October 4 – No added saturation just incredible colors!

Oct 4 - Full Pano WEBIf you are a new reader to my blog you may not realize that my images are images captured and created in the past week. So I am challenged on my day off to come home with a couple of photos worthy of an audience. If not, I eke out a few hours during the week to follow a local creative idea. Fortunately, with my iPhone, I have access to a pretty good camera all the time. Even on busy days, cracks in the sidewalk or peeling paint designs on fences or rusting car details can challenge me to take a few minutes off for the sake of capturing a blog-worthy image.

Oct 4 - leaves 2 WEBSometimes the captures in one week are just so diverse and rich that I want to continue to share them with you for a little while longer. That is what you have here. A few weeks ago the colors in certain locations of the Eastern Sierra were just beginning to turn, and, in others, were well into their most magical stage. On the trails, I met a couple of former Photochrome members I hadn’t seen in a long time, and they told me they had seen better color in other years. I can’t imagine that.

First light on the yellow and orange Aspens lining a creek near Lake Sabrina at nearly 8,000 feet gave them surrealistic neon glow. No added saturation to this image, really! Incredible colors. So often it is said that photography is about being in the right place at the right time. Add composition and photographic techniques to that equation and I am sold on it.

I find the details as beautiful and emotive, as worthy of praise and presentation as the grand scenes. Fallen leaves scatted in piles or individually sharing a rock with another also tell the story of the change of seasons and the ancient patterns of the earth’s rotation and history.

Oct 4 -SabrinaCreek WEBWhen water takes on the colors of those it nourishes a symbiotic symphony of hue and texture step into center stage. Reflections will extend closer to you the lower to the ground you get. That is why you will often see me sitting at the edge of a stream or lake with my camera kissing the earth.

Touching the earth, getting one’s hands dirty, and smelling the foliage beginning to mulch enhances ones experiential spiritual journey. Getting up from the ground is another kind of experience, but we won’t go into that!

Mountains and high elevations have a different effect on me than my favorite seaside destinations. I don’t mean dried, creaking skin and shortness of breath. Rather it is the words and the melody of the chant, “Mountain Mother, I hear your calling. Mountain Mother, I hear your song. Mountain Mother, I hear your laughter. Mountain Mother, I taste your tears.”

Oct 4 -AspenReflections WEBThe fall colors are like the ribbons mothers put into their young daughters’ hair to give the already beautiful girls a special persona. We outgrow our ribbons, but not the earth. Her ribbons of color are reminders that Mother regenerates herself every day, every year, and in every encounter.

Images:  Conway Summit (A Panorama made with 7 vertical images), Two Fallen Leaves, Bishop Creek at Lake Sabrina (24 mm lens), and reflection in Lundy Canyon Beaver Pond.

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October 2 – To sky, to earth, to sun, to moon.

Oct2 - Mono Sunset WEBAs a child I loved to gaze at clouds, attempting to find recognizable shapes and mystical creatures in their fluffiness and awesome expansions. Often I would see the shape of a huge Canada goose and then watch it morph into a unicorn and then break apart into small wisps that danced through the sky like the waltz of Snow White’s seven dwarf friends.

Clouds offer dramatic expression over land and waterscapes. They have specific scientific purposes and names, yet they also offer meditations as they travel through the sky. Mvskoke/Creek Poet Joy Harjo has said, “To pray you open your whole self to sky, to earth, to sun and to moon. To one whole voice that is you.”

In many religious traditions, clouds covering the mountains or blanketing the hills and plains are often a symbol that the divine presence in all her glory is near. This was my recent experience in Mono County. The clouds gathered, creating a canopy that sent the message that the land beneath was sacred.

Oct2 -Mono MoonRise2 copyAs the sun shared its final rays before setting behind the Eastern Sierras, its golden and then red colors painted the clouds as the evening moved toward twilight and the moon took her prominent place.

There are spectacular fall foliage hot spots in Mono County, and now is the time to see most of the Aspen Groves at peak colors. I will hopefully share images from that part of the county next week. One of the oldest lakes in the western hemisphere, Mono Lake, is hauntingly beautiful, reflecting the often snow-capped Sierra Nevada in its shimmering blue waters. An immense inland sea, the lake fills a natural basin 695 square miles in size. Because its size is threatened when the rivers, streams and snow melt are siphoned to provide water for Southern California, checks and balances have been put into place to minimize the damage.

