Tell me a Story: June 2018

I can hardly believe that we are halfway through the year already.  Seems like just the other day it was Christmas and we were rushing around with Amy and Daniel.  I was home alone and decided that I wanted to get out but not for too long.  The temperature outside is climbing, but even worse the humidity.  May and June have been very wet months and the humidity level is super high.

So a quick outing is about 10 minutes away from me.  The local park has a small walk through the bushes.  Outside of that walk is a small butterfly garden.  So that is where I was headed.  However, the butterflies were not in abundance and those that were out were not sitting still.  So today’s blog is more about the different flowers and a number of lizards that I came across, including the little on clutching onto the stem of a flower.

I had taken my macro with the intention of getting up really close however, I did like the creaminess of the images taken with the macro, so I opted not to go in close as a post edit.

 

South County Park: June 10, 2018:  5343

South County Park: June 10, 2018:  5384

South County Park: June 10, 2018:  5347

South County Park: June 10, 2018:  5321

South County Park: June 10, 2018:  5322

South County Park: June 10, 2018: 5324

South County Park: June 10, 2018:  5325

South County Park: June 10, 2018:  5397

South County Park: June 10, 2018:  5329

South County Park: June 10, 2018:  5346

South County Park: June 10, 2018:  5330

South County Park: June 10, 2018:  5333

South County Park: June 10, 2018:  5338

South County Park: June 10, 2018:  5372

South County Park: June 10, 2018:  5341

South County Park:  June 10, 2018

Thanks for strolling along with me, I hope you enjoyed the different flora and lizards that I came across.

This is a circle blog and I am looking forward to seeing what everyone else has got up to this month.  Follow the link here to see what my fellow blogger and friend Kim of Kim Sidwell Photography has for you this month, Don’t forget to leave a little love on their pages.

You can also find me on FacebookFlickrInstagramGoogle+ and Viewbug.

30 Minutes in the Life: June 2018

Growing up with an English grandmother living in our home, the ritual of tea drinking was a common place occurrence.  We did not drink coffee very often.  Moving to the USA, I quickly changed to drinking coffee but over the past few years I have reverted back to drinking tea.

Recently my immediate supervisor at work retired, and the ladies in her leadership team decided to take her to the Serenity Tea House for her farewell.  Nestled in among the old houses of West Palm Beach, Serenity Tea House is an interestingly charming place to visit.  Each room is made up of typically English style decor, with knick knacks and tea sets laid out among many rooms.

While everyone was chatting and waiting on the pre-ordered menu of high tea, I took the opportunity to go for a quick walk around the house.  Obviously there were other guests besides our group so I tried to not get people in the images or to disturb their experience at this beautiful tea house.

The high tea started out with a tomato bisque soup and then the tower of food.  We had two different pots of tea and I was able to order one of my favorites vanilla tea.  That reminded me of my dear friend Gavin who has now passed away.  I would go to visit and he would only share his vanilla tea with me.  Said I was one of the few who really appreciated.  I sure did.

Serenity Tea House:  June 5, 2018: 5238Serenity Tea House:  June 5, 2018: 5177Serenity Tea House:  June 5, 2018:  5179Serenity Tea House:  June 5, 2018: 5183Serenity Tea House:  June 5, 2018: 5173Serenity Tea House:  June 5, 2018: 5181Serenity Tea House:  June 5, 2018: 5189Serenity Tea House:  June 5, 2018:  5187Serenity Tea House:  June 5, 2018: 5186Serenity Tea House:  June 5, 2018: 5180Serenity Tea House:  June 5, 2018:  5190Serenity Tea House:  June 5, 2018: 5184Serenity Tea House:  June 5, 2018: 5196Serenity Tea House:  June 5, 2018:  5195Serenity Tea House:  June 5, 2018:  5194Serenity Tea House:  June 5, 2018: 5198Serenity Tea House:  June 5, 2018: 5199Serenity Tea House:  June 5, 2018: 5208Serenity Tea House:  June 5, 2018: 5478Serenity Tea House:  June 5, 2018: 5210Serenity Tea House:  June 5, 2018: 5216Serenity Tea House:  June 5, 2018: 5202Serenity Tea House:  June 5, 2018: 5233Serenity Tea House:  June 5, 2018: 5234

If you have not visited a traditional English tea house I would certainly encourage you to do so.  Pricier than a coffee shop, the experience is always worth the little extra you may pay.

Thank you for joining me for this month’s 30 Minutes in Life.  For the rest of the blog group, please take time to visit my friend and fellow blogger Sarah  of Sarah Keene Photography .and see what she has for you this month.   Keep following the circle of photographers to see what the other photographers, from the US and around the world,  have shared this month. Don’t forget to leave a little love on their pages.

