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Showing posts with label Mom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mom. Show all posts

Saturday, October 17, 2009

Iguana know more



These two photos are of Mexican Iguanas in the Yucatan Pennisula.
My mom took these photos while on vacation down there this summer.



They are supposedly vegetarian.

And, if you feed one...20 more will appear.

My mom fed them.

This one is running off with a piece of bread she gave it.



They're huge!
And pretty cool looking.

I can't imagine just seeing them all over the place, like they are there.

Grab a camera and a critter and join Camera Critters!


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Friday, October 16, 2009

Ironic

Can you see what I'm talking about?



You might have to click on the photo to see it closer.

Sunday, March 15, 2009

I think I killed the Shoe Fairy


Last night I was up late on the computer, when I heard a strange noise.
It sounded like tap dancing...coming from my bathroom.

I woke up Annie, the vicious attack dog,
and grabbed one of my kids' Star Wars light sabers...
and headed into the bathroom...

just in time to see my gigantic pile of dirty laundry fall onto the shoe fairy.

I think I killed her.

But the good news is, she left behind...











Ok, maybe I lied.





I do that sometimes.





I'm a writer.
I'm creative.
I can't help it.






My mom was about to get rid of a bunch of shoes she can't wear anymore.




And she gave them to me!

Woohoo!!






Saturday, February 28, 2009

Ladies Only


I love the weekend...for so many reasons.

One of them being, it's time for Camera Critters!!


And since my mom has been helping out with the blog this week, guest posting,
I thought I use some of her photos for today.


It's all about the Ladies...




Ladybugs, I mean.





She took these photos in Monterrey, California.

Did you see my mom's post on whales earlier this week?
Awesome photos.





Ladybugs are good luck.
I'm not sure why.


If I saw this many in one day, I'd go buy a lottery ticket!




What do you consider Good Luck?


You know the drill.
Grab a camera, find a critter and join Camera Critters!


Camera Critters


Friday, February 27, 2009

Flower Fetish

This is another guest post by my mother, Katherine.
She's been wonderful helping out with the blog this week.
She really helps out when I need her.

**********************************************************************************

So, I have a flower fetish.


Wikipedia tells me that a fetish can be, among other things, an attribution of mystical qualities given to inanimate objects.

Are flowers inanimate?



Apparently "inanimate" means not endowed with life or spirit.
Surely flowers have life ... if not spirit.
They certainly stir up my life and spirit.


This first photo is of a Protea.
Proteas were first seen (or noted) at the Cape of Good Hope in the 1600s.
They came to Europe in the 1700s.
They are also known as "sugarbushes."

What a great word: SUGARBUSH.


This is a pink mink protea, below.
Doesn't it look animate?
The petals look like fur.




The flowers were first called Proteas because they were named after the Greek god Proteus who could change his form at will.
This is because Proteas can appear so different from one another.

A close up of another Protea.






Here's a really large Protea with a bee.






The bee has large, orange pollen sacs on its legs.
Pretty neat way to carry pollen.

I'm assuming this is sort of a bee's eye view.





This next flower is some sort of Anthurium (also called "boy flower").
These are really strange looking boy flowers.







And, they are guarded by a group of carved Tiki gods.
I think the middle one looks like an alien.
Perhaps this is Rhea's proof of Aliens seen by the ancients.






If you want to know more about Hawaiin Tiki gods, click here:
Click here: hawaiian tiki gods history

If you want to know more about Protea and Aliens, you're on your own.

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Cloud Groupies

Did you know there are people out there who are really into clouds?

I mean, clouds are cool...
and who doesn't like them.

I've taken some amazing photos of clouds.

There were the ones that looked like an alien invasion...
and the other ones that looked like alien penguins fell from the sky.

What?
You don't see it?
You have to admit they're amazing though.


Anyway, these super-cloud groupies...they formed a group.

They're called the Cloud Appreciation Society.



As you can see, they sell books...and clothes and calendars.

