Monthly Archives: June 2017

Euphorbia milii: Flower of the Day, June 11, 2017

 

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Found this little Crown of Thorns in the back garden of a little restaurant in Ajijic.

For Cee’s Flower Prompt.

Odd (Eye)ball??? Cee’s Odd Ball Photo Challenge, June 10, 2017

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I absolutely love this photo. Whatever Dee is relating to Colleen has turned her cross-eyed.  Lynda, bored, couldn’t care less and has taken solace in her iPhone.  Whoever is lurking to the side could probably fill us in on what is being talked about here.

https://ceenphotography.com/cees-challenges/cees-odd-ball-photo-challenge/

Heliconia: Flower of the Day, June 10, 2017

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For Cee’s flower prompt. (Have a look at her flower as well.)

Revelation in Twilight: 19 Studies of the Moon

Revelation in Twilight

This morning I woke early—an hour before light
obscured my vision of the moon, hanging like a kite
in the night-stained sky, there through my window bars.
suspended high up in a sky devoid of clouds or stars.

Just a minute later, it moved along with me
to float the pool’s surface that only I could see.
Too soon the sun would come, its golden light to douse.
But for now, it followed me as I walked through my house.

Friendly moon to loiter in my company.
It seemed this early morning that both of us were free
to spend a few rare moments quietly alone.
Both of us free-floating in the twilight zone.

(Please click on first photo to enlarge all.)

 

 

 

The prompt today was revelation. All photos by jdb.

Bougainvillea and Friends: Flower of the Day, June 9, 2017

 

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For Cee’s Flower Prompt.

Big Spender

Big Spender

If a kiss were legal tender
I know those of either gender
who in the midst of a big bender
would be labeled a big spender.
And though they’re comely, fit and slender,
and may have many a staunch defender,
if I’m looking for a lender,
I’d prefer a less-used vendor.

 

The prompt today is “tender.”

Rococo: Thursday Doors: June 8, 2017

Rococo is de rigueur in Mexico.  Love this door.

Elocution

Elocution

When I was a child, I had a little lisp,
but now that I am older, my speech is bold and crisp.
I can voice my esses with no teeth pressed to my tongue.
I express myself more clearly than I did when I was young.
“Yes,” I say most clearly when my family asks for dough.
The only problem I have now is how to utter “No!”


I’ve had no electricity for almost 24 hours.  Need to get this up quickly, using my phone as a hotspot and a backup battery that is almost dead.  A day without a computer?  What will I do, folks?

The prompt today is crisp.

Bad Photos of Mama and Papa Wren

I was finally was able to capture these photos of papa..but no time to focus.  Can you see the jet that just happened to stream by as I was snapping the one shot? Sorry about the poor photos, but I’m hoping someone will tell me if I’m right in identifying them as wrens:

(Click any photo to enlarge all.)

 

To read the poem “Kitchen Nativity” about this bird, his mate and nestlings, go HERE.

Kitchen Nativity

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Kitchen Nativity

I crept into my kitchen to see
what caused this morning’s cacophony.
The high corner of the cupboard wall
seemed to be the source of all
the peepings and it’s then I guessed
a mother bird had made a nest
there above the kitchen ceiling,
where I thought the paint was peeling.
Instead, that white spilled down the wall
outside the kitchen is not at all
what I thought—salitre’s heavings,
but is instead the nestlings’ leavings.

The watching mother stays aloof
on the next-door neighbor’s roof
with mouth filled with a juicy grub.
Now she flies from roof to shrub,
objecting to my presence there,
so close to nestlings in her care.
And so I leave the bird’s domain,
lest nestlings’ voices be raised in vain.
Minutes later, all is still,
although I know ten minutes will
bring more protests from tiny beaks
for wormy treats that mama seeks.
So it is this year again
that Mother Nature invites guests in.
My house now shelters more than me—
my family stretched from “I” to “we.”