The most distinctive feature of Mono Lake is its peculiar tufa towers, mineral structures created when fresh-water springs bubble up through the alkaline waters of the lake. The lake’s salty water sustains trillions of brine shrimp and thus attracts millions of migratory birds hoping to feast on them.

Oct2 - Mono Basin WEBSpectacular young volcanoes are Mono Lake’s immediate neighbor. The craters range in age from 600 to 40,000 years old. Panum Crater is the most accessible and is the northernmost and youngest of the chain. It can be reached via a short dirt road, off Highway 120 about 3 miles east of Highway 395. The living and skeletal remains of sage brush dot the sandy basin. Like the clouds, each bush takes on a unique shape.

Wide-angle captures of nature are awesome, but also challenging. Often the capture includes too much and the range of exposure is beyond a single shot’s ability to keep everything properly exposed. But when such captures work, the wow factor takes over. I hope these images enable you to enter into meditative space accompanied by the wow factor of earth’s beauty. “Open your whole self to sky, to earth, to sun and to moon.”

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October 1 – Dancing Among the Autumn Aspen Colors

Oct 1 - Sabrina Area WEBThe temperature in San Francisco and all of Northern California these first days of October has felt much more like a mid-western summer than our fall. Although October is often our sunniest and most beautiful time of the year, hitting 90° on the thermostat is pushing it just a little bit out of my range of being comfortable.

I have always found fall to be a rather comforting time of the year. There’s a great burst of color just before the trees go naked for their winter sleep. The local color palette is not quite as vibrant as I remember seeing in the rolling hills and mountains of the Adirondacks or New England, but there are still many hints of the beautiful hues of autumn.

My favorite fall colors are orange, yellow and white. These are manifest best among the aspen trees of the Eastern Sierras. When a cold snap sets in and the chlorophyll stops flowing, the leaves of the green Aspen cease their photosynthesis and reveal hues of bright yellow, orange and sometimes red. As the leaves begin to fall to the ground, the Aspen trunks show off their beautiful white lines dancing among the colors.

Oct1 -TractorRim WEBBut the beautiful autumn colors of orange, yellow and white are ever before me. When I’m in the market or at the counter of the local store there the colors are — in the candy corn. People like me who have a sweet tooth often greet a new season with joyful anticipation of the treats that surround the seasonal festivals. But I am seeing orange, yellow and white even on the rusting rims of old tractors.

Although we know when fall is going to arrive and we can trace the patterns of certain foliage locations, there is still some unpredictability as to how the fall foliage will present itself. You don’t actually know what you’re going to get at any location until you get there.

On previous trips to the Eastern Sierras, driving I-395 from Bridgeport to Bishop, I made notes. The Aspen trees around Lake Sabrina near Bishop, at about 8000 feet, turned colors two or three weeks before the Mono County groves.

Oct 1 - LeafInStream WEBSo last week I rushed over for a couple of days. I was surprised by the beauty I saw. I had only been there in previous years well after the colors at Lake Sabrina had peaked.

Fall is also a time when we see in the cascading foliage a symbol of the importance of letting go of things, even some things that have been most important to us. It is also a reminder that we don’t need to hold on to everything in order to make it through the upcoming darkness of the long nights and even through the winters of our soul.

Images:  Lake Sabrina Area, Tractor Rim Detail, Leaf in Stream.

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September Week 4 – golden grasses and glistening grapes

As we mark the Fall Equinox we are held in perfect equilibrium honoring equal day and equal night. What an appropriate day for the United Nations Climate Summit 2014 to commence.   U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon was “excited to link arms” with the People’s Climate Change March on Sunday. “It’s clear that climate change is no longer a problem for the future. We can no longer delay action – if we delay we will pay,” organizer spokesperson Stephen Dujarric said. “These marches show world leaders that people want action on climate change now.”

Sept 4 - Goat Barn WEBThe sights and smells of golden grasses and glistening grapes are local Fall symbols that connect us to the earth. In honor of this week’s important conversations and actions I share with you two images embraced by poetic words from dear friend and a herchurch poet, Sherri Rose-Walker.

AUTUMN GODDESS    by Sherri Rose-Walker  ©September 1986

Sept 4 - Grapes WEB Ascending
with a thousand temple bells
through carved corridors
ancient as time,
the Queen has come
to take her rightful place
among divinities
governing heaven and earth.
 
Gold of antiquity
at her throat and breast,
mantle of fiery feathers
caressing her verdant body,
she is crowned with the crescent moon
and the stars of heaven.
 
