Oriental, Sailing Capital of NC
Greetings from the Neuse River
Life here along the banks of the Neuse River, overlooking close to four miles of water, is a sharp contrast to living in a city. Most months, it is idyllic; then, there are the months that remind you that Mother Nature is definitely in charge.
This neighborhood of houses face the Neuse River and backs up to several acres of farmland -- most years, soybean --- then thick tracts of pine forests to the main road.
I love to watch the sea gulls, sometimes the pelicans, and cormorants or egrets and the occasional eagle or osprey. The cute visitors are "chickens" that my neighbor called me about photographing who were grazing in her yard. Even at 100 feet away, they were skittish and flew to the further neighbor's yard but just enough for me to photograph them for identification. These "chickens" turned out to be cattle egrets. The flock numbered about thirty -- by the river bank...not sure why they picked her yard.
I suppose you could say this blog is an occasional picture-book of life in Pamlico County or whatever comes to mind at the time.
This neighborhood of houses face the Neuse River and backs up to several acres of farmland -- most years, soybean --- then thick tracts of pine forests to the main road.
I love to watch the sea gulls, sometimes the pelicans, and cormorants or egrets and the occasional eagle or osprey. The cute visitors are "chickens" that my neighbor called me about photographing who were grazing in her yard. Even at 100 feet away, they were skittish and flew to the further neighbor's yard but just enough for me to photograph them for identification. These "chickens" turned out to be cattle egrets. The flock numbered about thirty -- by the river bank...not sure why they picked her yard.
I suppose you could say this blog is an occasional picture-book of life in Pamlico County or whatever comes to mind at the time.
Friday, June 4, 2010
Critically Endangered
My paintings from my last exhibit, "Feathers & Fins" spoke of the demise of the environment using coastal metaphors. The recent BP oil disaster in the Gulf of Mexico is so incredibly sad and depressing that I returned to view my images from that show. One of them titled "Critically Endangered" with the looming black shape in the upper left (note the segment of wing in left foreground) speaks of the huge danger our bird and marine life is faced with.
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