
December sun casts shadows across a forest path. Sharing this post widely on social media will allow those who are stuck indoors, due to Covid 19, to…
Today’s Pictures: 13 Dec 20
More beautiful shares from Stuart. 🙂

December sun casts shadows across a forest path. Sharing this post widely on social media will allow those who are stuck indoors, due to Covid 19, to…
Today’s Pictures: 13 Dec 20
More beautiful shares from Stuart. 🙂

For those who want warmth at this time of the year, here’s a shot of the Lassithi Plateau in Crete. Taken July 2008 I walk daily in the Forest of …
Today’s Pictures: 12 Dec 20
Stuart has invited us to share his posts:
Sharing this post widely on social media will allow those who are stuck indoors, due to Covid 19, to enjoy it. It will also reach more people and, hopefully, illustrate what a wonderful place our world is. With luck, between us, we might restore love and respect for nature and slow down the destructive urge to ruin our environment. Thank you.

Entitled Watching You Watching Them, this photographer was gifted with an example of the bird he was studying right outside his cabin window.
The Cordilleran flycatcher is declining across western North America as the changing climate causes shrinkage of the riparian habitats (i.e. river and other freshwater corridors) along its migratory routes and on its wintering grounds in Mexico. In Montana’s Rocky Mountain Front, it typically nests in crevices and on canyon shelves. But one pair picked this remote research cabin instead, perhaps to avoid predation. The nest was built on the head of a window frame by the female. Both parents were feeding the nestlings, flying out to snatch insects in mid-air or hovering to pick them off leaves.
So as not to disturb the birds or attract predators to the nest, Alex Badyaev hid his camera behind a large piece of bark on an ancient spruce tree leaning against the cabin. He directed a flash toward the trunk, so the scene would be illuminated by reflection, and operated the setup remotely from the cabin. He captured his shot as the female paused to check on her four nestlings. Behind her—the cabin serving as a conveniently spacious blind—the biologist recorded his observations.
Happy Friday, everyone. 🙂

Ancient Beech trees line the rim of a long disused quarry in the Forest of Dean. Sharing this post widely on social media will allow those who are …
Today’s Pictures: 10 Dec 20
Lovely photos from Stuart. 🙂

On my morning walk to work today, I saw this moon slice competing with the streetlights against a misty ice fog.
The moon was prettier. 🙂

The waters of Cannop Ponds reflect the winter light of a December day. Thanks for visiting this blog. Please be generous to those imprisoned by the …
Today’s Pictures: 8 Dec 20
Tranquility. 🙂

The Deh Cho Bridge is a one km-long cable-stayed bridge across a 1.6 km span of the Mackenzie River on the Yellowknife Highway near Fort Providence, Northwest Territories.
I’ve crossed many bridges, both physical and figurative. Some have been “cable-stayed” and others have been ready to fall into an immense crevasse.
The figurative bridges have sometimes been the very worst and I would have given anything to have had decking under my feet.
How about you?

Winter fern in the Forest of Dean. Thanks for visiting this blog. Please be generous to those imprisoned by the Covid crisis by sharing this post …
Today’s Pictures: 5 Dec 20
More of Stuart’s lovely landscape photos. 🙂

A footbridge across the overflow of Cannop Ponds in the Forest of Dean. Thanks for visiting this blog. Please be generous to those imprisoned by the …
Today’s Pictures: 4 Dec 20
This bridge photo from Stuart is so romantic-looking, and then followed by an equally romantic beach photo.
The Northwest Territories’ Mackenzie River is the centre point of the longest river system in Canada, and includes the second largest drainage basin of any North American river after the Mississippi.


At times, it’s large enough to make you feel as if you’re on an ocean.
Happy Friday. 🙂