
‘Pitted II’
attracted to attrition
( more of this stuff in Pitted )

‘Pitted’
Wind and water, those eternal elements, have pitted the pale rocks on the surf beach at New Zealand’s Mangawhai Heads.
I have been drawn to the formations for many years.
A lesson in being beautiful despite being worse for wear…

‘Diamonds On The Roof’

‘Down To The Water’

‘Flow And Fallen’

‘Please Slide To Open’
There is a chink of light outside the door.
Slide the door.
Don’t pull it, or push it.
There is a slight opening, which will get bigger as you go.
Ease into the light, for you cannot force it.
Outside awaits you.

‘Dot Dash’
…morse signals in concrete and glass…
“Dot Dash
Dip Flash
Don’t Crash”
Wire,’Dot Dash’

‘Behind The Wall’
This shot found me peering over a stone wall in a quiet Scottish fishing town.
A lush lawn and garden is revealed, in contrast to the wall’s austerity.
Surprising!
Some people have hard, stony exteriors which don’t invite you in.
Maybe the facades hide softer, verdant souls…

‘Royal Spoonbill’
An uncommon but very cool local sighting of a royal spoonbill last weekend.
Originally coming from Australia in about 1950 ,there are about 2,000 of the birds now in New Zealand, but hardly seen in my neck of the woods.

‘View Of Rangitoto From Tahuna Torea’
Looking northwards from the sandspit near the mouth of the Tamaki River to Auckland’s iconic volcanic island, Rangitoto.
There are few sights that make me happier than a clear view of the island.
I know I am home then.

‘Sand Ripples II’

‘Sand Ripples’
Following on from the previous post, here is another image of repetition in nature – this time it is ripples in tidal sand, as regular as corrugated iron.
You’ll forgive me, I hope, for repeating myself…

‘Breathe III’
Another view of massed mangrove aerial roots at low tide, to surreal effect.
God only knows why they fascinate me. If you are similarly fascinated, you can see more in Breathe and Breathe II .

‘Never Bow Down’
“Never to bow down,
don’t you ever slow down”
 – ‘Bow Down’, The Go-Betweens
When I reviewed the above shot of the triple bows, all proud and pointing, these defiant lyrics sprang to mind.
You can listen to the terrific song from Brisbane’s finest, below:

‘The Vic (Windows)’                       Victoria Theatre, Devonport NZ.  June 2020

‘Now Playing’                                  Victoria Theatre, Devonport NZ.  June 2020

‘Bird On A Wire’

A favourite Auckland place – the short, curving breakwater at the Devonport shore.
I have visited there a number of times before, but this time around I was drawn to its pure functionality.
The sandy beach just out of shot was protected by the waves driven by a fresh south-easterly wind.
There was calm in the lee of the solid pier.
The breakwater was doing its job.
Which had me thinking about what breaks the adverse forces that fall upon us in life.
There is something about resilience in this. The tools that we have at our disposal or the things we learn along the way, that mitigate the effect of the negative and the harmful.
I spent a great part of my adult life not realising that resilience was even a quality. Stuff happened and you just dealt with it well, or didn’t, as the case may have been.
Which is sort of leaving things to chance.
The reason some people bounce back from tumult or disaster, and others don’t, doesn’t come down to genetics or your star sign.
It is our hard earned resilience that makes the difference. That is: learning from experience; realising that existence is both fluid and fragile; and finding shelter (or a breakwater) when you need it.
Just as an aside, resilience should not be confused with stoicism. I have learned the difference between the two the hard way. Stoicism is pretending you are the breakwater.
In life, as in the shoreline scene, we find ourselves on either side of the breakwater at different times.
Resilience is just knowing where to position yourself when the waves toss up.

. ..pig and poultry bliss…

…in heaven, time is eternal; just a little bit lower, the time is 11.22 a.m…