Memento mori
Yet another vacant lot in Asbury Park where urban blight is being reimagined daily as art (or kitsch?) The long abandoned foundation pillars were wrapped in colorful fabric months ago by a local artist; the stone cairns and mementos left behind lately seem a futile offering to the fickle gods of real estate development.
*from Memento Mori by Billy Collins
Seen along the boardwalk
A little boy’s (almost) smile
These made me smile today.
Linda lets me borrow her kids from time to time, to amuse myself from behind the camera. I love the open, unguarded faces of children. I love these particular children for their brown skin and laughing eyes, for the babytalk we share in Spanish, for the silliness they’re learning from their mom.
Wordless Wednesday – Banded
Mid-week bunny fix
Currently quite the rage among bunny breeders, but I sneeze just looking at them.
Those floppy ears can be as much as 22 inches long… kinda silly, I think, but breeders entertain themselves this way.
(snark)
Imagine that! I have to commend this group, unlike those at my local county fair, for actually engaging the public and letting us pet and enjoy the bunnies there on display. Usually the bunnies are left to pant for days in the heat, poked at by passerby, for the sake of a blue show ribbon. Getting the bunnies out of their cages where interested folks could touch them lovingly makes so much more sense, don’t you think?
Tern, tern, tern
This is a poem
about death,
about the heart blanching
in its folds of shadows
because it knows
someday it will be
the fish and the wave
and no longer itself–
it will be those white wings,
flying in and out
of the darkness
but not knowing it–
this is a poem about loving
the world and everything in it:
the self, the perpetual muscle,
the passage in and out, the bristling
swing of the sea.
–The Terns by Mary Oliver from House of Light, 1990
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All Commons, I guess. The Leasts are just too quick to photograph in the air. They’re still feeding babies on my favorite sandbar at Horseshoe Cove on Sandy Hook, but today there were far fewer loafing around. Maybe it’s just that the tide was higher this time.
I’m collecting tern poems if anyone has any to share…
Sea swallows
Field guides will tell you that terns are closely related to gulls and suggest that, because of similar feeding habits and a shared gregariousness, one might find all members of the Laridae family of birds equally deserving of our admiration.
That might be true for you, but I mostly ignore gulls in favor of terns. Exceptions to that are the handsome summer presence of Laughing Gulls and the dainty Bonaparte’s in winter.
In terns I see long fast wings that dance over the sun-dappled sea as it heaves at my feet…
and
the hover-and-plunge feeding technique so suited to little waves and the little fish they pluck from the shadows…
and
the dark eyes and sharp downward-pointed bills, the rising cloud of white birds and the storm of their cries all around me…
A particular joy at this time of the season, late July, when young terns and young osprey at Sandy Hook are learning to fish and to make their way in the world is to place myself among them on the bay near to sunset: behind every shell or pebble or bit of sea-drift is the possibility of a young bird waiting for its next meal delivery; a feathered army of birds marching ahead of me until finally I settle myself amongst them, drenched and soggy in the tide, sand-covered and happy.
: )
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Photos:
#1: Common or Forster’s? I’m thinking Common, but would welcome hints!
#2: Young Least Tern, begging (and squealing, almost!)
Bad bird photo of the week
Blackberry
It’s hard to appreciate in this photo, but when the sun hits it just right…
: )
So long as it gets me to work and back I’m happy, but a new car is kind of an occasion…
and this one makes me laugh when I see it…
IT’S PURPLE!!
and it reminds me not to take myself too seriously…
(important!)
I christened it properly this evening with a trip to the beach and a gallon of sand.