Here's their manifesto:

The following is the Cloud Appreciation Society's declaration of principles:

  • We believe that clouds are unjustly maligned and that life would be immeasurably poorer without them.
  • We think that they are Nature’s poetry, and the most egalitarian of her displays, since everyone can have a fantastic view of them.
  • We pledge to fight ‘blue-sky thinking’ wherever we find it. Life would be dull if we had to look up at cloudless monotony day after day.
  • We seek to remind people that clouds are expressions of the atmosphere’s moods, and can be read like those of a person’s countenance.
  • Clouds are so commonplace that their beauty is often overlooked. They are for dreamers and their contemplation benefits the soul. Indeed, all who consider the shapes they see in them will save on psychoanalysis bills.
  • And so we say to all who’ll listen: Look up, marvel at the ephemeral beauty, and live life with your head in the clouds!


They sound a little cloud-nutty, but ultimately, their message is nice.
They say, stop and look at the clouds and appreciate them.

A more atmospheric version of "stop and smell the roses."

Nature's tea leaves to read the atmosphere's moods? I don't know...

Go outside RIGHT NOW and look up.
Do you see clouds?
What do they look like to you?
Use your imagination, what shapes do you see?

Are you any kind of groupie?

My mom started writing this post, but I hijacked it and make it into my own.
hehe

I'm crooked like that.

And, if you're really into weather, supernatural and romance,
boy have I got a fun book series for you to read.

The Weather Warden books.





Tuesday, February 24, 2009

A Whale of a Tale

Hi Rhea's blog world! I'm Rhea's Mom, Katherine.
In a weak moment, I agreed to be a guest blogger this week.
I'm new at this, so be patient with me.
As Rhea mentioned, my husband and I just returned from Maui.
It's whale season there right now.





The endangered, Northern Pacific Humpback whales trek 3,000 miles from Alaska to have their babies
or breed in the safe, warmer waters of Maui. Why Maui? Who knows?
But, it's a pretty fabulous place for humans, too!






The Humpbacks eat plankton, krill and small fish found in northern Pacific water. These food sources aren't present in Maui. So, the humpbacks fast, and live off their fat reserves while in Hawaii.

It's like a weight loss, spa trip into warmer waters ... except for the ones having babies.

The moms weigh about 40 tons, and are about 42-45 feet long.
The sound of a 40 ton whale breaching the water and plopping back down is incredible!
No one knows if they breach to play ... or to knock off parasites. Maybe both.
Or maybe they're trying to run off those pesky males that want to breed.









They also release "spouts" which you can see from far away. I love how the spouts glisten in the sunlight. The spouts are actually whales exhaling.






We went out on a whale watching expedition. Actually, we were in awe of these creatures, and went out three times. I got so close to one whale that I got sprayed by her spout! This whale was a juvenille, and probably weighed about 20 tons.







She held our boat hostage for about an hour as she played with us ... and swam under and around our boat, over and over again. Several times, she came up to look at us.





Baby humpbacks are born weighing about 3,000 pounds (that's about what my car weighs), and they drink 100 gallons of milk a day. They gain several pounds a day. Whale milk is about 50% fat.
There are many amazing facts about the world's largest mammal.

And, this is the whale's fluke! .... the tail's end! And, the end of my tale.






Thanks for letting me join the blogging world today, and be a guest on Rhea's blog.
She's such a fabulous, creative, and loving daughter.
More on that, another time.


Saturday, February 21, 2009

Inflate your sac to show you love me.



Today's photos are from my mom,
who recently returned from a trip to Hawaii with her husband.

She's an amazing photographer, among other things.

I can't wait to share her whale shots with you next week.

But, for now,
Here are some pictures she took of a male African Grey-Crowned Crane
in Kula Botanical Garden in Maui.





This bird has a seriously awesome "do."

My hair frequently looks like this, actually.






These are the only cranes that can roost in trees,
because of a long hind toe that can grasp branches.

I want a long hind toe that can grasp things.
That's awesome.





The Grey Crowned Crane has a breeding display involving dancing, bowing, and jumping.
It also makes a honking sound quite different from the trumpeting of other crane species.
It has a booming call which involves inflation of the red gular sac.






I don't know about you, but nothing quite says "I love you" like the inflation of the red gular sac.



What are you waiting for?
Grab a camera & a critter!
Join the Camera Critters weekend meme!



Camera Critters


Saturday, June 14, 2008

Lots of good luck - Camera Critters





These wonderful Ladybug photos are curtesy of a Guest Photographer, my mother, while she was traveling in the Monterey Bay area of California.
Want to join Camera Critters?
Just grab a camera, snap a photo of a critter
and post it online!


Camera Critters
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