Lens-Artists Challenge #343 – Seen on my Last Outing

Every outing is a learning experience.

– Drew Pomeranz

What happened on Your last outing? Did you meet a friend or did you go shopping? Or maybe you just took a walk in the beautiful weather? What made you take out your camera? We’d love to know!

For a couple of days now, Spring has taken giant steps forward, and we see cranes and starlings – even the little wagtail is here. She used to come punctually on the 4th of April – but nature runs faster and faster… and well – she is already here. And she’s welcome.

Spring has returned. The Earth is like a child that knows poems.

– Rainer Maria Rilke

Spring is of course the main inspirer to take out my camera these days, but little outings can bring new and different things to tempt your lens – even things you did not expect when you left home!

The flowers of late winter and early spring occupy places in our hearts well out of proportion to their size.

– Gertrude S. Wister

This time I was looking for the little anemone hepatica – and I know where to find her. These anemonies are the harbingers of Spring, and their colours vary from indigo over light purple to very light blue. I love taking photos of them as they are reaching for the sunlight. In fact I almost take the same photos every year… maybe you recognise doing something like that too?

I feel a physical happiness when spring is coming. – Halldor Laxness

Milo is not that intrigued when I bring my camera, and he is not interested in either posing or the flowers. Rather a roll or two in the leaves – Not on the anemonies, Milo!!!

I also visited a newly found friend. I met her through an old friend of mine, and we have spent a couple of hours painting together. Now we were invited to her home, and the location of her house turned out to be a dream surprise.

If there is magic on this planet, it is contained in water.

– Loren Eiseley

As a child I always dreamt of having water running through my garden. It doesn’t have to be a river, a brook or creek would have been perfect. The pure harmony of the sound is soothing to every human ear – and I guess to nature itself.

Cats rule the world. – Jim Davis

Yes – I fell in love with her cat, Morris.

A real beauty – but a fast and cunning hunter as well, I learned. Cats are, of course, but he must have held some kind of record…

When my friend told me that Morris had caught five squirrels in a few days, and killed her garden robin and a wren… I was happy to have taken my photos before I knew about that. He was good at posing though –

Talking about posing nicely – the hectic love affairs going on in the pond made me sit down for a while to watch the multitude of frogs – I guess there where more than a hundred in that single spot. I caught this one smiling, while guarding its offspring… Who knows, one of them might be a prince? I can easily resort to fairy tales these days to forget about the craziness of this world.

So, what did I learn from my outing then? Good friends are priceless, Spring glory makes me happy and alive, I still love cats – and I agree with Cameron Diaz:

I’d kiss a frog even if there was no promise of a Prince Charming popping out of it. I love frogs.

Last week we had Egidio guiding us through Wild Life – thank you for all your exciting wild wonders, a treat every one of them!

Now I am looking forward to seeing your outings and what they brought! Link to my post and don’t forget the Lens-Artists tag. Next week Anne will be your host – please go to her site and get inspired!

Tursday Thoughts – A Time for Love

I had been waiting for this moment…

My granddaughter is to experience the same as I did as a child and as both my children did.

To follow the developing of a frog from start to finish. A Nature’s wonder – so clear to the eye. Last week we went to the pond to take some eggs home, and when the little frogs are fully fledged – with all four legs – we will return them to where they came from.

According to me, one of the best things to let a child experience. Patience and wonder.

Lens-Artists Challenge # 342 – It’s a Wild Life

The love for all living creatures is the most noble attribute of man.

– Charles Darwin

Egidio’s challenge this week is all about wildlife. My choices have to be mostly wild landscapes, and Iceland is one of them. Today I read about a new volcanic eruption near Grindavik – again. But people are used to it – being rather ”wild” themselves.

Another wild landscape is the jungle – in the Amazon there are still a multitude of creatures – even if human intrusions and atrocities are escalating. We should be very very anxious to keep these forests alive – if we want this planet to survive.

The Amazon was one of my greatest adventures. And the night walks were spectacular. The big spiders are not for me…to love, but it was a fantastic experience to see them too in real life. Clearly going by canoe is the perfect way to get close to the wildlife here.

The landscapes of the Galapagos islands are wild in another sense, there is almost no vegetation, but a multitude of animal species. Many of them are endemic, and if your read Darwin’s works you will realise that this is a veritable Paradise, where the animals have few enemies and you can come very close to many of them. I found the iguanas very interesting, both land iguanas and marine iguanas.

