View allAll Photos Tagged firstdayofspring
Well, what do you think folks?
Is this the last of the snow?
Isn't it gorgeous?
Warmer days are ahead,
but meanwhile, I loved this morning's beautiful snowfall!
Happy First Day of SPRING!
Spring has sprung.
I could not resist springing ahead in my story to post this photo today. This is the same colt from last year's story I've been telling.
Sony A77M2 with Sony 70-400mm
Sometimes I wonder how Mike puts up with me. I'm not exactly a "normal" wife. Not only am I generally uninterested in things like cooking and other traditional wifely arts... I spend a lot of time doing messy things that would make most "normal" people shake their heads.
Last week, I flagged down a local parks crew. They'd been out pruning the ornamental plums and cherries that make our corner of the world so pinkly magical in early spring. For years, I've been asking the dudes to tell me when and where they're pruning... so I can grab some branches before they hit the chipper.
This year I hit the motherlode.
The dudes pulled over in their truck and, when I asked for branches, handed me some clippers and told me to take whatever blooming sprigs I wanted. I looked at the clippers in dismay. "Can't I just take them all?" I asked. And the dudes pretty much just shrugged and said, "Um... yeah... sure... if you want them." So I hauled them all... a truckload of small-tree-sized blooming branches... into the back yard.
Over the weekend, I used some sprigs (along with tulips, daffodils and Dutch irises) to make a bunch of bouquets, which I placed all over the house in vases.
But the real fun started when Mike went to work, and I was free to drag said tree-sized branches into the house. (!!!) I made a huge mess, but... whoa... you should've seen my office filled with blooming branches!!! They're still here. Rather brown and dry... and shedding petals like crazy. But I'm not ready to give up on shooting their shadows yet.
So I really really appreciate that Mike obligingly turns a blind eye to the... ahem... organic matter littering the hallway, stairs, etc. As he turns an obliging blind eye to the various things I leave lying around... plastic eyeballs, doll parts, waterbloated books, hairy crab shells, huge creeping roots covered in sticky mud... etc.
In my defence, I come by this naturally. Just the other day, my mom was telling me how very tolerant my dad has become... how he rarely if ever remarks on the stuff that SHE has strewn around (I'll spare you the list, but it's frequently weird).
So... yeah. Anyway, this is one of those pics that turned out pretty much almost exactly as I'd imagined it. And it's pretty much straight from the camera (I just bumped up the contrast a bit to try to bring out the shadows a little more).
Happy first day of spring. May all your metaphorical offices be filled with metaphorical cherry blossoms.
“The promise of spring’s arrival is enough to get anyone through the bitter winter!” ― Jen Selinsky
Taken at Allan Gardens Conservatory
For your listening pleasure: 🎻 Serenade to Spring~ Secret Garden
Have a beautiful Sunday and Spring season!🌷💝 HSS!
Thank you for your visits, kind comments, invitations, awards and faves. Always greatly appreciated.
Copyright 2022 ©️ Gloria Sanvicente
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Hello Everyone,
When I think of spring I most often think of tulips and daffodils. I want to wish each of you a wonderful first day of Spring!
Edited with texture in Topaz Studio.
Thank you so much for stopping by and for leaving a comment. I love hearing from you!
©Copyright - Nancy Clark - All Rights Reserved
Phoebe "Bebe" Sophia Lester would like to cordially congratulate you on the coinciding of one of the most important days of the year with the most important day of the week.
“The flowers of late winter and early spring occupy places in our hearts well out of proportion to their size.” — Gertrude S. Wister
Dwarf Iris (Iris Reticulata) A native of Turkey and the Caucasian Mountains , Dwarf Iris (Iris reticulata) is a four-inch tall beauty (10 cm) with grass-like leaves and a violet-blue or purple flower with yellow markings that bursts into bloom in late winter to early spring to create an effect reminiscent of butterflies hovering low to the ground.
Today is out first day of Spring.🌷
Taken at Edwards Garden
Have. a wonderful weekend everyone!💝
Thank you for your visits, kind comments, awards and faves. Always greatly appreciated.
