An overcast evening sky …

… with a sliver of setting sun …

… highlights a boat racing for home.
Happy Saturday.
An overcast evening sky …

… with a sliver of setting sun …

… highlights a boat racing for home.
Happy Saturday.
Can you believe it’s August already? Although it has been a very hot, humid and uncomfortable one for many of us, I hate to think of it as beginning a slide toward autumn. Nevertheless, there are still lots of flowers to enjoy and easily for the next couple of months.

The tea roses have been blooming like crazy, their faint rosy perfume quite detectable in the warm air …

… while the matador roses have been doing the same.

These are very ordinary, commonplace roses that will grow almost anywhere …

… but I do love seeing them lining footpaths and sidewalks. So pretty.
Happy Friday and happy August.
I recently had an interesting conversation with one of the groundskeepers at the nearby Japanese garden about the fish in the pond there and learned a lot about the differences between koi and carp.

Koi are a domesticated, ornamental variety of carp that are the result of centuries of selective breeding for lighter colours such as orange, white, yellow and the mottled types as well. The behaviour of koi is also different; they are much less aggressive than carp.
Carp are a dull greyish brown and sometimes difficult to spot in the water; of course that is one of their natural defences, something that koi no longer have.

The fish in the Japanese garden pond are a mix of koi and carp; people have apparently been randomly dropping carp there after they become too big for their home fish tanks. In the pond they have been growing and multiplying rapidly because they’re eating everything in sight.

In the photo above, you can see quite a number of dark coloured carp; the groundskeeper says there are about 30 of them.

At the moment plans are in place to remove the carp from the pond in the autumn when their activity slows down; the koi will once again have their pond to themselves.

During the next winter the groundskeepers will also be on the lookout for otters. Last winter one started living in the garden and helping himself to the koi; apparently about half of them were consumed before the otter was trapped and moved to another location. That otter must have thought he was in paradise!

Happy Thursday.

I took this image before stitching together images to create panoramas was ‘click a button’ easy. In those days getting a full rainbow in a single …
Double Rainbow
A gorgeous double rainbow picture from Allan at Allan J Jones Photoblog. Please click the link above to see more of Allan’s beautiful pictures.
Scenes from a recent walk …

… a stretch of natural beach …

… with, of course, some late season ducklings …

… a single cumulus cloud …

… and a lovely sailboat.
Tranquil sights in the heart of summer.
Happy Wednesday.
Somnolent summer carp …

… barely moving in their sunny pond …

… staring intently …

… and asking: why are you not covered in water?
Happy Tuesday.

Il giardino di Kate #1.
Beautiful garden photos from Luisella at Tra Italia e Finlandia. I hope you click the link above to see more of her lovely pictures and interesting posts.
It’s the height of summer in the northern hemisphere and there’s a lot to enjoy and admire.



Happy Monday.
A pretty place to stop and relax …

… in our local Japanese garden …

… to admire the anemones …

… and pond lilies.
Happy Sunday.
We have been experiencing a rainier, cooler than usual summer punctuated by hot days where the temperature reaches 37 or 38 (98.6-100.4 F). A rainy night makes for comfortable morning constitutionals, however.

These clouds were moving into the north after being pushed out by …

… quite strong and gusty winds from the east. Surface easterly winds are unusual here since they have to make it past a number of mountain ranges in order to arrive, but I noticed that this one seemed to have quite a lot of altitude, too, probably about 3000 metres (approx 10,000 ft).

As the day wore on – and more clouds moved back in – our resident bald eagles weren’t too concerned as they perched in their favourite lookout tree to survey their territory. Some jostling from the winds didn’t stop them from having one of their regular, affectionate chats.
Happy Saturday.