Tag Archives: purple

Hellebore

Hellebore

Spring has definitely sprung, if the flowers have anything to say about it. First came the iris, and now the bright yellow splotches of daffodils are blooming in spots of the yard. I’ve noticed some tulip buds coming up but it’s apparently still too early for them – at least, here in Yakima. The hellebore have been in bloom since March. I never really gave much glance to these perennials but as I look at them more closely, they are, indeed, lovely. They are also poisonous, accodring to what I have read (so no hellebore salads – ahem). I’ll content myself with photos of these beautiful blooms.

Copyright Rebecca L. Latson, all rights reserved

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Filed under 1DX Mk II, Canon, Canon EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS II USM, Canon Lens, flowers, Photography, Seasons, Spring

Spring Has Sprung

6081_Little Purple Flowers

I wrote a post awhile back about Brazos Bend State Park  in the winter.  This post is about Brazos Bend State Park in the spring – well, almost spring – I visited 3 days prior to the official first day of spring (March 20).  I wanted to see if anything had  changed since my winter visit.  Plus, I didn’t have to return the Canon 100-400mm rental lens for two more days.

First thing I noticed:  water.  More of it.  In all the places that had been high and dry before.  In case you were not aware, Texas has been experiencing a horrendous drought.  Everything that should be wet and swampy, instead was dull  brown dirt covered over with  clumps of green dry slime that reminded me of  nori (seaweed).  For this visit, everything looked as it should look in a swampland.

5206_SwampGreenREV

5122_Swamp Flora CROP

5293_SwampVeg

5561_Spanish Moss

5490_Swampland

I saw more spring flowers, like these primroses,

5387_Primrose CROP

and this herbertia,

5571_trefoil

and these spider lilies,

5009_Spider Lilies

and this sweet little purple flower which I can’t identify (I’m not very good with wildflower identification, even with two Texas wildflower books in my possession).  Anybody know what this flower is?  The photo at the very beginning of this post is a wider-angle shot.

6040-2_Fuschia

I saw Indian paintbrush, blowing in the wind.

6095_Indian Paintbrush

And these yellow flowers (which I can’t identify, either), in the swamp waters.

5659_Yellow

There were more alligators.  I overheard one set of walkers tell another set of walkers that during the mating season in April, the alligators get quite aggressive and can sometimes be seen clamped to each other’s necks, rolling over and over in the water or even along the pathway.  Now that would be a photograph!  All I saw were alligators lounging in the still, reflective swamp waters, posing for the tourists and looking menacing; it really doesn’t take much for an alligator to look menacing, and woe betide the person who so close as to elicit  a low, rumbling growl from deep within, as the alligator’s jaws gape open to warn the hapless visitor to back off.

5640_Alligator Reflection

5339-3_Eyes On You

5354-3_Alligator Eye

5871_Toothy Grin

6019-2_Lurking

I saw lots more birds.  It’s ironic that my photos of the alligators turned out better than my photos of the birds, since the birds were  the main reason I drove to the park that day  (0f course, alligators don’t’ move much, while birds move  a lot).  I saw three different little blue herons (you can tell they are the little blues by their brilliant blue beak),

5751_Herons Reflection

5797_Little Blue Heron

Spying lunch:

5926_Spying The Prey

Taking the plunge.

5927_In For The Kill

Crawfish catch of the day:

5928_Catch Of The Day

Lunch!

5929_Catch Of The Day2

I saw a number of snowy egrets,

5418_Snowy Egret

5447_Snowy Egret

roseate spoonbills (way off in the distance, so it’s not exactly a stellar image),

5399_Spoonbill

cardinals,

5889_Redbird

5849_Cardinal

red-winged blackbirds,

5283_Red Wing Blackbird

white ibis,

5362_Ibis

5254-2_Ibis Eye

American coots,

5156_American Coot

5168_HelloThere

turtles,

5697-2_Turtle On Log

5714-2_Turtle Head

one moorhen in its breeding plumage (none of my photos turned out very well), and a number of other little birds that I could not identify nor could I photograph very well (they just won’t stand still for me, dammit!).

The next time I visit will be later in the summer.  We’ll see what other changes (if any) have occurred during that season.

5815_The Wide Path

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Filed under Brazos Bend State Park, flowers, Parks, Photography, Seasons, Spring

Easter Egg Salad Sandwich

I got this wild idea the other day for some great photographs and just couldn’t wait until the actual holiday.   Even though it’s a month early and not a Sunday, I figure the Easter Bunny must have started early in some country somewhere. 

Besides, I was hungry.

1986_Ready To Boil

1992_Boiling Eggs

2002_Boiling Eggs

2009_Eggs and Dye

2037_Eggs and Dye

2047_Eggs in Dye

2051_Dying The Eggs

2055_Colored Eggs

3219_Eggs In The Carton

2098_Basket of Eggs

3300_Eggs In A Basket

2104_Eggs In A Basket_CROP

2123_Eggs in a Basket

2196_In The Fridge

3324_Easter Egg Shells

2239_Egg Salad Fixins

2268_Egg Salad Sandwich

Yum Yum!  Open-mouthed smile

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Filed under Cooking, Easter, Holidays, Photography

Spring

Spring – I’m wishing for it.

Spring is one of the most beautiful times of year here in Texas, and the weather is pretty much perfect:  not humid, not too hot, not too cold.  The bluebonnets, Indian paintbrush, spider lilies, and primrose pop up to blanket swaths of fields, boulevards, and front and back yards with blues, pinks, purples, reds, and whites.

At the same time the wildflowers are coloring up Texas, they are also popping  up in my favorite state in the whole US:  Washington.

I lived there for 10 years (Seattle), I have family there, and I hope to retire there.  I try to make it out to WA to visit family and favorite sights every year, but last year (2011) I didn’t make it because of my big Ireland trip (see my previous posts about that trip).  I generally like to visit Washington in April, to celebrate my and my brother-in-law’s birthdays.  I also like to visit during that month because my bro-in-law is a flower grower extraordinnaire and their front, side, and back yards sport tulips, daffodils, iris, and other spring flowers of every shape, kind, and color grow-able in that state.

Since the flowers are not in bloom yet down here (it’s January 21 as of this post), I’ve been digging through my spring flower photos (I’ve got a pretty large archive of stuff through which to dig) and thought I would post these reminders of the season in which I was born.

For most of these images, I used a macro lens or a wide-angle lens, depending on how I wanted to  capture the images.  The cameras vary, from the Mamiya medium-format images and Canon film cameras (which were then scanned years ago to digital format) to a Nikon D70 and D40X to the Canon 5D and 5D Mark II.

Spring is not only lovely in color, but in monochrome as well.

Spring – I’m wishing for it.

Hey – if you like this photoblog, please click on this link to vote for me for the Photoblog Awards .  And THANKS! 😀

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Filed under nature, Photography, Seasons, Spring