This is a first for me, but I thought I’d give it a go. It can be found at http://lisaschaos.com/ if you would like to join in.
Tag: Photography
Cee’s Elemental Challenge
I’ve joined these together through lack of time at the right time. For her weekly Fun Foto Challenge Cee has chosen the 5 Chinese Elements, here are my 5 photos.
There were lots of entries – on time! over at http://www.ceephotography.com/2013/01/29/cees-fun-foto-challenge-fire/
Weekly Photo Challenge: Home
Christa at http://dailypost.wordpress.com/2013/02/08/photo-challenge-home/ says
‘In a new post specifically created for this challenge, share a picture that evokes HOME for you.’
I love these homes that I saw in Northern Ghana. It looks like such a tight community, something to be treasured in our hectic world.
The Lazy Poets Thursday Poem
I’ve decided to try to play with poetry occasionally and use one of my own photos as a prompt. This one was taken on Budleigh Salterton beach – I’ve never seen fungi on a beach before and keep thinking about it. Feel free to use my photo if it inspires you in any way.
Beach fungi
what happens to fungi by the sea?
does it adapt to salt misted air?
to a twice daily shower of English Channel
surviving and thriving on salt flavoured weed
evolve fins from mycelia that creep
from drift log to drift log
make demands to be hosted by a pilot whale?
or migrate across oceans on hulls
of a thousand white sails
mutating as arctic or tropic prevails
will it thrust roots and tiptoe inland seeking dry darkness?
to fester and squat like drinkers in a wine cellar
feasting on microscopic bacteria aerosoling
spores to caress rafters and beams
or overcome by saline will it dry
and then die crumbling along with the remains
of the 50p an hour deck chair
once graced by many a Budleigh derriere
Wordless Wednesday
Travel Theme: Shadows
Ailsa has chosen Shadows for her travel theme over at http://wheresmybackpack.com/2013/02/01/travel-theme-shadows/ this week. This is my response, a photo taken at Sultanhani Caravanserai in Turkey, and a quick poem.

On balance the shade is created
should some small creature have need
to escape fire radiating wall.
Justice will reign through unfolding hours
rusted metal absorbing the rays
til the wall is curtained with shade.
And the shadow that weighs
fades with sun’s last glow
and waits patient to forge a new day.
I’ve also linked to dVerse’s Poetics of Groundhog Day – Bright Shadow, thanks to Bjorn at http://brudberg.wordpress.com/
Grand Western Canal
The Grand Western Canal country park weaves its eleven miles through mid Devon from Tiverton right to the border with Somerset. It makes for easy level walking or cycling, with a profusion of wildlife, fishing or even a trip on a horse drawn barge. These are some of the things I saw today.
The Tivertonia looked like it was being prepared for the start of the new season and my photo didn’t turn out well so this is one I found,courtesy of the bbc, of the barge on a summer trip.
Weekly Photo Challenge: Unique
As soon as I saw the challenge I knew this photo was my choice, taken last Sunday at a sculpture exhibition at, you guessed it, Rosemoor.

Would you like to join in this week? http://dailypost.wordpress.com/2013/02/01/photo-challenge-unique/
Wordless Wednesday
My Hobbit is my guest!
Most of you are familiar with my friend at work, the lovely Hobbit who I tease so much. Well I invited him to write a guest post for Lucid Gypsy and he said yes! I hope you read and enjoy getting to know him a little, he is a gem!
Silence. Alarm. Silence.
I have been an avid reader of Gypsy’s blog for a while. I was chuffed that the other day, she asked if I would like be a guest blogger.
I’ve been thinking about what to write every day since. It had to be something relevant. It had to be a worthy event to justify someone taking the time to read it. Then I thought – keep it simple. Just write something.
Yesterday I was suffering from a common winter cold.
I struggled through the morning at work before I’d had enough. I negotiated a half day’s holiday. Besides, I wasn’t getting much sympathy at work – ‘Please don’t spread your germs around the office’ were the kindest words of support I was offered. Although I am sure it was meant with a slither of compassion.
Log off computer and shut down. Off I went.
The sensible thing to do would have been to go home, have a hot drink and go to bed. No. I was determined that as the cold weather had largely contributed to my cold, it could at least try its best to offer some sort of consolation. It didn’t disappoint.
There is a remote piece of wilderness on the edge of Exeter that is a favourite haunt of mine. It is a relatively small bundle of fields, trees and streams teeming with wildlife.
I’ve been there a thousand times – a regular visitor since I could barely walk. But yesterday I appreciated it more than usual.
You know that feeling you get when you wake on a Saturday morning, still sleepy, steeling yourself for the day ahead, still thinking its Friday, and a work day? Then comes the mini-euphoric realisation that it’s the weekend – extra minutes to laze in bed. Those extra minutes seem precious.
I hadn’t expected to be visiting my wilderness yesterday. Mini-euphoria.
It was silent and peaceful. The high ground was coated in snow.
The silence was briefly interrupted by the bang of a game-keepers rifle. This set off a sequence of bird alarm calls that sounded ten thousand strong, all shrieking in stereo.
Silence resumed.
The only sound was snow falling to the ground intermittently; its icy grip loosening from the frozen branches above.
Suddenly, a Jay crashes through the branches, barking out it’s disapproval at something in the woods as it flew hurriedly across the field.
The best of all though, arrived with no sound.
I had been walking for about an hour and the weather was biting again. I headed back to the car mindful of the worsening conditions.
I thought I had witnessed the best the afternoon had to offer, until the perfect picture.
The sight of a red fox staring at me in a field covered in snow. He knew I wanted to take his picture.
He posed, almost boastful of his glossy, shiny red coat. I rustled into my bag to grab the camera. I was ready for the picture. Nonchalantly, he turned away and disappeared into a mass of trees and snow.
I must learn to be a sharper shooter. A more sophisticated camera would certainly help.
What could have made my walk better?
Well, I guess it could have been slightly less chilly.
I suppose I could have taken the dog with me.
Maybe two of my equally enthusiastic photographer friends, who share my admiration of the countryside, could have joined me.
But then they would have probably caught my cold – and sympathy would have been even less forthcoming.
Even so, I wish every Thursday afternoon could be like yesterdays.
I would quite happily tolerate a cold each time to make this happen.
Simple.
Hobbit





