After a memorable week in Zion National Park with 5 painter friends and two of their spouses, we began the traverse east. Our scheduled route was I-70 west of Denver, but they were expecting a blizzard with 15 inches of blowing snow and chains required for commercial vehicles so we scrapped all our reservations and decided to head to a tried and true route through New Mexico on I-40. However, since we had to get to near Chicago we decided to cut up through Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Missouri, and Iowa on our route to Chicago. Well, we went from the possibility of driving through a blizzard to driving through an amazing dust storm near Dalhart, TX. If you read the economy section of this entry you will see why it is probably in the state it is regarding dust!
We saw motorcyclists abandoning their bikes and tow behind RV's toppled on their sides. Our car felt like it was being sandblasted while we rode a bunking bronco with very little visibility as everything was dust colored--the sky, the road, the street, and the tumbleweeds were pouring over the road and the fences on the side of the road. After this 3 hour nightmare where we drove about 150 miles in these conditions, we emerged in Kansas into slightly better, but still tremendously windy conditions.
After several more stormy days, we finally are seeing blue skies again. The daffodils and tulips are out here as are flowering magnolias, the peonies and hostas are inching upward, and there is lots of GREEN GRASS.
This blog will show examples of my work and also document my attempts to learn new techniques. Please respect my copyright to images
Showing posts with label flowering trees. Show all posts
Showing posts with label flowering trees. Show all posts
Saturday, May 3, 2014
Driving through the Dust Bowl on the Way to Spring in the Midwest
Labels:
Batavia.,
daffodils,
Dalhart,
dust bowl,
flowering trees,
kaleidoscopes from nature,
spring,
Texas,
tulips
Location:
Batavia, IL, USA
Sunday, March 17, 2013
From Melting Snow to Flowering Trees
What a difference a week makes. Last Sunday, the snow was pinging off the trees and seven days later I am racing around taking pictures of flowering cherry, apricot and quinces in that brief window before the petals fall and the leaves come out. The furnace went off this week which must sound pretty great to our northern friends and relatives and now the emphasis is on not getting warm so we installed a solar shade on our bedroom patio door this week. The sun is so strong in Arizona that it isn't the temperature as much as the sun's relative strength that makes it seem warm.
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| Pretty in White |
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| A Quince Explosion by the Porch |
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| An Explosion of Cherry Blossoms |
Labels:
apricot,
cherry,
flowering trees,
geometry in nature,
kaleidoscopes,
quince,
spring
Location:
Sedona, AZ, USA
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