Capture: Colour is the new black
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Sofie Bribiesca, in reply to
Well that is nice to know. Essential viewing if I was down there. Plants and dirt are really good therapy.
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Joe Wylie, in reply to
Plants and dirt are really good therapy.
Also plants don't seem fazed by earth tremors, last summer was great, as this one is shaping up to be. There was the mysterious death of a peach tree and a big old wisteria after the September quake though, for which no-one has a good theory.
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Just love this shot - not mine but it inspired me to write the following poem.
Boy at play in good father field
Leaping to meet
The heroic heart in every man
Blest is he, blessed I amSoul knows further fields
In times and tides to come
Will ask heroic deeds
Of this brave sonBlest is he, at play and found
In the field of the good father
On holy ground
On holy ground -
Islander, in reply to
Pipiwharauroa doesnt chime: it does have a somewhat melancholy call with an upbeat end ‘kuii! kuii! Kui kui aa!’
For decades, I’ve had rirerire (grey warblers) nesting in my trees, so there’s a few shining cuckoo about too (they also have an unfortunate habit into flying into lit windows at night.) I love both calls…but the olds thought rirerire (and pihareika, the black cricket) were the sweetest singers of all. In the south, we added piopio
the S.I thrush…There an excellent book, “NZ Bird Calls” by Lynette & Geoff Moon, John Kendrick & Karen Baird (pub. New Holland, with pictures, info and a CD, $29.99) that I recommend…
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Sofie Bribiesca, in reply to
There was the mysterious death of a peach tree and a big old wisteria after the September quake though,
Wisteria, whilst grown anywhere (happily in sun), does need well draining soil so depending on the liquefaction build up around it, it may have suffocated/ drowned. Some plants do have delicate shallow root systems (like Daphne) so I imagine earthquakes would be a wee bit hazardous to them. Not sure about fruit trees yet.
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Sofie Bribiesca, in reply to
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JacksonP, in reply to
Photos? I could post lots of old cinemas from around NZ.
Geoff, please get in touch if you'd be interested in contributing a Capture post on old New Zealand Cinemas, with photographic accompaniment. It would be a huge privilege to host them here.
And we could get our cinematic hats on in the replies. Sofie already looks like a film star. ;-)
Cheers
Jackson -
Geoff Lealand, in reply to
Thanks, Jackson. I will certainly consider this. I am posting two photos with each cinema on my http://cinemasofnz.info site but I will have plenty left over.
Any good time for this, -
Also have great photos of my father in the North African desert in WW2--all off duty (drunk soldiers sleeping it off, washing themselves naked in the sunlight). Must search them out.
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Lilith __, in reply to
There was the mysterious death of a peach tree and a big old wisteria after the September quake though, for which no-one has a good theory.
Joe: My Mum lost a peach tree and a robinia after the September quake, and I know several other people who had healthy trees suddenly die. I'm guessing there was some invisible damage to their root systems in the earthquake.
Also the violets in my garden flowered continuously this year from March until September. Normally they come out, like clockwork, in the middle of August. A friend who works in horticulture says some plants can be "forced" into bloom by vigorous shaking, so I'm guessing that's what's happened to the violets. I guess it's like how stressed grapevines put most of their energy into grapes not leaves - prioritising reproduction over feeding themselves.
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Russell Brown, in reply to
Neat photo Dyan. I lost a lot of scanned old stuff so have to do it all again but for some reason this one of me in ’85 is still exists. So here I am at 21 :)
You lil' cutie!
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Joe Wylie, in reply to
Joe: My Mum lost a peach tree and a robinia after the September quake, and I know several other people who had healthy trees suddenly die. I'm guessing there was some invisible damage to their root systems in the earthquake.
Thanks Hebe, that seems to be the consensus from those with proper horticultural knowhow. As for extended flowering seasons, the pansies & violas around here just haven't stopped, even for the snow in July & August.
Anyway, here's Santa in Riccarton Road today.
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Lilith __, in reply to
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Oh you sexy thing, Sof.
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Islander, in reply to
Annnnd- that empty chair says so much Jackie-
(it's a bit like my uncle Bill's Mercator folder - the most basic folding knife you can get- which he wore all the black paint off, and which I continue to have in a pocket-
because it was uncle Bill's. And I gave it to him - with the family's ritual exchange of a small silver coin for the gift of something edged- when I was 16...the threepence is still around somewhere too-)A physical presence - somehow attached to a physical object- when the person is gone.
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Joe Wylie, in reply to
Lilith - sorry, addressed you as Hebe in my reply upthread.
Speaking of grapes, the little Niagara vine that went in after September's quake now has tiny grapes. The seem to thrive on punishment. -
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@Joe: White Niagra? I have had a good crop from mine for 4 years but the vine has gone into decline. Recommend tying small paper bags over each bunch, before they ripen, as the birds love them.
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Simon Grigg, in reply to
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