This has not been a busy year on my blog, having sometimes gone a month or more without posting anything new. Currently teaching three college classes online from home, and not finding much time to write and post images for the blog. One more week in the semester and Spring has sprung, so that should change. I have a backlog of several dozen photos taken in the last few weeks, so I will soon be posting them along with stories of the experiences I'm having along the way. My overall theme is generally concentrated on flowering plants and their symbiotic relationships with their pollinators. When the mood strikes, I insert philosophical and political comments. Please feel free to share your comments, but please be nice. I try to be.
I have been teaching since 1965 and have recently joined the English Department as an Associate Faculty member at Feather River College. Recently taught Nature Literature in America and am currently teaching Interpersonal Communication and Basic Reading and Writing.
I began my search for photogenic brown subjects yesterday, but didn't get far before another prominent yellow bloom caught my eye, the Goldenrod. Then I found some Mullein and Plantain that had turned brown, but the most noticeable subjects in the area were the log stacks at the mill and the fence along the north side of the fairgrounds where the Virginia Creeper is beginning its annual fiery red display. Today I get to drive about 20 miles out of town, so I'll be watching for interesting displays of brown like the cat-o-nine-tails north of the Greenville Y. I'll be trying to make brown seem colorful.
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