Behold her with awe and wonder;
risen from unimaginable depths,
she carries in her womb
renewed life of the spirit
more precious than earthly treasure.
Sing praises, bring offerings;
in her radiant, numinous embrace
your blazing visions shall be incarnated.
 
 
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September Week 3 – Be for the birds!

Sept 3 - Jay 4 WEBBeautiful sounds and multiple hues of blue are prevalent in the coniferous branches along the path that circles Stow Lake in Golden Gate Park. The sounds and color are provided by the Steller’s Jays, year-round residents in the west from South Alaska to Central America.

The Steller’s Jays are the only jays that have a crest, giving them a regal portrait.  Locally, they love to spar with the squirrels for the peanuts that are thrown their way. They become quite accustomed to campsites and human providers. And, as is not the case for most birds, they are likely to fare well into the next century.

Specific groups of birds are at high risk from climate change: migratory, mountain, island, wetland, Arctic, Antarctic and seabirds. Scientific reports reveal that bird populations are declining. Those that thrive only in a narrow environmental range are expected to decline and be outnumbered by invasive species.

Sept 3 - Jay 5 WEBThis week The National Audubon Society has a big new report documenting how global warming threatens the habitats of 588 different bird species across North America. The report finds that 314 species are likely to lose more than half their current range by 2080.

“What could be missing along with those birds and their ecological niches are their very presence and songs — crucial components of our daily lives and the cultural fabric of our communities,” said Gary Langham, chief Audubon scientist.

Let’s all be for the birds and educate ourselves to the real threats of climate change. We need to pursue the multiple ways that we as individuals and as part of the greater human community can alter this course of destruction.

Sept 3 - GaiaCandles WEBHundreds of thousands of concerned citizens will gather for the People’s Climate March in New York City on Sunday, September 21 (the eve of the autumnal equinox). They will take to the streets as world leaders arrive for the UN Climate Summit. This will be a historic moment for The People’s Climate March as it aims to be the largest rally for climate action in the world.

There are several local marches planned and you may want to join one.

Remembering our Mother-Earth, it is time for taking decisive action to protect future generations. You can make a difference: click here to show your support for strong limits on carbon pollution.

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September Week 2 – Comedy Conundrum with Peppers

Sept 2 - peppers WEBI will have to confess that I love zingers — as long as they aren’t slung at me. Remembering Joan Rivers and the way she was able to laugh first at herself and then poke fun at others brings a smile to my face and heart. “The trouble with me is, I make jokes too often,” she told The Associated Press in 2013. “That’s how I get through life. Life is SO difficult — everybody’s been through something! But you laugh at it, it becomes smaller.”

Joan River’s sardonic wit could cut a person in two but she also had a compassionate and tender side. One of the organizations she supported with money and presence was God’s Love We Deliver. The mission of God’s Love We Deliver is to improve the health and well-being of men, women and children living with HIV/AIDS, cancer and other serious illnesses by alleviating hunger and malnutrition.

The organization also provides illness-specific nutrition education and counseling to its clients, families, care providers and other service organizations. All services are provided free of charge without regard to income.

Sept 2 - lineslamps WEBI don’t wear make-up to hide my life-lines but have always loved her line, – “I’ve had so much plastic surgery, when I die they will donate my body to Tupperware.” In addition to making us laugh, I feel Joan Rivers also made us think. She was a trail blazer for women in comedy and a feminist voice in society in general.

There is no debating that Joan Rivers worked very hard to be successful. She was once billed at a strip club by the stand-up name “’Pepper January’ — offering “Comedy with Spice.” So I am offering you these images: “Popping Peppers” and “Lines and Lamps” in honor of Joan Rivers.

Without Joan River’s one-liners I guess we might have to depend on the captions for the cartons in the New Yorker to keep us laughing – although there are all those up-and-coming women comedians, thanks to Joan’s inspiration and trail blazing into the lands once dominated solely by “Johnny.”

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September Week 1 – Every Night for Fifty Years, Blessed Be!

I created and framed this first image for the San Francisco Night Ministry Board to consider using as thank you gifts for five honorees — long time supportive organizations. The Night Ministry provides crisis intervention, counseling and referral services every night of the year, from 10 PM to 4 AM.

Sept 7 -  Pier7 WEBMy image includes 25 “starring” street lights on each side of San Francisco’s Pier Seven. (That’s an approximate number – so don’t count). The lights represent the 50 years of Night Ministry in San Francisco. The lamp on the right in the foreground is just coming on, so it is not “starring” yet – it represents moving into the next year and the next 50 years of night ministry. (The stars are caused by the choice of a very small aperture opening – f/22.)

