Weekly Photo Challenge: ONE

This week’s photo challenge is ONE.

005It looks as if I photoshopped this leaf onto a white background, doesn’t it? Nothing too exciting.

009But this lone leaf was actually on my sunroof one gloomy late fall day. It looks as if it may have been the last to fall from my five tall elms.

010Now you can see that the first photo is just a close up of this one leaf taken from a slightly different angle.

I hope you like this interpretation of ONE. I can’t wait to see what others come up with. The Weekly Photo Challenges are such fun!

Weekly Photo Challenge: Grand (2)

This week’s photo challenge is GRAND and though I’ve already posted once, I must post again, for I live in the GRAND VALLEY with the GRAND RIVER (changed to the Colorado River in 1921) running through it, the incredibly grand Colorado National Monument to the south, and the 10,000 foot GRAND MESA (largest mesa in the entire world) directly to the east.

The Grand Valley, in the fall, with Mt. Garfield on the left and the Grand Mesa in the distance.

The Grand Valley, in the fall, with Mt. Garfield on the left and the Grand Mesa in the distance.

My daughters and friends climbing Mt. Garfield, high above the Grand Valley.

My daughters and friends climbing Mt. Garfield, high above the Grand Valley.

Another view of our Grand Valley, with the vineyards and peach orchards in the foreground.

Another view of our Grand Valley, with the vineyards and peach orchards in the foreground.

This view of the Grand Valley was taken from the incredibly grand Colorado National Monument.

This view of the Grand Valley was taken from the incredibly grand Colorado National Monument.

Taken from the Colorado National Monument, with Independence Monument in the foreground and the Grand Valley beyond.

Taken from the Colorado National Monument, with Independence Monument in the foreground and the Grand Valley beyond.

Following my dog down the Colorado River, which was formerly the Grand River. It starts high in the Rockies at Grand Lake.

Following my dog down the Colorado River, which was formerly the Grand River. It starts high in the Rockies at Grand Lake.

The Grand Valley from Powderhorn Ski Area on the Grand Mesa.

The Grand Valley from Powderhorn Ski Area on the Grand Mesa.

Cross country ski trails on the Grand Mesa.

Winter splendor on the Grand Mesa.

Lake kayaking at 10,000 feet on the Grand Mesa.

Lake kayaking at 10,000 feet on the Grand Mesa.

My daughter snowshoeing across Island Lake on the Grand Mesa.

My daughter snowshoeing across Island Lake on the Grand Mesa.

Fall colors on the Grand Mesa.

Fall colors on the Grand Mesa.

Life is grand here in the Grand Valley. So lucky to live and play here!

Leaf Luck

Last fall, I didn’t rake leaves. The neighbor’s giant mulberry tree was bare, many of its leaves piled against the fence on the south side of my yard. But the tree in my front yard, the paradise tree, was the last on the block to lose its leaves.

I didn’t even see it happen. I came home from work one windy November afternoon and my tree was bare, its leaves, and those of the neighbor’s tree that had fallen into my yard, blown away. Gone. All on their own.

My yard was cleaned up for the season, fortuitously.

This fall, thOLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAe mulberry has dropped some beautiful yellows in and around my yard, but, for the most part, it still has most of its leaves and they’re still mostly green (the tree in the background of the photo). My paradise tree, however, is bare, the ground beneath it littered with groups of flat, gray, ugly clumps of leaves connected with spindly stems. I love this tree for its straight trunk and size, not for its foliage.

This November has had nothing but beautiful days–warm, sunny, no rain or snow, no wind. I always wonder what it is, exactly, that makes different trees’ leaves change colors and drop at different times. And why, for some trees, it’s a two-month process, and for others it seems to happen all in one day. Why some years you’re lucky, some years you’re not.

This fall, I had to rake. I  say had to rake as if it’s horrible, horrible to be outside on such a glorious day getting a bit of exercise and fresh air. I consider myself fortunate. I have a yard, I’m capable of raking, and, on top of that, the leaves were dry and light and easy to move.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAI raked the driveway, swept my porch area, and moved all the leaves from my yard to the street in about two hours’ time. The city workers pass through with their leaf vacuum three times each fall. I am grateful that our city offers this service. Do you have leaf vacuuming trucks where you live?001

I just hope they get it done before we get a super windy day, before the light, dry leaves that were so easy to rake get blown right back into my yard. I enjoyed working outside today, but that doesn’t mean I want to do it all over again next weekend.

When I finished my yard work, I sat outside and read and admired my spruced-up yard, the afternoon sunshine warming my back.

And I tried to ignore all those green leaves, on the neighbors’ mulberry tree, that still have yet to fall.

The Embroidery

Each fall as I see hillsides of deep color and texture, I am reminded of an embroidery panel of my mother’s that I saw as a child.

I have no memories of my mother sitting and embroidering. I suppose, now, that she did such things after we kids were tucked in or perhaps while I was away at school, especially for the two or three years when we lived in town, prior to the farm, after which I’m sure she never sat down to embroider again.

Despite that, every fall, I am taken back to our house in town, upstairs, to a small nook off the main part of my parents’ bedroom, to my mom’s sewing area where I discovered the embroidery.

The panel was large, perhaps two and a half feet across and a foot high, the left third or so embroidered, the rest just muslin with faint veins of blue guidelines.

I ran my hand over the finished part, astounded at how an entire hillside of evergreens, leafy trees, bushes, and reeds grew from the different stitches and small knots made with various hues of thread. Where and when had she learned to make a piece of fabric come to life? Looking at it was probably my first experience with art appreciation.

I don’t recall asking my mom about the embroidery, but perhaps I did, or maybe she noticed me admiring it, for I have a vivid memory of the day, not long after that, when she introduced me to the craft.

I was home sick from school, in my parents’ king size bed, heavy with bed covers, their warmth, their scents. Their room was just down the hall from the kitchen where I could hear my mom and call to her when need be. She tended to me with soup, 7-Up, and things to keep me occupied between naps.embroidery thread

At one point of waking, she was there with a small piece of muslin and several shiny, silky threads. I have no memory of her teaching me, but she must have, for I can see myself, a pajamaed girl in that vast sea of bedding, hunched over my work until it sapped from me every bit of the little energy I had that day.

When I could concentrate no more, I lifted the work from my lap to take a final look at what I had accomplished, and when I did, up came the sheet along with the embroidery. Every stitch I had made had gone through not only the muslin, but the sheet beneath it, the sheet in my lap that warmed my skinny, seven-year-old legs.

“Mom!” I screamed, feverish, fatigued, and devastated that my embroidery would forever be a part of her bed.

She was there right away, not angry, tender as always, telling me not to worry, that she could fix it. When I awoke, the embroidery was detached from the bed and there were more stitches in the muslin than I had put there and they were even and lovely and not those of a beginner’s hand.

I have no other recollection of my mother’s embroidery panel, no knowledge of whether it was ever completed. She may have put a lot of time into it initially, and then, as her days and priorities changed, put it aside, then, finally, away.

Yet still, the embroidery that I see every fall upon textured hillsides is that season in my life, that day, in particular, when my mother’s presence, her attention, her patience, were the stitches that constituted her love.

Walking in an Autumn Wonderland

The molecules of moisture on the trail expand and collapse beneath the warmth of the midday sun. The ground under the snow, not yet frozen on this early fall day, is already soupy, slippery.

I step lightly, eyes cast down, not wanting my feet to come out from beneath me. My vision of vigorous hiking melts to one of strolling.

I come up over the first rise. Ahead of me is a timeless scene of tranquility.

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