The Stream
Water's edge etc.
Scrubble
Scrubble - 2
Calla Lilly
Dead wood and dust
Sycamore
Duck house
Nostalgia
Days of lockdown
Rocks and scrubble
Photography on aluminium
A Synapse
Conception
Doll
Flawed man
Song of a Fish
Guarding the Inivtation
Wall
A patch of colours
African Habitat
Tourbillon
Dead wood I
Dead wood II
Wares on the wall
Wares on the wall
'Solstice’ (the ‘stand-still' of the sun)
An afternoon in the Park
Poems of Finland
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‘Impervious to the passage of time’, the Hercynian Forest was thought to be as old as the world itself. Remnants of what was once the largest natural feature in Europe survive in patches of woodland and forest. The town of Pforzheim, which is not the northern gateway of Black Forest, was once Porta Hercyniae. Some of the migrants led by Segovesus would have passed through the Bavarian or Bohemian Forest which marks the borders of Germany, Austria and the Czech Republic. The names ‘Bavaria’ and ‘Bohemia’, are mementos of the restless Boii tree, who took part in so many Celtic migrations that no one knew for sure -- perhaps not even the Boii en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boii themselves -- where their homeland had been. - page 163
A mighty wind blew night and day
It stole the oak tree’s leaves away
Then snapped its boughs and pulled its bark
Until the oak was tired and stark
But still the oak tree held its ground
While other trees fell all around
The weary wind gave up and spoke,
“How can you still be standing Oak?”
The oak tree said,
“I know that you Can break each branch of mine in two Carry every leaf away Shake my limbs, and make me sway
But I have roots stretched in the earth Growing stronger since my birth You’ll never touch them,
for you see They are the deepest part of me
Until today I wasn’t sure
Of just how much I could endure
But now I’ve found,
with thanks to you I’m stronger than I ever knew!”
~ Johnny Ray Ryder Jr.
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