Date: January 31st, 2010 | Comments : none | Categories: Garden, Green, Heart Shapes In Nature series, Leaves, Seasonal, Series, Summer, Texas, Trees.

Avacado leaf with caterpillar-munched heart shapeAvocado Leaf, caterpillar munched heart-shape. The Heart Shapes in Nature website is temporarily only one static page. The calendars need updates and will be available online again this week..sorry for the inconvenience. If you would like to place an order or purchase any of the images as framed or unframed prints or calendars, please contact me at nikki_coulombe@hotmail.com

~

_________________________________________

i carry your heart with me by ee cummings

i carry your heart with me
(i carry it in my heart)
i am never without it (anywhere
i go you go my dear; and whatever is done
by only me is you doing, my darling
i fear no fate (for you are my fate, my sweet) i want
no world (for beautiful you are my world, my true)
and it’s whatever you are a moon has always meant
and whatever a sun will always sing is you.

here is the deepest secret nobody knows
(here is the root of the root and the bud of the bud
and the sky of a sky of a tree called life; which grows
higher than the soul can hope or mind can hide)
and this is the wonder that’s keeping the stars apart.
i carry your heart (i carry it in my heart)

 

Date: January 18th, 2010 | Comments : none | Categories: Dallas, Elements, Garden, Heart Shapes In Nature series, Leaves, Seasonal, Series, Texas, Trees, winter.

Avocado leaves curled into a heart shapeDuring winter the Avocado leaves become very crisp, and when crumbled in the hands the scent is kind of like licorice.

 

Date: September 25th, 2009 | Comments : none | Categories: Flowers, Garden, Heart Shapes In Nature series, Seasonal, Series, Summer.

Heart shape in the heart of a sunflower…a heart in the heart…

 

Date: August 11th, 2009 | Comments : none | Categories: Anoles, Garden, Seasonal, Series, Summer, Texas.

Green Anole … another Green Anole photo … birds are lingering around the back yard more this year, so it’s good to see the anoles are still thriving.

 

Date: May 23rd, 2009 | Comments : none | Categories: Garden, Green, Heart Shapes In Nature series, Leaves, Seasonal, Series, Summer, Texas, Trees.

Redbud leaf, newest addition to the Heart Shapes In Nature seriesHeart-shaped Redbud leaf on a two year old young tree.

 Somerset Maugham said, “There is never enough time for love and art”.

To elaborate:

There is not enough time for love of trees and art.

 

Date: April 19th, 2009 | Comments : none | Categories: Anoles, Garden, Green, Seasonal, Series, Texas.

Green Anole in our back yardGreen Anole in our back yardGreen Anole in our back yard 

Green Anole in our back yardGreen Anole in our back yardGreen Anole in our back yard

 

Date: February 25th, 2009 | Comments : none | Categories: Seasonal, Series, South Carolina, Summer, Travel, Trees, conservation, petition.

Thanks to individuals rallying together and signing the petition, we are reassured that small efforts can and do make a difference on this planet. The land surrounding the Angel Oak is no longer in jeopardy. http://www.savetheangeloak.org/

~

Originally posted September 11, 2008

The 1500 year old Angel Oak on Johns Island, South CarolinaThe 1500 year old Angel Oak on Johns Island, South CarolinaThe 1500 year old Angel Oak on Johns Island, South CarolinaThe 1500 year old Angel Oak on Johns Island, South CarolinaThe 1500 year old Angel Oak on Johns Island, South CarolinaThe 1500 year old Angel Oak on Johns Island, South Carolina
This set of photos honors the efforts of a petition to halt construction on John’s Island, South Carolina that would encroach on an area of land boasting an Oak tree estimated to be between 1,400 and 1,500 years old.
Charleston, SC is proud of its heritage and respected for its commitment to preserving history in the area, so residents hope that plans will not proceed to cut down nearby trees and forest in favor of land development. Charleston, SC is proud of its heritage and respected for its commitment to preserving history in the area, and on the Angel Oak petition website, even if you don’t sign (but please do), you will still be able to read pages of interesting comments and pleas from residents who have fond memories of climbing the immense branches as children, and whose children now do the same; how a nearby elementary school carries its’ name, and exclamations by tourists who have visited the area specifically to see the Angel Oak.

