Posts Tagged ‘shadow’
a moment of beautiful – shadow forest
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tree shadows, drawn on a sloped roof
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tilted shadows on snow, graphite stems, crowded trees
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pencil sketch of woodland, whim
of northern winter, slanted sun
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from the trees, truth, but the artist lies
maligns tree shape, size and colour
wind direction
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shadow trees without wild life
red squirrels and blue jays
seldom visit while light and pencil
sharpen their edge
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only phantom light in space
between sender and receiver
message warped, passed
from molecule to molecule
through lead and air
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Copyright 2015 Jane Tims
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naming the woods 7-25
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Today’s bike trip took me past the ‘woods’. Almost any time I ‘bike’ through a wooded area in Cornwall, I find the wood has a name on the map. I think naming the various acreages of woodland makes them more precious. Giving a name to the woodland identifies it and acknowledges its right to exist.
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The names of the woodlands in the Caerhays area of Cornwall include: the Forty Acre Wood (reminds me of Winnie the Pooh!); Castle Wood; Kennel Close Wood; and Battery Walk Wood, among others. Each woodland has its own characteristics and I long to get off my virtual bike and explore some of the woodland plants.
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I know from my history studies that forests and woodlands are strongly connected to the history of England. The nobility of post-Conquest England had a special love for the forest and the hunt, and protected park-like settings for the pursuit of wild game.
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In the 12th century, the king protected the woodlands with the Assizes. These were formal rules governing both the public and officials. The purpose of the “Assize of the Forest” was to protect the forest and the game living there. The Assize described rules for conduct in the forest and for use of the land, wood and game. It also described the roles and responsibilities of those assigned to protect the forest, enforce the laws, and monitor and report on the state of the forest. The Assize further specified punishments for breaking the rules and for the forest administrators if they failed to meet their responsibilities.
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The rules of the Assize were designed to ensure the continued use of the forest.
For the King, one value of the forest was as a source of revenue from rents and fines. Rental income came from pannage (keeping of swine) and agist (pasturing). Fines were generated from illegal hunting and other uses, purprestures (encroachment such as building within the forest), and assarts (use of the forest clearings). Wood had value as fuel, or as timber for building boats, bridges, defenses and castles. Other values included the King’s own pleasure in hunting, and the favor he gained from gifts of venison or other wild game, or from granting others the privilege of hunting.
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Medieval hunters had various words to describe the different parts of the woodlands. The ‘chase’, for example, referred to the open woods for hunting of deer, and the ‘warren’ described the unenclosed tracts where other wild game such as pheasant and partridge were hunted.
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Best View: shadows on the road … hill on one side and the Forty Acre Wood on the other …
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Copyright 2013 Jane Tims
apple tree shadow
This time of year, I watch for the old apple trees along the road. Most are neglected, and the fruit remains unpicked, even for cider. When the apples fall, they lie beneath the tree in a circle of red or yellow, mimicking the shadow of the tree at noon.
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apple shadow
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days follow days
and the apples
fall to the ditch,
claim the gravel
edge the asphalt
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ripe shadow space
at the base of
the leaning tree
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passing cars play
polo and wasps
worry in the
rotting remains
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Copyright Jane Tims 2012
a moment of beautiful – bug-shot shadows
the space: the surface of the power pole in front of our house
the beautiful: the pattern of shadow through bug-eaten leaves
The power pole in front of our house is habitat for a vine of Virginia Creeper (Parthenocissus quinquefolia (L.) Planch.). also known as Woodbine. I brought the vine home about thirty years ago, as a slip collected from a plant in the park beside the St. John River. Over the years, it has struggle against the winds, determined to blow it from its perch, the power company, unhappy with its use of the pole, and the lawn mower as it snips away at the horizontal tendrils.
This year, it has a new challenge to overcome. An insect has chewed the vine full of holes… probably not a severe problem for the plant.
On Friday, I caught the shadow pattern created by the bug-eaten leaves as the sun shone at the right angle for a moment… a new way to see the consequence of belonging to the food chain!
© Jane Tims 2012