Nature Poems

books and jug
Original 13cm x 13cm

It’s been a while since I drew anything just for the fun of it, so simply drawing the pile of books on the coffee table in pen appealed to me. That didn’t seem quite enough, so I added the small jug from the sideboard and brought a pen and pencil into the picture.

The book is Jane McMorland Hunter’s A Nature Poem for Every Day of the Year, which we’ve kept up to since our friend Jill bought me if for my birthday in April. This morning’s poem though had a touch of the supernatural about it: The Sphinx by Oscar Wilde.

Published
Categorized as Drawing

Monday Morning in the Park

Three times around Illingworth Park,Ossett, is one mile and, although we’ve walked it so many times since the first lockdown, it’s always different. This morning, using Adobe Photoshop Camera on my iPhone, I’ve gone for an art filter which puts the emphasis on colour, as a contrast to last week’s linear woodcut effect.

The heightened colour on the daisies reminds me of the heightened coloru of Pre-Raphaelite paintings, such as William Holman Hunt’s The Hireling Shepherd.

The mushrooms that I photographed last week have gone but a bracket fungus and ear fungus on elders by the allotment fence make equally appealing subjects.

Illingworth Park Woodcuts

For this morning’s stroll around a foggy Illingworth Park, Ossett, I’ve gone for a woodcut effect. These were taken on my iPhone, using an art filter in the Adobe Photoshop Camera app. You get a preview of the effect, so I soon found myself looking at the world through woodcut-tinted glasses. Amongst my favourites are the drystone wall, the fungi and the allotment fence.

Fresco for iPhone

man in hat

My first drawing using Adobe Fresco for iPhone, drawn with a Wacom Bamboo stylus.

Published
Categorized as Drawing

Feather-moss

oak, oak apple, feather-moss

The oaks at Skelton Lake have long-stalked acorns so, as the stalk botanically is the peduncle, these are common oaks, also known as pedunculate oak.

The old oak apple is a gall caused by the gall wasp Biorhiza pallida. The larvae develop inside the corky gall, so the holes are probably where the winged adult gall wasps have emerged during the summer but they might also be where parasitic gall wasps that feed on the Biorhiza larvae have emerged. There are also inquilines, insects that use the gall for the development of their larvae without preying on the original occupants.

When the Biorhiza wasps emerge in the summer, the females lay their eggs on the roots of the oak and an all-female generation of wingless gall wasps will emerge in winter about 18 months later. These females emerge climb up to lay their eggs in the leaf buds of the oak and it’s the leaf buds which develop into oak apples.

Rough-stalked feather-moss, Brachythecium rutabulum, is a common moss on wood and rocks. It also grows in grassland and can be considered a weed in lawns. I’ve been raking and scarifying our back lawn in preparation for the winter and this looks like the moss that I was raking up. I filled a large trug with moss and dead grass.

Published
Categorized as Drawing

Skelton Lake

Skelton Lake

“You’ve got a good day for it!”

The anglers don’t agree with me: “It’s terrible weather for fishing!”

But Skelton Lake is a great place for a muddy stroll on a dull October morning; at the motorway services, a family are getting their children to change into wellies.

We’re here to take photographs of autumn colour, alder cones, the flowers in the wild flower beds by the services, which itself has a green roof. Rather than put this morning’s photographs in a slide-show style gallery, I’m putting them into an e-pub publication. I’ve only got as far as the cover so far, but I’m learning as I go along.

Jab, flutter and squawk

The geese look haughtily at us and decide to move on but, as I crouch down to attempt to photograph them, the hens rush towards us, so enthusiastically that I narrowly avoid one of them pecking at the lens of my iPhone.

But they soon realise that we haven’t brought any corn with us and return to their continuing soap opera of sorting out the pecking order of the flock with a jab, flutter and squawk.

Published
Categorized as Drawing

Autumn Colour

There’s still some mid-autumn colour in our flower but it’s not quite as punchy as my photographs suggest: today I’ve had the Art Filter on my Olympus E-M10 II set to Pop Art. All taken with the macro lens. I’m especially pleased with the detail on fly; as it was quite a cool day, the fly allowed me to push the lens towards it without buzzing off.

St Aidan’s, October

A perfect morning for an autumn walk around St Aidan’s RSPB reserve. I set the Art Filter my Olympus E-M10 II to Pin Hole. All of these were taken with the Zuiko 60mm macro lens. It wasn’t until I crouched down and focussed on the buttercup that I noticed the hoverfly. There are also a couple of green aphids at the top of the stem.

Buttonweed, Cotula coronopifolia, is a native of temperate South Africa, introduced to Britain.