The 1500 year old Angel Oak on Johns Island, South CarolinaThe 1500 year old Angel Oak on Johns Island, South CarolinaThe 1500 year old Angel Oak on Johns Island, South CarolinaArbourists have propped and supported the weight of the branches of the Angel Oak with stakes and cables.Arbourists have propped and supported the weight of the branches of the Angel Oak with stakes and cables.Arbourists have propped and supported the weight of the branches of the Angel Oak with stakes and cables.
This summer my husband and I drove through South Carolina and took a short detour to John’s Island. We drove through wicked rains at the edge of Tropical storm Faye, so when we arrived at Angel Oak park no one else was there. The tree trunk and lower branches are so immense, they have been propped up with stakes and heavy cables here and there, which is a little intrusive but obviously necessary. Growth is spread outward more than upward, occupying an enormous space at least 150 feet wide.

It occurred to me that this tree has lived through one serious chunk of history, and wondered what was happening on our planet when The Angel Oak was knee-high to an acorn? 1400 years ago it was the year 608 A.D., Common Era. Almost everything we are familiar with; our collective modern identity has been shaped by many of the events and people who lived and died since the Angel Tree established its first roots in the earth.

Some branches measure at least two feet in diameter near the main trunk on the 1500 year old Angel Oak on Johns Island, South CarolinaSome branches measure at least two feet in diameter near the main trunk on the 1500 year old Angel Oak on Johns Island, South CarolinaSome branches measure at least two feet in diameter near the main trunk on the 1500 year old Angel Oak on Johns Island, South CarolinaBranches extend over thirty feet away from the trunk on the 1500 year old Angel Oak on John\'s Island, South CarolinaBranches extend over thirty feet away from the trunk on the 1500 year old Angel Oak on Johns Island, South CarolinaSome branches measure at least two feet in diameter near the main trunk on the 1500 year old Angel Oak on Johns Island, South Carolina

Angel Oak’s parent-tree was undoubtedly alive for centuries before and during the year 476 A.D. when the last of the Roman emperors died, bringing about the Fall of Rome. Around the 7th Century A.D. an acorn falls from one of the magnificent Oaks on the southeastern shores of a land only known to the indigenous peoples; a land we now refer to as North America. The acorn sprouts along with many others…but this one will outlive the rest, seasoning hurricanes, wars, and countless generations of playful children climbing it’s branches; it sprouts in conjunction with the collapse of Teotihuacan, one of the major cities in Mesoamerica with widespread influence in central Mexico. The Toltec civilization was unheard of, and would not flourish for another 500 years (1100-1521). Aztecs did not seize power until the 13th century.

When this tree was 300 years old during 901 A.D., the Vikings discovered Greenland. In 1066 William the Conqueror and the Norman troops conquered England altering the English culture forever by bringing French rule and rivalry with France until the The French Revolution occuring from 1789 – 1799. Circa 1100 A.D. the famous Buddhist temple, Angkor Wat in Cambodia is constructed to house the Hindu faith. Around 1275 A.D. Marco Polo, the Venetian explorer and trader visits China via the The Silk Road, returning to Europe with new foods and goods from the Orient which impact modern culture, medicine and dietary habits today.

Healthy ferns support other organisms on the branches of 1500 year old Angel Oak on Johns Island, South CarolinaHealthy leaves continue to thrive on the 1500 year old Angel Oak on Johns Island, South CarolinaHealthy leaves continue to thrive on the 1500 year old Angel Oak on Johns Island, South Carolina
The Black Death devastates Europe around 1348 A.D., while the 740 year old Angel Oak thrives. Columbus and other adventurers would not claim to discover America for another 144 years (C. 1592). Leonardo da Vinci, a man light-years ahead of his time in the field of science and medicine through his various studies. By the time he would paint the Mona Lisa and Michelangelo would paint the Sistine Chapel, the Angel Oak has lived for 900 years. The Tree continues growth beyond the life of Galileo, father of modern Astronomy, and through the life of Shakespeare, who established some of the most famous English literature in our era (c. 1564 – 1616).

Healthy ferns support other organisms on the branches of 1500 year old Angel Oak on Johns Island, South CarolinaHealthy ferns support other organisms on the branches of 1500 year old Angel Oak on Johns Island, South CarolinaHealthy ferns support other organisms on the branches of 1500 year old Angel Oak on Johns Island, South Carolina
Year 1776 – Angel Oak is 1,166 years old when the U.S. breaks free from British rule and establishes the first Independence Day In 1895, and by the time the Angel Oak had already survived for 1,287 winters Sigmund Freud would bring modern medicine and humanity into a new open-minded age by announcing his theories of dream psychoanalysis and studies of the human psyche.

