I spend many summer hours wandering around and photographing things. The eastern Ontario highlands are a treasure trove of earthy abundance, and I feel fortunate to be there and taking it all in. The wonders never cease: dragonflies, butterflies and moths, bumbles and wasps, birds, puddles, trees, orchids and wildflowers, poppies and lupins gone wild and doing their own carefree thing in roadside ditches.
Some time is spent crawling about in the woods on all fours with a macro lens on the camera “doing” ferns, mosses, lichens and little green frogs. Every tump, stump, leafy alcove and stone has wonders to share. Is it difficult to lurch back to a standing position afterward? Oh yes, but I do it anyway. The results are worth it.
Other hours are spent hanging out at the lake capturing images of loons floating on the water at sunset, great herons motionless in the shallows, kingfishers hunting the last small meal of the day. Once in a while, an otter turns up and watches me from the water for several minutes, occasionally displaying the bright red inside of its mouth and a set of wicked teeth. Curious critters, otters.
Birds, otters and fabulous sunsets, there is always something to see. These are kingfisher days, times out of time, full of magic and an elusive something I am always reaching toward and can't quite find a word or image for. When I arrive home, dusty, sweaty and speckled with leaf dust, I look at everything, but the images make me groan, so I archive them on a DVD and think no more of it.
Years later, when I am searching for an image for something or other, I pull out a DVD of long ago captures and discover to my astonishment that it holds treasures. Wonders of wonders, some of the images are not too bad at all. I can remember when they were taken, my soulmate and Beau (or Cassie or Spencer) and I together in the woods or at the lake, royally chewed by bugs and happy as clams.
My apologies to Susan Coyne for borrowing the title of her memoir (Kingfisher Days) for this morning's post. Her creation is a gem, and I am reading it again.














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