Day 44 – Camellia

1_Camelia

This may well be the last blossom my Camellia bush puts out this year. I have been photographing it off and on throughout the project but never came up with an image I liked until now.

My reading today in John O’Donohue’s book is about “The restless beauty of the Ocean”. I wish I had a new ocean picture to share with you. Maybe before the project is over…. Meanwhile I can really relate to John’s words:

The words ‘sea’ and ‘ocean’ are too small to image such wild divinity. The ocean is beyond language. The flow of the ocean presents a most beautiful dance.

Day 41 – Trillium

Trillium

My Mom always says the Trillium must be in bloom before you can find morels. I’m here to tell you it was not for lack of Trillium that I came home empty handed today.

I confess, I skipped ahead a couple section to John’ discussion of Yellow:

The color yellow holds such warmth, brightness and attraction for us because it is the color of the source that sustains us.

Day 40 – Lilac

Lilac

In the space of a week the Lilacs went from perfection to over the hill. This one still looked pretty good though. Apologies for misidentifying yesterday’s image. It is Periwinkle not Honeysuckle. Thanks to Gail Anderson for catching me out.

I had to read a long way today to find the word beauty even mentioned as John O’Donhue explored the concepts of light and darkness, black and white. Then he moved on to “the Passion of Red” and I found this in the first sentence of that section:

The night breaks when the red fire of dawn is kindled and the world glows again in the beauty of color.

I can envision a book in which I go back and attach these quotes to exactly the right photograph. This one definitely belongs with a sunrise picture.

Day 35 – Lady Bug on Lupine

LadyBug

I was photographing my neighbor’s Lupine and happened upon this lady bug so of course she had to become the star of the show.

I’ve moved on to John O’Donohue’s chapter on the Color of Beauty and today’s quote is very appropriate for today’s photograph:

In a world without color, it would be impossible to imagine beauty; for color and beauty are sisters.