The First World War between 1914-1918 was followed by WWII, 1939 -45/51.
According to after the Category 5 Hurricane Hugo hit the coast of in 1989, Governor Carroll Campbell is reported to say that the storm destroyed enough timber in South Carolina to frame a home for every family in the state of West Virginia. All those trees and forests obliterated, yet The Angel Oak survived. It has since healed injuries inflicted by Hurricane Hugo.

The petition page has so many interesting comments left by those who signed the petition.

 

Date: November 16th, 2008 | Comments : none | Categories: Garden, Seasonal, Series, Summer, Texas, fruit and veggies.

Seedless watermelon on September 19th, 2008 Seedless watermelon on September 25th, 2008 Seedless watermelon on October 21st, 2008 Seedless watermelon on October 27th, 2008
Seedless watermelon on November 16th, 2008
Watermelon, apparently seedless…
One of the fun things about gardening is that you can never predict the outcome of a planted seed. Even seedless things still insist on having seeds in them sometimes. Such was the case with the mother of this watermelon, apparently seedless, it had only one. This series of photos were taken on Sept.19th, 25th,  Oct. 25th and 27th, and Nov. 16th (2008).

~
Avacado leaves, Caterpillar ArtI haphazardly plunked a few avocado pits into the soil six years ago and one of them is now over seven feet high. However, it’s too close to the house and if I had known it would grow three feet in height and width this past summer I would have transplanted it somewhere smarter early last Spring.

In the South there are no basements and the foundations of houses are more susceptible to cracking and deterioration; maintenance and prevention is critical. Now, Avocados are supposed to develop fruit the seventh year…this one possibly next year. What to do? Should I move it next Spring to some location with completely different light and soil conditions and risk it dying, or allow it to do what it will and perhaps enjoy a few home-grown avocados (a dream come true for a northern gardener), knowing that next year’s roots will be anticipating serious business as far as where they establish themselves…most likely in our foundation and the accompanying sprinkler system. The best decision is to move it sooner than later. We may not live here long enough to enjoy the fruits of our labor, but hopefully this tree will reestablish itself and produce fruit sometime soon, and it’s cool to think that someone – whoever, whenever - will enjoy fresh avocados from it.

 

Date: November 14th, 2008 | Comments : none | Categories: Garden, Seasonal, Series, Texas, fruit and veggies.

Healthy tomatoes in November - finally - do they have time to ripen before frost?If you can grow tomatoes in Texas you can grow anything. Even if the plants survive Summer’s 105* F heat they will still not produce tomatoes on those leggy vines until November. One day in July when I was outside tending to yard work, my neighbor came shrieking out of her yard with a tone higher than her usual typically high octave that native Texan women have. All the fuss was about a tomato presenting itself in her garden, and she was mighty excited about it. She told me that someone told her that someone else told them that throwing used coffee grounds on the base of the plant will do the trick. I had heard about putting coffee grounds on rose bushes and do know the goodness that composting provides, but for fear of attracting snakes or scorpions into my yard -which I’ve never seen but apparently they exist here- I have not kept a compost at all in this garden. I don’t mind the critters, love them in fact, but even the fire ants are not enough to convert me to wear shoes and socks in the summer and I’m not fond of the idea of Snake Surprise. Anyway, coffee grounds have regularly been sprinkled on the tomato patch since July, plus this particular plant was propped up onto a bird bath stand. It’s November on the verge of frosty nights and the fruits are looking quite healthy. Next year the tomatoes will have the advantage of this years’ supply of the ol’ Texas coffee-ground-trick a lot earlier in the growing season. I can hardly wait for next year’s giant tomatoes to appear in June.

 

Date: October 25th, 2008 | Comments : none | Categories: Animals, Anoles, Garden, Reptiles, Seasonal, Series, Smile, Summer, Texas.

Green Anole on the American made propane tank - valve may be imported.Propane tank made in the USA.

Valve may be imported.

Anole made in the USA.

 


 

 
Nikki’s Photography is proudly powered by WordPress Copyright © 2007, 2008 NikkiCoulombe.com / NikkiPhotography.com ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
Images contained in this website are exclusively owned by NikkiCoulombe.com / NikkiPhotography.com and protected by all applicable Copyright laws.
All rights reserved. NikkiCoulombe.com / NikkiPhotography.com are registered trademarks of Nikki Coulombe.