You can also find me on FacebookFlickrInstagramViewbug and Google+

 

 

Inspired by Life: June 2018

Inspired by Life is very apt when it comes to Dragonflies.  I hate mosquito’s and dragonflies love mosquito.  On the flip side Dragonflies are a tasty little treat for baby birds.  I remember watching the first 8 day life cycle of Redwing Blackbird chicks.  The female would often bring home a dragonfly as food for the chicks.  For each there is a place.

The wetlands have seen few dragonfly over the past couple of years so it was nice to get out and walk around and see them flitting from one plant to another.  Catching them on camera was a totally different story.  Just when you have the lighting right and the focus almost perfect, they up and fly away.  What I have learned though is very often they will come back to the same plant.

For me I am always happy to see an abundance of dragonfly in my garden.  The last few weeks after all the rain we have had they do seem to be in abundance.  I also same some damselfly.  However, they did not sit still long enough for me to capture them.  Next time I think I will go out with my macro and see what I can come up with.

I hope you enjoy the different species of dragonfly that I managed to find.

Green Cay Wetlands: June 3, 2018: 5005

Four Spotted Pennant

Green Cay Wetlands: June 3, 2018: 5011

Four Spotted Pennant

Green Cay Wetlands: June 3, 2018: 5014

Halloween Pennant

Green Cay Wetlands: June 3, 2018: 5016

Four Spotted Pennant

Out on the back canal: June 9, 2018: 5329

Orange Meadowhawk

Green Cay Wetlands: June 3, 2018:

Four Spotted Pennant

Out on the back canal: June 9, 2018: 5243

Orange Meadowhawk

Green Cay Wetlands: June 3, 2018: 5068

Blue Dasher

Out on the back canal: June 9, 2018: 5257

Needhams Skimmer

Green Cay Wetlands: June 3, 2018: 5072

Four Spotted Pennant

Out on the back canal: June 9, 2018: 5260

Needhams Skimmer

Green Cay Wetlands: June 3, 2018: 5082

Scarlet Skimmer

Out on the back canal: June 9, 2018: 5265

Needhams Skimmer

Green Cay Wetlands: June 3, 2018: 5084

Four Spotted Pennant

Out on the back canal: June 9, 2018: 5287

Needhams Skimmer

Green Cay Wetlands: June 3, 2018: 5085

Four Spotted Pennant

Green Cay Wetlands: June 3, 2018: 5134

Four Spotted Pennant

Dragonfly are fun to watch.  They are really busy little critters.  And if you happen to get up close to them you will find that often they are chomping on something.  Their mouths are going all the time.  Their eyes are incredible when you manage to capture them in macro and all over the dragonfly is a pretty cool critter.

Thank you for joining me for this month’s Inspired by Life.    This is a circle blog although we are a little on the light side this month. Please take time to visit my friend Ceri  of Ceri Herd Photography and see what she has for you this month. Keep following the circle to see what the other photographers have shared this month. Don’t forget to leave a little love on her pages.

You can also find me on FacebookFlickrInstagramGoogle+ and Viewbug.

10 on 10: June 2018

This past month we had a staff retreat at the home where we traditionally have our Christmas luncheon.  Every year I take my camera with me, except this year.  I decided I was not going to.  There are only so many things you can take in the garden.  Mmm, maybe not my best decision.  Out in the garden was an enormous amount of orchids and all I had was my cellphone

Orchids remind me of my dad.  My father used to grow orchids.  He initially started out with this really small orchid house.  Perhaps 100 orchids, maybe a few more.  One day we came home to visit and my father was in the process of building a bigger and better hot house for his orchids which I might add took up half the garden.

My dad died in 1995 but the memories are still so vivid. Dad loved that hot house.  Each day he would go outside and make sure that the sprinklers were working.  Each orchid had to get it’s nutrients. He would spend hours in the hothouse, pottering around.  He would split up the orchids, trim the roots, make sure the potting mix was the best he could make up.  He tended his plants with love and care.

My son loved to go into Grampa’s flower house as a toddler.  Grampa on the other hand, watched him like a hawk.  Cameron had a habit of beheading flowers.

I spent a lot of time trying to find different orchids for my dad.  I specialized in the unusual.  In his orchid house he had Dendrobium orchids, Cattleya orchids, Dancing ladies orchids, Paphiopedlium “Slipper” orchids, Encyclia Orchids, Oncidium orchids, Phalaenopsis orchids, Vanda orchids and some whose names I do not even remember.

I remember one year an orchid flowered through the bottom of the hanging basket.  It produced these large plastic looking flowers.  The flowers were stunning.  My dad brought the plant into the house to display and we all looked at it with admiration.  And then we went to sleep and the next morning we thought we were going to die.  The whole house stank something awful and the plant was quickly removed outside again.

