Welcoming June
06/01/2010 at 11:13 am | Posted in beginner blogger, Creation, everything pretty, Floral Photography, Flores, flowers, My Portfolio, Nature, photography, Photos, plant species, roses, spring, Spring 2010, Welcoming Spring | Leave a commentTags: Daffodils, flora, flowers, new beginning, new life, Photo, photography, sights of spring, Signs of Spring, spring blooms, Spring flowers, To be one with nature
Yesterday gray, today bright orange.
Yesterday fierce cold, today heat warming my heart.
Yesterday was January, Today welcome June.
Yesterday wintry white for miles,
Today only green luscious canvas with splashes of yellow, red and pink.
The earth beneath my feet screaming with delight
As the carpet of green and drapes of new season surrounds me.
How can one not be with nature
when the scream of renewal can be heard so loud for miles.
My heart fled with glee as I visit my garden each morning.
To touch the new blooms of white roses,
To see as each plant greets with new growth
,
I must truly be insane but simple joy in my heart
is a million dreams revisited!
“Happy Spring to all!”
It’s spring fever. That is what the name of it is. And when you’ve got it, you want – oh, you don’t quite know what it is you do want, but it just fairly makes your heart ache, you want it so! ~Mark Twain
Do you know the name of this spring flowering plant?
06/15/2009 at 1:38 pm | Posted in Floral Photography, flowers, photography, plant species | 2 CommentsTags: flowers, Ontario CANADA, photography, Sauble Beach, Signs of Spring, Spring flowers

As I was walking my dog Sandy, I saw a glimpse of yellow by my feet.
As ussual, armed with my handy Sony Cyber-shot, I simply had to take a photo
of this beautiful spring bloom. I have no idea what it is called. If you know, I would
really appreciate a note. The plant is only about a foot in height with one bloom.
They grow in cluster near the lake, more specifically by Georgian Bay.
Here is a quote for the last week of spring:
Everything is blooming most recklessly; if it were voices instead of colors,
there would be an unbelievable shrieking into the heart of the night.
by: Rainer Maria Rilke, Letters of Rainer Maria Rilke
What are these days we call spring
06/01/2009 at 4:00 pm | Posted in Floral Photography, Flores, flowers, photography, Poetry, spring | Leave a commentTags: flora, flowers, new life, photography, renewal, sights of spring, Signs of Spring, spring, spring blooms, Spring flowers



What are these days we call spring
I cannot help but question
I use to ignore all the signs
But today, I could no longer
They are everywhere
Green Green Green
The warming breeze against my face
as I take my morning stroll
Not too far
Just around my little corner of the world
I am consciously bombarded
by the colors
some miniscule
as I look down
tiny new life
sprouting everywhere
My senses arouse once again
The movie of spring colors
Accompanied by the orchestra of
feathered friends in the background
once again the signs of new life
Spring make one hopeful of good things to come
A sense of renewal evident
My sense of sight hightened
spotting bright reds, yellow and green.
My sense of hearing tuned perfectly
to all the feather friends songs
my canvas now complete under the bright
spring sunburst of lights
My day forever
A gift
i crave nothing more
than this life
from the pen of Jocelyn June 1 2009
Seeing Reds and Yellows
05/08/2009 at 7:34 pm | Posted in everything pretty, Floral Photography, Flores, flowers, spring | 2 CommentsTags: Daffodils, flowers, Ontario CANADA, Red, Signs of Spring, Spring flowers, tulips, Yellow
“It was an ideal spring day, a light blue sky, flecked with little fleecy white clouds drifting across
from west to east. The sun was shining very brightly, and yet there was an exhilarating nip in
the air, which set an edge to a man’s energy.”
- Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

Standing tall and proud, they are, they are, so they adorn my front door.

In the sea of Green, my lone Yellow tulip, I found in my backyard.

Sun-Kissed REDS.

YELLOW daffodils, so bright like the day and simply nature’s perfection!
Signs of Spring in Ontario CANADA
04/27/2009 at 4:16 pm | Posted in flowers, photography, spring | 2 CommentsTags: Ontario CANADA, Signs of Spring

Above : Fishing in Northern Ontario

Above and below: Trillium flowers native to Northern Ontario,Canada
The white trillium has been Ontario’s provincial floral emblem since 1937. Its white blossom is associated with peace and hope.
The plant contains tannic acid and saponin. It was used by First Nations People and settlers as an antiseptic and a nerve tonic. The leaves were boiled in lard and applied to ulcers as a poultice, and also used to restrict gangrene. The roots were used to ease fevers and diarrhea. Another name for the plant used to be “birthroot,” originating from its use in easing the process of childbirth. However, no part of white trillium should be considered safe or edible for human consumption.

This elegant spring flower blooms about the same time as robins return, thus, the name “wake-robin”. The plant is called a “trillium” because the flower parts occur in threes, along with a whorl of three, broad, egg-shaped leaves. The single, large, white flower, up to 10 cm (4 in.) across, perches upright at the top of a stout 10 cm – 40 cm (4 – 16 in.) high stalk. Three white petals form the flower, with three green sepals beneath. At the flower’s centre are six stamens and a six-lobed ovary with three styles. The white petals fade over time to a dull pinkish purple, becoming slightly transparent.
The leaves in this trillium species are longer than in the western trillium, and shorten more gradually to a point.
White trillium grows from a short thick rhizome (underground stem). The fruit is a round, greenish, berry-like capsule, 15 mm – 25 mm (1/2 – 1 in.) in diameter. This slightly angled, six-sided fruit has many brown seeds. When mature, the whole capsule falls off the plant.
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