Weekly Photo Challenge: Reflections

Plockton: the morning before the race

Plockton: the morning before the race

I took this photo a few years ago, and love the vertical reflections of the masts. The boats are due to take part in a race later in the day, as part of the yearly regatta, and so soon the peace will be swirled into the wild excitement of competition.

I have posted this for the Weekly Photo Challenge : Reflections

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Weekly Travel Photo Challenge: Fluid

Doggie tag at Yellowcraigs

This weeks travel photo theme is Liquid……my post for last weeks theme Mystical would have fitted just as well this week, but I put on my thinking head and went for a browse through this summers photos. These shots were all taken late in the day, as the light was beginning to be tinged with golden pink from the lowering sun. The dogs were full of energy as usual, and Molly, the youngest was having a wild time in the waves. To me these photos say ‘liquid fun‘.

Stick fun in the sea

This stick provided hours of entertainment….more ‘liquid fun’…..

You’re it!

They never seem to get tired!

I love the way the water leaves patterns on the sand which make it look like frozen waves, and the liquid light seems to merge the ocean and the land. Lovely parallel liquid lines.

This last photo just makes me smile…..as though the dogs are being sucked…or are running…down some liquid wormhole 🙂

tiny planet dogs!

If you click on the link below it will take you to see some others photos on the theme ‘Liquid’ at wheresmybackpack.co.uk

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Autumns last fling: just before the storm

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I took these photos while out on a dog walk on Sunday. It was a beautiful sunny autumn day, and the trees were hanging onto their last modesty covering of leaves. On Sunday evening the wind whipped up and a wild storm blew all night. In the morning the ground was strewn with leaves and the trees were bare. I was so glad I had taken the time to enjoy a walk on Sunday, as the scene has changed completely now. That’s the last of the autumn colour for another year I think.

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It’s a great reminder not to procrastinate, and to get out and enjoy every day as it is. No day is ever repeated, which is abundantly clear when change happens suddenly and dramatically overnight. Yet even the quiet days and the little subtle differences and changes are well worth taking the time to notice. Don’t be in such a hurry for the next day, until you have had time to savour and appreciate the day you are already in.

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Never will this last fling of colour been seen again. It will not repeat, so why not embrace the unique, never to be repeated wonders of nature. She might even make us smile 🙂

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Weekly Travel Photo Challenge: Mystical

Sun in peat bog

Sun and dragonfly in bog pool

Dragonfly and peat bog reflections

These photos were taken in a Scottish peat bog, deep in the Scottish Highlands, and I was captivated by the clarity and depth of reflection in the dark peaty water. The sky seemed to fill the pool with mesmerising reflections and it made me think about the Celtic otherworld, a spiritual place which they believed lay beneath the everyday world we see and inhabit. The pools of water in peat bogs were seen as sacred gateways to the otherworld, and offerings and sacrifices are believed to have been placed here to harness otherworldy and mystical powers.

When the sun disappeared behind a cloud the reflections became even more mysterious, and I love the way its dazzling light is diffused through the cloud and then reflected on the water….it becomes almost moon like, and the blue daytime sky darkens, giving a mystical feel to the pool. It was a deeply relaxing and spiritually uplifting experience, and I stayed for hours, despite the midges.

I had come here to try to get some photos of the giant blue dragonflies which breed here, and if you look closely you will see dragonflies in two of the three photos. I find them fascinating and otherworldly in themselves, with their glittering iridescent bodies, and their transformational life-cycle, changing from water grub to beautiful high fliers! All very mystical and mysterious.

I’ve posted this to take part in where’s my backpacks’ weekly travel photo challenge: mystical. Click the link to see more photos on this theme, and join in if you want.

wheresmybackpack.com – travel theme: mystical

Here are one or two entries from other bloggers

smartntrendymom.wordpress.com

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Wild Weekly Photo Challenge – Sunsets

Plockton sunset over Cooper Street

Plockton sunset over Crags

Here are a couple of sunsets taken at different times of the year, over the very picturesque village of Plockton in Wester Ross, Scotland. I have been coming here since I was a little baby as it’s where my mother’s family are from, but I never get bored with the sunsets….each one is unique and never to be repeated. It encourages mindfulness, knowing that this is the only chance to see this particular mix of colour and clouds….

