
Sometimes what can’t be seen, can be undoubtedly felt–welling up and out of the unknown.

Sometimes what can’t be seen, can be undoubtedly felt–welling up and out of the unknown.
As a photographer, I am average, at best.
I take photos of plants and landscapes that speak to me.
What do I hear? What do they say? Only I know that I must look closer. So I do that through the camera viewfinder. I share these because somehow or other they have spell bound me. And I like that. I hope you have a similar experience.

Sun. Flower. Tell me more about the Sun and flowers.

I’m coming to get you!

“Are you asking me? …is that some kind of existential ‘look-in-the-mirror’ trick?”
“Are you going to take the trip or not?”

Stop pushing me!

Oooooopps—more than a pair!

Corylus avellana, 600 meters above sea level, 12June2010, North facing slope, Bernese Highlands, Swiss Alps.
Hazelnut or filbert. At the risk of sounding too much like an oldtimer…
Once upon a time, before European mass produced chocolate became common in the United States, if you wanted chocolate with nuts, you had primarily chocolate with peanuts. Then if you took the big voyage to Europe and tried to find chocolate and peanuts…impossible. Chocolate and nuts in Europe meant chocolate and hazelnuts. Need I say mouth watering?

Sambucus nigra, 11June2010, 600meters above sea level, North facing slope, Berner Oberland, Switzerland.
Dig into this one. Elderberry ice cream. Elderberry cordial. Elderberry jam. And on it goes. Wait until ripe, if you haven’t already harvested the flowers. So light. Heavenly.

I love to see an agricultural community in transition. Everything counts. Nothing is wasted.

People still remember that everything counts and, for security, nothing is wasted.

Found at approx 1600 meters above sea level in the
Swiss Alps, Bernese Highlands, Jungfrau Region

Gentiana acaulis
22May2018