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Cupressus nootkatensis “Glauca Pendula”

Unique texture, designs created by water streams on the sandy beach!

 

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PATTERN SEEN IN NATURE is the topic for Saturday, March 16, 2019, Group Our Daily Challenge

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=iv8GW1GaoIc

pattern language

spotted water hemlock...(an extremely poisonous plant)

brooksville, florida

Euphorbia griffithii “Fire glow”

The grass is frozen and bent, shaped by the cold night. It looks rough, tangled, and imperfect, but that’s what makes it interesting. Wabi-sabi is about finding beauty in things that are temporary, imperfect, and unfinished—just like this frozen grass. The frost highlights every blade, showing details you normally wouldn’t notice. It’s a fleeting moment that won’t last—soon, the ice will melt, and the grass will shift again. Nothing stays the same, and that’s part of its quiet beauty.

Bubbling algae in a water puddle.

Algées dans une flaque d'eau.

White barked Himalayan birch

.......provided by the master garland maker. And though it's just my opinion I am fairly certain I've never seen a finer one hanging in any department store window display.

 

Best viewed large

Echium Fastuosum Candicans, Pride of Madeira

Metasequoia or redwood

Such a basic design in Nature.

Lots of vines grow in Louisiana, so I don't have an ID, but this grows all over.

awesome object of nature!

detail of a trunk of a coconut palm

Alternating Muscadine leaves competing for a bit of sunshine. We have loads of these on our property, but sadly, they must all be male plants, as they don't produce any grapes.

Croton plant is a perennial evergreen shrub (Codiaeum variegatum) native to India and Malaysia.

I've just been shooting anything and everything lately. Drifting aimlessly. No direction known. Just whatever presents itself.

Japanese stewartia

Stewartia pseudocamellia

Detailed macro view of a Virginia silkweed seed pod bursting open, dispersing seeds with silky filaments, set in natural light. Helios 44M

High angle close-up framing of the rush of water up a beach from a breaking wave. The sea waves seem to carry water to wash over the beach.

 

Being visible, the swash zone is most associated with beach erosion and the impacts of climate change. A swash helps to build up the beach, loosing its energy and depositing its load of sand and silt.

 

The landward edge of the swash zone is highly variable in terms of geomorphology, and may terminate in dunes, cliffs, marshes, ephemeral estuaries and a wide variety of sand, gravel, rock or coral barriers. This influences the exchange of sediment between the land and ocean, which ultimately forms the coastline.

 

Shot from the seashore of Dahab, South Sinai.

Sedum morganianum

Fascinated by the patterns of the little sand balls and traces left by tiny bubbler crabs, astonishing artists of the beach. The sandy brown colouration has them well camouflaged on the sand and when they have the least sense of a threat they are quick to disappear in the little holes which are their burrows.

 

The Sand Bubbler Crabs feed by filtering sand through their mouth parts, eating the micro-organisms and detritus that they find in there. They discard the sand in the form of little balls, probably to prevent sieving through the same sand twice, and kick it aside. They tend to start foraging close to their burrow and spiral out as they cover their territory. Moving around in this spiralling way causes them to create these beautiful patterns on the beach.

 

Shot with a Canon EOS 700D from the seashore of Ras Mohamed National Park.

It's been a loooooong hot and dry summer. We're finally seeing some relief, but I think it's too late for several trees in our yard... :(

Symmetry... what a relief. Things in order. Structure, patterns... and then spotting "deviations"... it sounds much worse than it is, right? ha, ha, ha...

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