This was posted in response to be inspired be wilds’ weekly photo challenge. Click the link to see more fabulous sunsets from all around the world, and submit your own photos…

wild weekly photo challenge-sunsets

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Weekly Photo Challenge: Green

Here is my gallery of Green, from Scotland, where the grass grows soft and green due to copious rainfall and gentle sunlight 🙂

Click here to see more links to the Weekly Photo Challenge Green

Here are a few other galleries I liked

salmonfishingqueen.wordpress.com

eof737.wordpress.com

adinparadise.wordpress.com

myjourneywithdepression.wordpress.com

izabelabenisz.wordpress.com

Posted in green walks, nature photo, photos, weekly photo challenge | Tagged , , , , , | 30 Comments

Happiness: look down to find this elusive feeling

I had a very contented day yesterday, in fact I would say I was very happy. I noticed this when I was walking with my three wildly happy dogs through the aching beauty of an autumn bronzed beech wood.

Beechwood path

I think on reflection that my happiness was a result of me being fully present and engaged with the beautiful colours and sounds which surrounded me. I had walked here in these same woods only 2 days before, but had been wrapped up in thoughts about a problem at work, and so had barely noticed the breath-taking autumn scene around me. Yesterday however I wasn’t distracted by my thinking mind, instead I was walking fully engaged with my senses, drinking in my surroundings. I found a peaceful and contented joy, which I might easily have missed, had I been focused on getting from start to finish in a set time, or had I been lost in my thoughts.

Beech tunnel

So it seems that happiness is something which we can find if we stop searching and yearning, and just let ourselves be emerged, with all our senses, in the beautiful process of living. Kicking my way through this thick crisp carpet of leaves took me back to being about 4 years old, and full of wonder. Happiness was literally right under my feet.

The foolish man seeks happiness in the distance, the wise grows it under his feet.
James Oppenheim

I love this quote which speaks to me of living mindfully, of living in the moment. If I can be absorbed with the joy and beauty of what’s actually happening right now, my mind has no space to drift back to the past, or to yearn forwards for some imaginary point in time when everything will be aligned perfectly to bring me happiness. Happiness is already with me, if I will just give myself space to notice, and time to breathe.

Posted in mindfulness, nature photo, philosophy, photos, relaxation, spiritual, thoughts, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | 6 Comments

Poppies to remember: Or to forget?

Poppies have always seemed rather cheerful flowers to me, with their vivacious red petals filling my borders with colour year after year. So to me it has always seemed a bit of a misfit with the somber remembrance of the loss hundreds of thousands of vibrant lives, on the 11th of November every year. Visiting the local war memorial this year on Remembrance Sunday, as I have done for as long as I can remember, got me wondering about why the poppy has come to signify this deeply depressing remembering of lives, cut down before their time on earth had run its natural course.

War memorial, Midlothian

When I was a little girl the wreaths, encircling curious emblems, were part of a mysterious, mournful yet colouful pagent which marked the time between Halloween and Christmas. There was lots of standing solemnly in church, and at the war memorial, usually in bitingly cold wind.  There was the wildly emotional sound of the last post playing valiantly on a lone horn, and the tear inducing cry of the bagpipes, while autumns leaves swirled around our feet. There were the huge colourful regimental flags and of course dashings of poppies. My mother was, and to this day still is, sad and introverted around this time. She lost her father in the II WW, and as it happens she opened the door to the postman bearing the grief infused telegram for her mother which was to change all of their lives forever. I think she still carries some misplaced childhood grief about the excited way she skipped down the hall to announce the exciting arrival of the telegram. When I was younger the day always felt like a strange mix of universal pride in the men and women who had given their lives for the greater good of the country, and personal grief for those families who had lost beloved members. It was as though national pride could somehow wash away and compensate for all the individual private losses.

Poppy remembrance wreaths

Nowadays the 11th of November holds a very different mix of emotions for me. I feel universal despair and grief at the pointless loss of so many promising lives, and at the seeming endless excuses for war and violence as a solution to difference. I feel personal grief and disillusion at the casual way my brother and many of his fellow soldiers have been sent into hell, and then been abandoned when broken by the experience. I can find nothing uplifting or comforting in the senseless loss not just of life, but of promising futures. The lists of the dead are only part of the losses incurred, the even longer lists of the wounded, maimed and mentally tortured are rarely mentioned.

