Wednesday, August 29, 2018

Morning / evening











8 comments:

deborah said...

Beautiful. I love the sun coming through the red leaves. Coleus is heartbreaking lovely. I disliked it as a kid, now it stirs something deep in my heart. the variation, the color contrast. Your iguana looks like road kill lol.

About a week ago I moved a small toad from the cement by my side door to the back yard and put him in the hostas by the house. A few days later I walked by and saw him still there, if it was the same one. I want to get a little clay pot and make him shelter.

edutcher said...

Nifty.

The pics are as nice as the plants. Give thineself a pat on the back.

edutcher said...

deborah, you were wondering about how Trump does his thing.

A few fine points from the Eminent Mr Surber.

6, 7, and 8 will interest you, but 5, I think, is what you were asking about. Just multiply it by all the other countries Trump has on his side on this one

MamaM said...

"Beautiful" seconded, with deborah's heartfelt response teaming/teeming with loveliness as well.

As for toads and other Bufonidae, they are not without the resources needed to find their place in nature.

MamaM said...

Appreciating the link, edutcher. 3 was well said and 4 affirms what's caught my attention over and over when he is out in public or making introductions.

SonM said the company he works for changed their order of 21 fork lifts from the German made brand they'd been buying to the US made brand due to the change in steel prices this summer.

edutcher said...

WAY OT, but Troop wrote passionately about this yesterday and I agree.

Very good piece from Team Jacobson on how the wall of silence in the Church must be broken. Non-Commie priests are beginning to fight back.

Again, another big story that will be around long after Songbird's flag has been struck.

deborah said...

Thanks, Ed. Number six is his calling card. And while everyone is having a meltdown he meets with world leaders.

MamaM said...

Something long ago and far away chimed in my soul when I read the title.

It links back to the following, memorized in grade school school:
The earth was without form and void, and darkness was over the face of the deep. God said, ‘Let there be light,’ and there was light. And God saw that the light was good. And God separated the light from the darkness. God called the light Day, and the darkness he called Night. And there was evening and there was morning, the first day.”

Part of a Creation story that happens over and over in gardens everywhere, when that which is without form and seemingly empty bursts into life.