The well-lit path of the pier leads to and from the city, shrouded in fog, yet visible in the night air. The many people of the city that have been touched and healed, held and helped, by the Night Ministry (its ministers, volunteers, crisis line voices and multiple supporters) — have experienced through them the light shining in the darkness.

Sept 1 -  SC LtH WEBThere are actually people walking in the above picture, but the camera shutter is open so long you cannot see them since they walked right out of the picture. Likewise many of those assisted by night ministry may go nameless or even vanish in the night. But they are ever present among us and because of the SF Night Ministry they are better off and ever beautiful!

The New Testament and Psalms – An Inclusive Version, Oxford University Press, translates John 1:5 with these words: “The light shines in the deepest night, and the night did not overcome it.” Unfortunately most translations still use the word “darkness” and continue to perpetuate the equation of darkness to evil and light to the good.

Over the years, via photography and thea-ology I have come to appreciate the relationship, importance and holiness of both the darkness and the light. They are partners in metaphor and reality. They are dependent and interconnected. Many dark/black images such as the ancient mother are grounded in the earth and cosmic powers which create and compassionately embrace life from the womb to the tomb.

Sept 1 - Candles WEBThe San Francisco Night Ministry’s 50th Anniversary Commemoration Service of Thanksgiving is on Sunday, November 16, 3:00 p.m., at Grace Cathedral (1100 California St. at Taylor). Anne Lamott will be the guest speaker, and there is a reception following the service.

The Night Ministry, like street lamps, lighthouse beacons and candles, is burning brightly in the deepest night. Blessed be the light and blessed be the darkness.

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August week 4 – Dahlias: Incantations for global healing.

Aug 4 - Dahlia Orange WEBThe stunning blossoms of the Dahlia Garden next to the Conservatory of Flowers in Golden Gate Park peak in their beauty from mid-July to mid-September. This area was dedicated in 1920 to the dahlia, the official San Francisco Flower. The diverse hybrids with their multitude of colors swaying in the foggy breezes look like a sea of Technicolor dreams.

These dahlias were probably dancing to a different tune when the ground moved early Sunday morning as the result of a 6.1 earthquake epicentered near Napa. Damaged buildings and several injuries occurred in old town Napa and a nearby mobile home park, with four homes burned and nearly 300 others now in need of repair. The tower at the Napa County Airport had its windows shattered, a church in Napa and one in Vallejo had extensive damage, an apartment-building car-port collapsed  on vehicles, homes shifted off foundations, and broken bottles of wine littered several market floors.

Aug 4 - Dahlia Center WEBI think the dahlias with their beautiful displays are offering their own prayers for hope and healing for those who face transitions and obstacles from the damage. Such beauty leads me to believe that there are perhaps more incantations for global healing coming from the plants than from the peoples of the land.

Aug 4 - Dahlia Zoom WEBThe California Dahlia Society website helps us get acquainted with the garden and the growing process as well as informing us of a variety of programs and shows. Volunteers help plant, disbud, de-leaf, water, deadhead, and, later in the Fall, dig out and store approximately 500 clumps of dahlias. Most mornings you can meet the overseers who donate all of the tubers for their particular area. They are deservedly proud of their award-winning garden.

The dahlia originated in Mexico and was used by the Aztecs for medicine, religious ornamentation, and food for their animals (the tubers). The genetic make-up of the Dahlia gives it an uncanny ability to cross-breed into many varieties. Some dahlias are as small as a quarter and some as large as a beach ball. There is even a dahlia that looks like my morning hairdo.

Aug 4 - Dahlia Pink WEBYou can use every technique and piece of camera equipment available to you when capturing the essence and emotion of the dahlias. I love working with individual blooms, so most often I choose to photograph with a 400 mm lens, adding an extension tube between my lens and camera so I can focus at a closer distance.

But if you can’t get to the SF Golden Gate Dahlia Garden today, you have several weeks left, when there will still be many blooms.  When admiring their colors and shapes you might easily be caught up in their visual meditations — not a bad way to begin a day!

Addendum: After hearing more reports it is obvious that the injuries and structural damage in Napa and Vallejo are quite extensive. Some small aftershocks are still rumbling in that area. Healing and reconstruction will be needed for sometime to come. But more than 80% of the wineries are open. So stop by and support those local communities!

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August Week 3 – Driving: Miss Doggie, Human-animal Humor!