Perhaps the poppy is after all the perfect symbol, known as the flower of forgetfulness, its opium juice has been fueling conflict in Afghanistan for countless years. It springs hopeful from the battle-scarred earth, but its hope is cut down every year, as new conflicts arise. As I sat in the 2 minute silence which engulfed the country on the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month, with the sound of the tolling bells still ringing in my ears, all I could feel was the senselessness of war, and my powerlessness to do anything about it. This was a different kind of mindful silence from my usual daily practice, yet there was also a deep feeling of being connected to thousands of others who were also observing silence in this tiny part of the day. There is no other time in the year when some much silence is experienced universally by so many.

I like the silence, and next year I think I may wear a white poppy.

In Flanders Fields

In flanders fields the poppies blow

Between the crosses, row on row

That mark our place, and in the sky

The larks, still bravely singing fly

Scarce heard amid the guns below

We are the dead; short days ago

We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow

Loved and were loved, and now we lie

In Flanders fields.

by John McCrae

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Weekly Photo Challenge: Renewal

Sacred Well

The deep well of renewal.

Wells were in the past places where travellers could refresh and renew themselves, before the next stage of their journey. They were also sacred places of connection with the otherworld, and its regenerative forces of renewal. I find these old wells still have a wonderful energy, both soothing and refreshing, and dipping into the crystal clear waters rewards the tongue with a cool tingling sensation of renewal.

This well is nestled away slightly off the path, sheltered in a stand of oak trees, in the Scottish Highlands, and I loved the way the sunlight was twinkling on the dark water. Taking the time to pause and appreciate where this water had come from, bubbling up through the earth and rocks perhaps for hundreds of years, before rising into the light on the surface of the well, made me more appreciative of the water itself, than when I just turn on the tap back at home.

Click here to see some other photos of renewal in the Weekly Photo Challenge

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Surprise Brides of Edinburgh

I had headed up to Edinburgh’s Old Town, looking for some atmospheric shots of the old Closes (the alleyways squeezed between the crooked old highrises). I had set up to take a picture down Old Assembly Close when suddenly a beautiful bridal couple spilled out into my view. It was a beautiful and picturesque surprise, if a little blurry.

Vintage with pink shoes

Her pink shoes were a wonderful pop of colour, setting off her vintage look perfectly. I followed their progress out onto the cobbled streets of the historic Royal Mile, where their wedding photographer lined them up for a classic shot down the historic street. Just behind them was a group of charity collectors who were dressed up in silly animal costumes. The juxtaposition made me smile, yet another surprise of the day.

Bridal couple plus comedy backdrop

After this I turned back to try to get some shots around the back of St Giles Cathedral, in the heart of the old parliamentary and legal square. After taking a few nice pictures I stepped back to look around and another bridal couple sailed past me, followed by their photographer who was busy issuing instructions. They seemed oblivious wrapped up in themselves, and they looked so romantic.

Romance in the Old Town

I wandered further round the old square, and around the next corner I stumbled upon a third bridal party. The guys were lined up having their photos taken by this very jolly photographer, as the bride looked on.

Jolly chap

I was bemused by all these unexpected brides, all within a tiny space, and wondered if it was a particularly special Saturday to get married on. Super Saturday of the Bridal year perhaps. As I wondered and walked across the square yet another bridal party tumbled out of the Signet Library and onto the cobbles in front of St Giles. This bride had gone for a shorter modern look, with fabulous heels, which must have proved challenging for negotiating Edinburgh’s cobbled streets.

I thought this must be it on the wedding front, but there was a final surprise encounter in store for me as I turned the final corner around St Giles to head back to where I had started on the Royal Mile. There ahead of me was another wedding party complete with kilted gents. I do love a man in a kilt, and have never seen one who doesn’t suit it….but then I am a Scot!!

I hope you enjoyed my surprise brides as much as I did, and I’m sure they all got stunning photos with this amazing historic backdrop. The light was fading and the street lights were coming on as this dedicated photographer continued to shoot 🙂

 

 

 

 

Posted in Edinburgh, history, photos, spiritual, Wedding | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | 11 Comments