15 Replies to “Exodus”

  1. doronart – Due to illness I found Painting... what a discovery! I hope that following my blog you will get some encouragement to pick up a brush and paint yourself.... it is easy everyone can.
    doronart says:

    great picture

  2. egghill – Was enjoying photography and retirement until my youngest son contracted Valley Fever while working. Now, I haven’t written any posts or taken many photos (very few anyway). I struggle with remembering all my settings since not using them. There are plans afoot to start my blog again.
    egghill says:

    I am amazed at your talent of having just the right words to bring the photos alive. A true poet!

  3. Beautifully soft and white, bending to the inevitable, her work done and her seeds ready to depart and regenerate into another beautiful wild flowering plant.

  4. sharonstjoan – Poet, writer, and advocate for wildlife, wild lands, and the earth. President, Forest Voices of India - a U.S.-based group which aids charities in India that further education, culture, the well-being of women, children, and animals, and the restoration of sacred groves. websites: https://wordpress.com/view/forestvoicesofindia.com https://wordpress.com/view/echoesinthemist.com https://wordpress.com/view/wildvoices.world book: Glimpses of Kanchi https://www.amazon.com/Glimpses-Kanchi-Sharon-St-Joan/dp/1982901179/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=Glimpses+of+Kanchi&qid=1581769003&sr=8-1
    sharonstjoan says:

    Reblogged this on Voices and Visions.

  5. Dr. Denny Wilkins – Dr. Denny Wilkins professes journalism at a small, private university in the Northeast. He has climbed, hiked, kayaked, photographed, skied, and otherwise meandered aimlessly throughout the American West for decades. He has degrees in geology, environmental studies, and communication — and has tried to make use of them as a co-founder of the progressive cultural blog ScholarsandRogues.com. He’s broadly interested in how the world works and why it works that way. He hates writing, although he does like having written well.
    Dr. Denny says:

    So that’s aster. Thanks. All this time I thought I was posting images of goldenrod. I wish I knew more about what’s growing in my backyard. I appreciate the education that often comes with your images.

    1. Asters and goldenrod are from the same “plant tribe”: Asteraceae and there are scads of versions of each one and very, very difficult to tell apart. The only way I know for sure is when I’ve seen them in bloom.
      Thanks for all your kind comments.

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