Saturday, June 29, 2013

What's For Dinner



What's for dinner.



BBQ Chicken with roasted Broccoli, Cauliflower, and Fresh Garden Squash - My plate


Roasted Pork with Roasted Broccoli, Cauliflower, and Fresh Garden Squash - His Plate

I love food but more than anything I love flavors and tasting food. This is what Raoul prepared for dinner tonight. It looked so good that I just had to take a photo. The food was as good as it looked.

Terlingua Sunset 062913
The sunset tonight reminded me of Neapolitan Ice Cream. As you can notice now. The sun is now setting to the far right of the horizon. It will begin to move the left of the horizon. In the photo, the mountain to the left is Sawmill Mountain. By December 21 the sun will set to the far left of Sawmill Mountain at a point not pictured in the photo.

Enjoy.

The world is what we make it.

Charlton

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

The Set and not the Sun

Sometimes it's less about the sun and more about the set.




Stormclouds gathering at sunset over Terlingua and Bee Mountain 062413
 We, as a people, go about our daily lives. Trips to the grocery store, the hair salon, the gas station, restaurants, our places of employment. Other lives, oblivious to our own, exist and thrive without our knowledge. If we do know about them or realize they exist, it is on a superficial basis. I go to work five days a week and then go home. On one of those usual days I drove up to the back of the motel, parked, and on my walk to the back door, I glanced to my right and noticed what would appear to most, a weed. Long, green, and seemingly insubstantial thin and barely there on leggy stems. At the end of the stems were very tiny white blooms. In a desert setting, to me, any color can be a welcome sight. I made a mental note to take a photo later during a non-busy moment in my work that evening.

I am always amazed at the beauty contained within a very small and tiny space. I was not disappointed with this bloom. They are pictured below. The anthers are the width of a human hair. Fragile and thin looking, the anthers were covered in what appeared as sugar particles. What the sugar particles actually are is pollen.

Again, it brings to mind that here, in the searingly hot and unmerciful desert sun, there are these small blooms there, below our eyes that stare straight ahead and often miss these small worlds that spin and grow and thrive. I love those worlds.





Enjoy and thrive yourself.

Remember, the world is what we make it.

Charlton

Monday, June 3, 2013

Stormy Weather


Storm clouds approaching Terlingua from the north. A storm also approached from the west and finally hit us  in the late evening with a sudden punch of 40 to 50 mph wind.



Charlton