
Standing alone on Bluebell hill, I watched the clouds go by, their shadows like smudges of ink gliding across the countryside. A thought came to mind – do these shadows at some mysterious level leave behind their tracks in the landscape, or do they simply, without a trace, dissolve with their twin in the sky?
Like this:
Like Loading...
Author: Don
My name is Don Scrooby and I live in The United Kingdom. I feel that more than anything else, nature, and the objective things around us, convey a speech and a message we always need to listen to and follow. This kind of listening is life-giving and there is a certain form spirituality about it.
In this blog, through the the photographic image and accompanying words, I’ve tried to share this experience as simply as I can. There is an underlying beauty in nature we all need to see and experience, especially in this day and age as we struggle to save our planet.
Most of my shots are taken with a Fujifilm XT100 camera and my Iphone. I’m no professional Photographer, but I do enjoy outdoor walks with my simple gear trying to capture what I see and experience.
View all posts by Don
What a notion would be most people’s thoughts!
I believe that everything on this planet – man, flora, fauna, weather – well, just about everything is interdependent. Just as high rainfall preserves certain species of plant, animals and insects, everything else that touches this earth leaves a mark -visible, or invisible (to the naked human eye).
From the fruit I had for breakfast, right back to the store, delivery truck, grower, sun & rain, birds and animals that might have left fertilizer in the field, to the insects that pollinated its flowers, to the leaves that dropped in Autumn to mulch the ground, to the seed as it lay on the earth, to the…………well, anything and everything.
None of us humans, no matter how hermit-like our existence, is ever truly alone either.
LikeLiked by 2 people
Vicki, you have a wonderful way of seeing things. So much of your blog is a testimony to what you have said so beautifully here. Thank you for your inspiring comment and for taking the time to share your thoughts in this way.
LikeLiked by 1 person
What a lovely line, “dissolve with their twin in the sky”!
LikeLike
Thank you. So glad you liked it.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Interesting notion to ponder, Don. Reminds me of the butterfly effect.
LikeLike
Thanks Dan. Yes, it sure does.
LikeLiked by 1 person