The land iguanas love the Opuntia cactus ( known as the prickly pear cactus), and eat it with relish. In the Galapagos islands it can grow up to 12 meters and the iguanas up to 1.30 meters length.

In Sweden, and in the other Nordic countries, the wildlife is of course different from that of a jungle…the biodiversity is not as big, but we do have big predators like bears, wolves and wolverines. The nearest wolf habitat is a forest only a kilometer away from my home.

I guess Sweden’s nature is most famous for Carl von Linne’ and his categorizing of it. So, here is his own wild flower – the tiny, delicate Linnaea borealis.

I would say one of the things carachterizing the wild life, is its resiliense and adaptability. But surely there is a limit… This bee sat frozen on a flower in my garden – representing my closest ”wild life”. It came alive again and started foraging with the warming sunlight.

It’s a wild life, Egidio says…and with dogs, at least my dogs – it really is!

The greatness of a nation can be judged by the way its animals are treated.

– Mahatma Gandhi

This past week, Tina’s challenge brought out many personal favorites. So beautiful responses! For this week, we’ll look forward to seeing what your wild imagination will focus on. Don’t forget to use the “lens-artists” hashtag for your post so we can easily find it in the Reader.

The first challenge for April will come from me, Leya/Ann-Christine. It will go live at noon EST in the USA. Tune in to find out more about the challenge then. Please see this page to learn more about the Lens-Artists Challenge and its history.

Lens-Artists Challenge #341 – Personal Favourites

You can look at a picture for a week and never think of it again. You can also look at a picture for a second and think of it all your life.
– Joan Miro

Tina has set the most difficult challenge ever… at least if you are a nature lover like me. Which five to choose from more than 100 000 pictures in Lightroom? Now I have chosen five pictures I often come back to – so I guess they are personal favourites. I was inspired by Tina to pick most of them from my own surroundings at home. That way I was automatically limited too.

So, this week our challenge is to choose no more than 5 images as our all-time personal favorites!

Sometimes you will never know the true value of a moment until it becomes a memory. — Unknown

My favourite dog breed is Lagotto, and these two guys were my first ones. Always together, always playing or sleeping or eating together. This photo shows their different characters perfectly well. Mille is the brown and wild one, while Totti is the ”monitor” and supervisor. He was very laid back too.

We were fortunate to have them in our lives for 12 years each, and they will always stay close to my heart.

Only photograph what you love. – Tim Walker

The land of my dreams is Iceland, and we have visited several times – never disappointed in our favourite destination. Some years ago we went in winter instead of summer – the hot spring baths are at their best when there is snow and ice. One evening we went to the black beach in the south of Iceland to see the sunset. And like everything else in Iceland – it was magical.

Don’t shoot what it looks like. Shoot what it feels like. — David Alan Harvey

In 2020 we went to an art exhibition some 20 kilometers from my home – which ended in me mostly taking photos of the entrance windows instead of the art…The window was overgrown with vines and an enigmatic golden light shining through.

I wish that all of nature’s magnificence, the emotion of the land, the living energy of place could be photographed. – Annie Leibovitz

I think many of you know how much I love winter and snow, and how climate change has deprived us of this in later years. Some days still have the old glory, and this photo was taken on such a day, when the light was perfect and the air crisp and clear. Bitter sweet memories.

Photography is a love affair with life. — Burk Uzzle

This aster I photographed in my garden, an autumn some years ago. I woke up to frost and a clear sky, and as I looked out of my bedroom window, I knew there would be a short photo option not to be missed.

The best images are the ones that retain their strength and impact over the years, regardless of the number of times they are viewed.
– Anne Geddes

Thank you, Tina, for another challenging challenge!

So now it’s your turn. Share with us your five favorite images making sure to link them to Tina’s post and to use the Lens-Artists Tag. We so look forward to seeing your choices! Last week Ritva challenged us to focus on portraiture. As usual your responses were terrific. Many of us wondered how to manage such a challenge, but ended up more satisfied than expected! Finally, we hope you’ll join us next week at noon EST when Egidio once again leads us on his Through Brazilian Eyes post. Until then, be kind and enjoy the adventure.

Thursday Thoughts on a Friday in March

Spring beauties at home! Nature is waking up – and so are we. The vernal equinox was yesterday – so, now every day gets a bit brighter. Breathe!

The Hazel looks glorious, shining in the sun.

Blue anemonies are peeping out from their winter rest.

Hawfinch and Eurasian Siskin seen through my window. Feeding will continue some more weeks. We still have our nights below zero.

Wishing you a great weekend!