Or, Spring is nigh; Winter, your days are numbered...
The wattle, an explosion of gold, I simply had to stop the car and record the abundance of blossoms. It took ages to get home because as my eye had been attuned to ‘yellow’, I stopped and took photos of anything yellow that caught my attention. I dropped in to see my mother who happened to be hand-washing woollens; serendipitously, she was wearing yellow gloves, and when she opened the door to come out to see me, I asked her to hold her golden yellow be-gloved hands to the sky… she politely acquiesced.
Please enjoy my visual essay on today’s marvellous YELLOWS.
Happy days,
Lara Jane.
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This clump of daffodils has been delighting my family for over 30 Springs. |
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Be on guard for horses and their riders... |
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Another species of wattle, paler, more duckling yellow. |
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Speaking of ducklings, this is an image of Graeme's latest painting: "The Navigators" 92 x 170cm, on it's way to the Christopher Day Gallery in Paddington, Sydney, Australia as I write. |
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In South Australia, power lines are supported by 'Stobie' poles, a concrete slab supported on either side by metal joists. |
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These jonquils (I think), emerge every year and have for the 3 decades I have known this space. |
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Attention: curves ahead! |
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A species of gorse, sharp prickles, a rapacious weed, but sporting a pretty yellow nonetheless. |
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My Milk Bottle Everlasting Daisies (see previous post), still upright and responsive to a breeze after many a winter storm, amongst the Oxalis (the foliage that looks like Clover). |
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When the almost neon yellow of the Oxalis open (more commonly known as Soursops), the bees celebrate! |
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Hello Mum and your yellow gloves! |
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Daisies beaming yellow and happy from Mum's garden. |
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On arriving home I said 'hello' to Graeme in his studio, here are his most regularly used yellows... |
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"This here's the wattle, emblem of our land, you can stick it in a bottle, or hold it in your hand"... Monty Python. |
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