Tuesday, June 29, 2010
Forest Flowers
Spent the June long weekend walking through forest in the Otways, feeling like I was where the Wild Things are :) The most amazing and surprising thing was the wide variety of fungi sighted. Here are just a few examples
Monday, May 31, 2010
Caught in the act
I've enjoyed many of the lane ways in Melbourne that have been cheered up with graffiti art. Saturday morning I was delighted to catch some of these artists at work. Here they are:
Sunday, May 23, 2010
Where the streets are paved with gold
We alone can devalue gold
by not caring
if it falls or rises
in the marketplace.
Wherever there is gold
there is a chain, you know,
and if your chain
is gold
so much the worse
for you.
Feathers, shells
and sea-shaped stones
are all as rare.
This could be our revolution:
To love what is plentiful
as much as
what's scarce.
(Alice Walker, in Horses Make a Landscape Look More Beautiful, pub. Harcourt, Brace, Jovanovitch, 1984)
Monday, May 17, 2010
last days of autumn
I've got the lovely Jess staying for a few days. Seeing that the sun was shining we went for a walk at lunch time. The autumn leaves, whether on the ground or on the tree, are glorious
It is clear that winter is near, though.
No wonder the buzzy bee was very slow moving.
Good ol' gum blossom doesnt wait for it to be spring to do its blooming
Wednesday, May 12, 2010
The Nature of Dreams
Disappointment is the nature of dreams...
"If you compare Israel to the magnitude of its dreams, it is a disappointment. But this is not about the nature of Israel; it's about the nature of dreams. Israel is a dream come true, and is such it is destined to taste sour - because it is fulfilled."So says Amos Oz in the documentary The Nature of Dreams, based on his memoir A Tale of Love and Darkness, directed by Masha Zur Glozman and Yonathon Zur. Oz is one of Israel's most esteemed writers; he is also known for his controversial political views. The man portrayed in the documentary matches the one who shines through his poetry and prose; humane, compassionate, insightful. A beautiful, beautiful man. The documentary follows Oz on an International lecture tour, reveals aspects of his family life, growing up in Jerusalem in the 1940's and later, living in a Kibbutz. It explores his hopes for peace between the Israelis and the Palestinians, particularly through a very moving conversation with a Palestinian man. As in his writing, Oz seeks the common ground, the self in the other, the other in the self, the naming of polarity as destructive.
The part of the film that I enjoyed the most was when there was a voice over of a piece of Oz's writing. Disappointing, then, was that the film did not really delve into Oz's creative, imaginative life. It had a much more political focus. I remember a wonderful interview that Oz gave with Radio National's Ramona Koval a number of years ago, where he spoke about the Hebrew language. I was captivated by the poetry, the mystery and the history of it. Guess you cant do everything in 100 minutes (or so). Several times the camera scanned the view of Jerusalem from the surrounding hills, an image that affected me for reasons I dont really understand. The shining gold Temple of the Rock dome against the sameness of the rest of the city; rows on rows of cream buildings. The harshness of the hills; dry, rocky, treeless. I'm glad I saw the film; it made me want to read the memoir. I also appreciated understanding just a tincy bit more about Jewish history and about Israel and Palestine. I also feel like I gained a little more insight into Albert and Rico, loved characters from The Same Sea
Promised lands are a lie. There is no wondrous snowman in the mountain ravines. Only in the sea there awaits her what never was and has gone. - from The Same Sea
A WISH STIRS
Evening. Rain falls on the empty desert hills. Chalk and flint and the smell of dust being wetted after an arid summer. A wish stirs: to be what I would have been had I not known what is known. To be before knowledge. Like the hills. Like a stone on the surface of the moon. Simply there, motionless and trusting in the length of its shelflife. - The Same SeaIsn't that beautiful!
The Nature of Dreams is showing at the Nova
Monday, May 10, 2010
Who lives here
Each time I walk along Collins Street in the city, I marvel at this nest, way up high in one of the trees. I'd love to know what sort of bird calls this tree home, and how they cope living on a busy city street (see photo below)
Sunday, May 9, 2010
river walk
Beautiful day to be out in the fresh air. Went for a walk along the Yarra just near where I live. Hard to believe such a peaceful valley exists only a few km's from the CBD




Then before coming home went to visit the bats (Grey Headed Flying Foxes) who fly over my home each night and morning, in their home. They were fast asleep and not receiving visitors


Labels:
bats,
Grey Headed Flying Foxes,
Melbourne,
Yarra River
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