75, and I knew this would be her last time here. Strangely enough, that is what we felt too, my husband and I, this year. This might be our last time, our last walk in Madeira. My husband is now the same age as my mother was in 2010, and we have been here so many times over the years.

The bus dropped us at Ribeiro Frio, and as usual its name was accurate – it was cold. This walk is 11 kilometers long and of moderate difficulty. Sure footedness and a head for heights is essential.

Let’s go – with beating heart and high expectations!

We decided to go to Balcoes first, where you can see all the way down to the sea. Misty mornings are not unusual …

… and this one was no exception. Luckily it lifted just in time for the great views!

So, where is the levada? This sidetrip to Balcoes does not follow a levada, but is truly worth it for the magnificent views.

As soon as there is a house or a road in sight – the path is adorned with Pride of Madeira. This is not their national flower though – which is the Strelizia.

We walked back to the starting point and Levada do Furado, where the main walk begins. It is a varied and beautiful walk, much travelled. Luckily it was not crowded at all, so it felt like good old times.

There are some steep parts, but in most places also good railings. A couple of tunnels as well, but today you can easily use your phone instead of the torch. We met many of the pretty Chaffinches – especially where hikers usually take a break to eat something. Totally unafraid of people they come jumping up to you, watching your every move with those pepper grain eyes.

At the restaurant in Portela, we had a well deserved dinner and a coffee, warming up a bit after the last 30 minutes of rain.

Oh, the scent, the lush landscape, the silent walk and the soothing trickle of water. I know mum would have loved it – again.

Was this really our last time? Well…