Cymbidium orchids were the trickiest and the hardest for him to grow.  Living on the coast we had a much warmer climate.  Cymbidium orchids need a cold snap to produce flowers .

I remember the 2nd last week of his life.  He was still able to get up and move around.  I was spending the week with him knowing it was going to be my last week.  Each morning dad and I would make our way through to the orchid house and he would take care of his flowers.  I asked a lot of questions in that week telling him he was going to have to teach me more about his hobby, yet knowing full well, that time was so short.  By the time my dad died the following week, he had managed to accumulate over 4000 orchids.

My mom’s green finger was like mine – we tend to replace rather than grow.  Orchids hold a special place in my heart.  When I see them I see my dad, and I see his brother Robert who was another orchid hobbyist.

I hope you enjoy the beauty of nature’s creations.

IMG_9122[22492]Orchids:  May 8, 2018: 9123Orchids:  May 8, 2018: 9124Orchids:  May 8, 2018: 9125Orchids:  May 8, 2018: 9126Orchids:  May 8, 2018: 9127Orchids:  May 8, 2018: 9128Orchids:  May 8, 2018: 9129Orchids:  May 8, 2018: 5472Orchids:  May 8, 2018: 9132

Thank you for joining me for this month’s 10 on 10.  This is a circle blog.  Please take time to visit my good friend Ceri of Ceri Herd Photography and see what she has for you this month. Keep following the circle to see what the other photographers have shared this month. Don’t forget to leave a little love on their pages.

You can also find me on FacebookFlickrInstagramGoogle+ and Viewbug.

Share Six: June 2018: Abstract

How can we be halfway through the year already??  This year is just flying by and I feel like I still have so much to do.

This month for the Share Six theme Ceri of Ceri Herd Photography chose the theme Abstract.  I am in my element here.  I love abstract art.  I haven’t made a lot of it but today I got to play around a little and see what I could come up with.

I encourage you to go and play and make some abstract art – it is kind of addictive.

Abstract: October 20, 2014: 0882

For this image I just chose to do some selective cropping to capture the stalks and the bokeh and hopefully to give it that abstract feel.

Abstract:  November 14, 2014: 4740

I would love to say that this was ICM – Intentional Camera Movement, but it was not.  The bird moved and I did too, but I loved the abstract effect of this image.

ARM Loxahatchee National Park: June 22, 2017: 5128

Believe it of not this was an abstract sunset created with a Lensbaby Sweet 35 as seen below, which is the actual image.  In this image, I used Photoshop to create the effect.  First I opened the image, then created a duplicate layer.  I went to Filters, and chose Pixulate and then Pointilize.  I set the dots at a fairly large size.  Next step was to go to Filters, Blur and chose radial blur.  I then chose zoom and best.  Once I got the spiral result, I then went to my adjustment tools and used the saturation tool to change the color of the image from browns to blues.

ARM Loxahatchee National Park: June 22, 2017: 5128

So this was the origianl image used for the blue version above.  For me this is abstract that I love.  This is create with the Lensbaby Sweet 35 and it is captured by turned the lens to a blur position.

Bokeh:  November 14, 2017: 6756

This was traffic lights, and I captured this image with the Lensbaby Sweet 35.  Once again I turned the lens to a obvious blur position.

Tulips: April 7, 2015 9680

This is a black and white image of a poppy interior.  In this image, I used Photoshop to create the effect.  First I opened the image, then created a duplicate layer.  I went to Filters, and chose Pixulate and then Mezzotint, and I chose the setting medium lines.  Next step was to go to Filters, Blur and chose radial blur.  I then chose zoom and best.  Once I got the spiral result, I then went to my adjustment tools and just played with light and dark.

ARM Loxahatchee National Park: June 22, 2017: 5135

I know I gave you an extra one.  I was not planning to give you the example for the blue abstract image but I changed my mind.  Another one of my abstract favorites.  In this image I used a Lensbaby Double Focus lens, and again took it to the blur position to get these results.

Thank you for joining me for this month’s Share Six.  This is a circle blog.  From the sneak peak images I have seen, you are going to want to follow the circle.  Please take time to visit my friend and very talented artist Ceri of Ceri Herd Photography and see what she has for you this month. Keep following the circle to see what the other photographers have shared this month.  Don’t forget to leave a little love on their page as well.

You can also find me on FacebookFlickrInstagramGoogle+ and Viewbug.

Now it is your turn. Don’t forget to like us on Facebook at Share Six and come and share your images on the theme {Abstract} throughout the month of June.  A new theme will come out on July 6.

Remember you can follow us on Instagram at @sharesix  and tag your images #sharesix_abstract.

You can also find the Share Six webpage at http://www.sharesix.wordpress.com

We look forward to seeing your images on the theme {Abstract}