Please click on first photo to enlarge and see entire series.
This little solar-powered fountain floats along on the surface of my pool. Here it is in front of a bank of assorted flowers.
For Cee’s FOTD
Please click on first photo to enlarge and see entire series.
This little solar-powered fountain floats along on the surface of my pool. Here it is in front of a bank of assorted flowers.
For Cee’s FOTD
For Last on the Card, Nov. 2024
When the adults took a break from the dance floor, the kids took over for a song…running and leaping. love this shot!!!
Click on photos to enlarge and see details.
Welcome to “The Numbers Game #50.” Today’s number is 171. To play along, go to your photos file and type that number into the search bar. Then post a selection of the photos you find that include that number and post a link to your blog in my Numbers Game blog of the day. If instead of numbers, you have changed the identifiers of all your photos into words, pick a word or words to use instead, and show us a variety of photos that contain that word in the title.
This prompt will repeat each Monday with a new number. If you want to play along, please put a link to your blog in comments below. Above are my contributions to the album.
Click on photos to enlarge.
A Mexican Wedding is a joyous affair. You might guess from the number of wedding cakes how many people were at the celebration afterwards. The photos in this spread just show a bit of the spectacle. I didn’t realize until I started editing that I had taken over 500 photos! 400 on my camera before the battery gave out and then 100 plus more on my friend’s phone. At any rate, here are a “few” of the shots. I particularly love the one of all the children acrobatically dancing on the dance floor…More photos will follow in a few days. I might add that Alejandra is Yolanda’s niece and my English student. I first met her at a camp we threw for local children many years ago. One of the photos is of Yolanda and her sisters. Another is of Alejandra with her two children, her sister Marie Jose and her cousin Yoli, who is Yolanda’s daughter. Yoli and Marie Jose are also taking English lessons from me. The two other Anglo women were Alejandra’s former teachers. Do you know about the Mexican tradition of filling eggshells with confetti and breaking them over each others’ heads? You can see evidence of the practice in the photos. The bride and groom are not the only ones brushing confetti from their hair and clothing at a Mexican wedding!
For Cellpic Sunday
Click on photos to enlarge and better make out the different elements.
NOTE: I saw “Five Elements” in the prompt and just naturally thought, “Air, earth, water, fire” and I saw “Metal” before I started finding photos. It wasn’t until after I posted and saw the posts of others that I realized “wood’ had been substituted for “air.” I guess 5 of the photos include wood by accident, so I’m covered. Next time I’ll read more carefully and not presume!
In most cases, fire in these photos is represented by the reflections of the sun. Air is ever-present, especially in photos of the small toy metal figures suspended in parachutes. In one case, metal is shown in the wire of the fence as well as the car made out by its headlights. In another, by the metal boat. The other larger images of cars are obvious.
For the Lens Artist Challenge: We were asked to post photos that included the 5 elements of air, earth, water, fire and metal.
Requiem for a Tyrant
(Guess Who?)
He will wander from the wide-eyed world into that sacred cave
where past memories assault him—wave on wave on wave,
bringing back on him the agonies, maneuverings and strife,
shattering the safety that cushioned him in life.
Harsh currents froth around him and spray into his eyes—
all his evil actions, his cheating and his lies
strung out to swirl around him, shifting power once again
so he becomes the object of all his former sin.
For The Sunday Whirl Wordle the word prompts are:frothed waves string face cave spray sacredshift shattered safe wide-eyed world