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Posts from March 16, 2008

16 March 2008

'Florida Scrub Jay = Yoda' by Daniel Godwin | Lake Wales | Creative Commons

This photograph was sent to the photographer by his brother and posted at Flickr under a CC license (yay!)  The photographer's brother explained why this little nestling is be-robed for the photo:

I banded the first brood of Florida Scrub-Jay nestlings at Lake Wales Ridge State Forest (southeastern Polk County) this past Wednesday. One of the nestlings didn't want to come out of the weighing bag (aka a trimmed panty hose), so I had to "peel" the bag away from it. Suddenly the jay looked very much like a well-known, very wise ("Wars not make one great"), and much loved old ... bird (?) [links added fyi by me]

Don't his little claws look like little taloned hands?  This photo has won a certain amount of well-deserved acclaim on Flickr....  This species is under threat due to habitat loss, by the way.   Let's hope we don't lose yet another species of animal people.  I would hate to lose little Yoda.  No wonder he looks a bit annoyed.  Or maybe he just had to deal with an unpromising trainee.

"You worthless at learning Jedi techniques are!  I fed up to the beak with you am!" 
Heh. 




'Florida Scrub Jay = Yoda' by Daniel Godwin | To see his Flickr photostream, click here | To see the full-sized version of this photograph, click here
| I do not own the rights to this photograph, but am using it in compliance with a restricted Creative Commons license.  Please do not save or download it without first consulting the terms of the applicable license.  A link to the license is shown here.

Signs of Cassadaga (Central Florida's Spiritualist Town) | Cassadaga | Creative Commons

Most non-Floridians don't really seem to have heard about Florida's psychic and spiritualist camp, Cassadaga, hidden away in the pine barrens of Central Florida, within about 50-60 miles of Orlando.  You can read more about its history here.

Can I just whisper in your ear that I visited it for fun with my friend Frances in 1996?  And that the reading I received from the psychic I consulted for 'fun' was weirdly accurate for the next three years?  Among other things, she very specifically and clearly described----ignoring my unconcealed skepticism---that (1) my mother would have heart trouble in August, but recover; (2) that I would meet a guy with whom I'd initiate a close friendship---meaning exactly that, a friendship--- that would be very important in my life; (3) that my husband would take a new job in another town that had the word 'Gourmet' in it (the name of the business actually did); that I'd find myself short of money, but would come through it; and much, much else of which not an inkling existed at the time. 

Furthermore, though I rebuffed her when she asked me if I was an artist----I wasn't, and treated the statement with incredulity----she said she saw me working with 'little multi-colored flowers.'  A few weeks later I looked down at the needlepoint I was doing for a one-time-only special gift for my mom:  yep, little multi-colored flowers everywhere.   I didn't imagine what she told me; I have it all on tape.  Yes, I know what you're thinking.  Believe me:  I know.

Frances, on the other hand, didn't have such good luck with hers (if you want to call it good luck).  So I don't know.  I don't 'believe,' but I can say that I met one person whose predictions turned out to be dead on.  I haven't been back; I find I don't want to know what's next with that level of accuracy.  It's unsettling and it's also unclear what you do about it once you realize it's happening.  In fact, there is nothing you can do really, making foreknowledge an exercise in futility.  To paraphrase a character in one of my favorite Ursula LeGuin novels, divination is useful only as an illustration of the uselessness of knowing the right answer to the wrong question.

Anyway, I remember the palms and pine trees, and I remember big, somewhat ramshackle houses of somber aspect heavily shaded by live oaks.  Like many Central Florida towns, it had a certain bleakness in the perpendicular afternoon light, but as the light mellowed, took on that mysterious late afternoon radiance.

 



Cassadaga Signs by Niemster (Matthew Niemi) |  To see his Flickr photostream, click here | Website:  The Niemster |  To see the largest version of this photograph available on Flickr, click here
| I do not own the rights to this photograph, but am using it in compliance with a restricted Creative Commons license allowing for limited noncommercial use.  Before saving or downloading it, please consult the terms of the applicable license.  A link to the license is here.




'Eloise in Cassadaga' by Mlle Sarah (Sarah) |  To see her Flickr photostream, click here | Website:  Pretty Little Bits |  To see the largest version of this photograph available on Flickr, click here
|  I do not own the rights to this photograph, but am using it in compliance with a restricted Creative Commons license allowing for limited noncommercial use.  Before saving or downloading it, please consult the terms of the applicable license.  A link to the license is here.



Um, Sure... by Niemster (Matthew Niemi)  To see his Flickr photostream, click here | Website:  The Niemster |  To see the largest version of this photograph available on Flickr, click here | I do not own the rights to this photograph, but am using it in compliance with a restricted Creative Commons license allowing for limited noncommercial use.  Before saving or downloading it, please consult the terms of the applicable license.  A link to the license is here.



'Cassadaga'  by errrrrrrrrika|  To see her Flickr photostream, click here |  To see the largest version of this photograph available on Flickr, click here I do not own the rights to this photograph, but am using it in compliance with a restricted Creative Commons license allowing for limited noncommercial use.  Before saving or downloading it, please consult the terms of the applicable license.  A link to the license is here

'Fort Myers' by Alexander Wrege | Fort Myers | Creative Commons

Here's a radiantly tinted shot from the Gulf Coast city of Fort Myers.  I love the red awning and the flashes of yellow and royal blue.  Magnificent holiday shot---wish I was there now.  I really do.



Best-Winter 2007 -Fort Myers by Alexander Wrege | To see his photostream at Flickr, click here  | website:  Quantum Indecisions | To see the largest version of this Flickr, click here


I do not own the rights to this photograph, but am using it pursuant to a restricted Creative Commons license.  Please do not save or use it without first consulting the terms of the applicable license.  The license can be viewed here. 
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