Copyright 2021 ©️ Gloria Sanvicente
Info: Canon 40D with an old legacy manual lens adapted: Tamron 35-80mm SP CF macro Adaptall @ F/4, ISO:800, 1/750 sec, Edit Raw file on Photoshop CC and added the Orton effect layer. Location: Lucas Nursery, Oviedo, Florida.
For: LOOKING CLOSE... ON FRIDAY'S
Theme: COLOUR ORANGE
Thanks so much for your visits! Have a wonderful day!! 🌷
Please do not use my photos on websites, blogs or in any other media without my written permission.
Sunshine on Snow! I LOVE it! The sun is our gift today! Nothing prettier to me than sun on snow! Happy Spring!
For those in the Northern Hemisphere, who are enjoying the rotation of the earth towards the season many enjoy....
Welcome to Spring!!
This morning, on the first day of spring, the sun was shining bright through the trellis on the edge of this carport. It was warm and breezy, a perfect spring day in Adelaide.
It's spring fever. That is what the name of it is. And when you've got it, you want - oh, you don't quite know what it is you do want, but it just fairly makes your heart ache, you want it so!
~ Mark Twain
Today marks the official changing of the season. In the Northern Hemisphere, spring officially begins —the vernal equinox, or spring equinox.
Happy first day of spring!
~Story people~
Happy perfect purple Saturday guys ... :) Hope this one is purple enough!
Wish you all a wonderful first day of the Spring! :)
Please no large glittery graphics or big group invites!
3/20/2021 Timmerman Trail, Cayce, SC
Sony ILCE-6000, Sony E PZ 16-50mm F3.5-5.6 OSS
© 2022 R. D. Waters
My flowers aren't blooming yet but found this shot I took a while back of these beautiful flowers pushing through an iron fence.
Here we are, it's the first day of March and the beginning of metrological spring. Given that the Easter Eggs represent a time of rebirth, we can start eating them today, or wait for the spring Equinox on March 20th. I havent done Lent since 1996!
The magnolia buds on the two trees in a local garden are beginning to show some colour, perfect for the first day of spring.
121 pictures in 2021 (88) simplicity
100x 13/100
I appreciate each and every visit, comment and fave here on my little corner of the world as seen through my lens.
An American Robin made good use of our bird bath, on the first day of Spring! I love wathcing the Robins bath as they really move a lot of water.
Taken yesterday, the first official day of Spring, from a 34th floor balcony of my condo building. You can see the Humber Bay Marina and the Waterfront Recreational Trail, a shared path in our neighbourhood.
Best seen large, thanks for visiting, much appreciated. May today find you healthier and happier than yesterday.
meteorological spring, day 20
The „real“ spring starts...
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meteorologischer Frühling, Tag 20
11:28h, es beginnt der „echte“ Frühling...
I saw this about a mile from my house - it was the only Tulip I saw outside so far this year - and it was on the 1st Day of Spring - how cool is that!?!
22* and gale force winds off Lake Michigan up to 35 MPH down to the beach. We under a storm watch for snow till Saturday.
urbanlegends.about.com/od/errata/a/equinox_eggs.htm
Can you balance and Egg on the Equinox?
Eggs in the balance
The egg being the most literal and obvious of all fertility symbols, ancient eggish customs survive not only in the form of egg rolling and Easter eggs, but also in the quaint superstitious belief, most often attributed to the Chinese, that you can stand a raw egg on end during the equinox. Apparently this derives from the notion that, due to the sun's equidistant position between the poles of the earth on the first day of spring, special gravitational forces apply.
For skeptics, the first objection that comes to mind is that there's another equinox on the first day of autumn — why does no one speak of balancing eggs on end in September? Secondly, while it's true that on both equinoxes the earth's axis is perpendicular to the sun so day and night are of equal length, there's no scientific reason to suppose that such an alignment has any effect on gravitational forces here on earth. Thirdly, if the equinox can cause this curious anomaly, why aren't there others? Why don't we hear talk of being able to stand broomsticks, pencils, lollipops, or toothpicks on end?
THE ANSWER - YOU CAN BALANCE AN EGG ON END, EVERY DAY, ALL YEAR LONG! But the Chinese created this custom to represent the idea of a rebirth and renewal.