Thursday, March 1, 2012

Photo Hogs

or The Tourist Experience

I've begun to feel like a tourist in my own garden.  Spring can be thanked for that, as can the extensive replanting done last fall and the new-to-me perennials now putting on fledgling growth.  Every day as I amble around the circle path or walk the length of the patio or sit on the kitchen doorstep, some wonder is waiting to be discovered.  Each venture into the garden is a voyage "for pleasure, instruction, or culture."

Even familiar things are basking in the glow of fresh light these days and looking new and wondrous.  I've been trying to foster that frame of mind in myself in any case with the Thirteen (or Fewer) Ways of Looking at a Crocus (or Some Equivalent) Challenge.  I have become a tourist of crocuses over the past few weeks, exploring their shadings and shapes, their translucence in sunlight, their gleaming iridescence.  But as is the case all too often when you're a tourist and taking a never-to-be-replicated photo of a sight you won't see again soon,


some schmoe


always has to get


in the way.

Grand Canyon, Mona Lisa, Taj Mahal, or tiny garden flower, it doesn't matter.  At some point when you're a tourist, whatever you're trying to photograph will be "bombed" by someone who just has to get his (or her—I'm not really up on my aphid sexing) licks in first.

An inset of the above.  Who knew that aphids had such big, brown eyes?

Looking at these little photo hogs, I find myself disconcerted to realize how much I have come to see the garden as a cultural experience.  I've come to realize that aphids, too, have their place in the world, with their own customs to be studied and respected and photographed in situ, and that crocuses, no matter how much I love them, are also the rightful food of the hungry—even of hungry pests—at the lean end of winter.  Then again, the word "culture" does come from "cultivate," and the verb "to culture" means "to maintain in conditions suitable for growth."   How could a garden be anything but a cultural experience?

Such a nice thought.  And yet, an even nicer one—

Whatever fate may befall other photo bombers, the aphids will turn into mantis food later this spring.

One of four mantis egg sacs that I know of in my tiny garden, which I am
endeavoring to maintain in conditions suitable for growth

_________________
The "Thirteen Ways Challenge" also invites others to join in if they like.  Donna at Garden's Eye View has written a wonderful meditation on time, in which crocuses play a part, in the post Wishing For...

Other lovely crocus posts have been written by b-a-g at Experiments with Plants and HolleyGarden at Roses and Other Gardening Joys.  Jean of Jean's Garden has written on five ways of viewing forsythia.  My thanks to all of you for chiming in!

16 comments:

  1. Beautiful photos - and the bugs are as lovely as the flowers. I also enjoy how gardening makes us look more closely at the world, and realize the beauty and value of things we may have despised (or not even noticed) before. Great post.

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    1. Thanks, Rebecca. Gardening and blogging both encourage us to look more closely--I'm still amazed at how the two seem tailor-made for each other.

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  2. Thx Stacy for the shout out...I love your photo hogs and how our gardens are a cultural experience....so very true..

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    1. I'd be glad to lend some aphids—or even give them outright!—to anyone who needs a bit more culture in their lives...

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  3. Isn't nature a wonderful thing! I think we need to be more laid back about insects, bugs or whatever you want to call them. each has their place...and I learnt a new word! I had to google it. "Schmoe" meaning dull, stupid or boring person (US slang).

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    1. Janet, I had no idea "schmoe" wasn't "universal" English! It's good to see an official definition--I tend just to think of schmoes as "guys who bother me in a mild sort of way." And yes to being more laid back about insects and their ilk. If nothing else, gardening becomes a whole lot more enjoyable!

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  4. Stacy, I like the little visitors for photo op, but not so much to stick around. Nice close ups too. No crocus here yet, and the way the weather is, I may not see them for awhile.

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    1. Donna, the problem with those kinds of visitors is they never really do know when to leave. This time of year is the most painful, I think, when you're in the northeast. Hang on...

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  5. I was wondering how you were going to find yet another viewpoint on crocuses, but you've done it again and the photos get more beautiful each time. Poor aphid probably realised that it was pretty low down in the food chain.

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    1. Thank you, b-a-g. We're nearing the end of the crocus posts here--I'm beginning to worry what I'll find to say next year. Aphids definitely seem to have that "seize the day, because you never know when there will be another one" mentality.

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  6. Blimey Stacy, I've been working on a post 'to join in' but after seeing your photos, I might as well scrunch up my photos (if I could scrunch up digi-photos) and toss them into next door's garden (if she wasn't so nice). Post a few slightly out of focus and badly framed would ya? Dave

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    1. Dave, you're very kind, but no one who can take the kind of waterfall picture (or any of the others) that you did for your Dales Way post will be anywhere close to being flummoxed by a crocus. The motion in that one is beautiful, but the light toward the top of the 'falls completely stole my breath away.

      http://theanxiousgardener.com/2012/03/02/the-dales-way/

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  7. I don't think aphids will ever win a place in my heart even though they might be a necessary part of the food chain.

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    1. I see what you mean--I don't think I'll ever love the sight of aphids. It is fun to think of them as fodder for the good guys, though.

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  8. serendipity, synchronicity!? I had never heard of your 13 ways poem, but this has just popped up in my G Reader
    http://10000birds.com/thirteen-ways-of-looking-at-a-blackbird.htm

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    1. What amazing timing--thanks for passing the link along, Diana!

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