Aug 3 - DogInCar WEBOver the years I have become much more aware of the importance of the creatures, plants and elements of our world and our interconnectedness to them. Although I am not a pet person I surely admire those who like to curl up with their furry or feathered friends. Seeing and interacting with animals in the wild is attractive to me, especially when I’m able to be a few feet closer to them than is probably recommended.

Previous expressions of my own spirituality were born out of patriarchal systems, and those that evolved in spite of those systems still left the animals in a submissive, second class role. Most people are familiar with Mahatma Gandhi’s words, “The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be measured by the way its animals are treated.” Unfortunately, thousands of creatures, domestic and wild, are being slaughtered by us or left in torturous situations or led to the brink of extinction by our human activity.

Wearing the leftovers - Roosevelt Elk

Wearing the leftovers – Roosevelt Elk

Through the most recent stages of development, human beings have thought of themselves as superior to the creatures around them, and that the animals, plants and elements of the earth need human control. This misunderstanding of our relationship with these neighbors of ours has done great damage.

The book that I am presently reading is called Spirit Unleashed: Reimaging Human-Animal Relations, by Anne Benvenuti.   She is a professor of psychology and philosophy, a licensed psychologist, and an interdisciplinary scholar and priest of the Episcopal Church.   She uses the sciences, cultural studies and personal experiences to show that the animals have souls, systems of communication and progression. In the midst of all her academic presentations, her bottom line is simply to show us that if we find new ways to relate to the animals we will find out what it will take to change life on earth for the better.

Aug 3 - DogMailSlot WEBOther studies have said that it is wrong of us to project human feelings onto our animal friends. But we have to use our language, expressions and emotions in order to understand a variety of things including the ways in which animals live with us. So I have seen, as I’m sure you have, the animals’ sense of humor, their ability for compassion, their deep-seated ways of caring, building community and using their creative, calculating minds.

I have photographed a little bit of the humor in our furry friends this past week. When violence erupts near us or even within us, it is important to see that there are still humorous things around us. Our tears of laughter need to be mingled with our tears of sorrow so that we may stay grounded and continue to find our purpose for building community and a better world.

All beings tremble before violence. All fear death. All love life. See yourself in others. Then whom can you hurt? What harm can you do?” – Buddha

PS – Please don’t leave any potential pets at my door step. I would rather – on occasion – hang out with the bears, whales and picas in their natural settings.

 

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August week 2 – More clumsy than charming?

Aug 2 - Pelican Landing WEBMaybe it’s because of their looks, a combination of the homely and comedic, that one expects the pelican to be more clumsy than charming. But “it ain’t so!”

Aug 2 - Pelican WEBLong before I learned that pelicans were a symbol of the Divine Feminine and the Mother Jesus of the medieval church, I loved them. Their wings seemed be the bridge between the heavens and the earth as they turned gracefully to descend to the waters or beaches below.

In the Middle Ages, Saint Gertrude of Helfta had a vision of Christ as a pelican. Inspired by Psalm 102, the church interpreted the female pelican as a symbol of Christ, believing this magnificent bird was able to give her life-restoring blood to her dead offspring. This metaphor was based on a popular fallacy, yet the imagery of the mother pelican returning to her brood to restore them to life continues to spark my spiritual imagination.

It has been more than 25 years since Virginia Ramey Mollenkott reclaimed the biblical imagery of God as female. Of the pelican she has written, “The dream that the male pelican kills its offspring, while the female pelican bestows new life upon them, turns out to presage a reality for many of us in the contemporary faith community.”

Aug 2 - Pelican Baths WEBShe continues: “Exclusively male images of God are killing our spirit by distorting our understanding of masculinity, femininity, and mutuality. The recognition of biblical images of God as female, the infusion of positive female images into the language of faith, the achievement of balance between male and female references, will do a lot to bring us renewed health.” The Divine Feminine, page 47.

Watching the brown pelicans gliding, flying, landing, diving and taking off along the Santa Cruz coastline beaches is a spiritual activity worth returning to on a regular basis. Even if the imagery of the divine feminine is not a part of your vision, the pelicans’ incredible grace offers you soul-renewing energy. Tracking and photographing them in flight is both a challenge and discipline to be pursued religiously!

Aug 2 - White Peli WEBIt is also worth noting that brown pelicans dive for fish as individuals while white pelicans are group fishers. Yet both seem to come together as groups to hunt for food. The white pelicans beat their wings on the surface of the water moving the fish to surface waters or, working together, they use their beaks to move water weeds, dislodging the fish among them. Thus, the pelicans can also be symbolic of group efforts made in order to identify and access resources. Lessons we need to relearn?

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