The loungey chair beyond the bleachers
Still not all gone
"Be looking down!"
Puttin' on the spiff
Made it through the winter
Rear view
So, I am in the bathroom, minding my business. . .
“French hen”
First day of butterfly spring
Selfie
The Helen Fogwill Porter Footbridge
Before the pasta went in
Pigeon on the screw
Jack and Colleen coming down the hill
Supermarket reimagined
Goldiboyos brightening and a goldigirly hanging ou…
Start howling
Chopt leeks
Warm enough for the big guys
Eating juniper seeds
Another one of those white-winged crossbills
The purps are back
Talking back
And they opened
At the outflow, a chair
King of Pussywillowdom
Beatin' the paths
Signs
No cause for a scowlery
Salt and a red thread
Feaver's Lane
Piney and Downy up in a tree
The sun in my backyard
Birders R and B
Katie
John
The New Moon with the Old One in its arms
That wahbluh again
Looking out the front window
Early bird at the nuts
On the deck
Storm birds -- better than storm chips
In the trees, in the sky, it has wings . . . ohh,…
"What is that human being doing?"
Dull day, truck's arse
1/250 • f/5.0 • 40.0 mm • ISO 1000 •
OM Digital Solutions OM-1
OLYMPUS M.40-150mm F2.8
EXIF - See more detailsSee also...
Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
-
42 visits
Old is new again


I was out in the light rain this morning looking for a bird I did not find. I found myself on a path I last walked on over fifty years ago.
Back then, I was walking the length of a river that had been put underground twenty years previous to then. Its headwaters were in the then-City-Dump. Even in the early 'seventies, the Dump had been closed and covered for decades. But the brook still stank so it was still covered.
In the late 'seventies, the City put through a major sewer line parallel to the underground river, making a kind of path over the sewer. And then twenty years later, the City decided to release the river itself.
Since then the path, walking above the big sewer line, follows the brook which still adds a red tinge to the rocks it flows over (from the iron leaching out of the Old Dump). But it doesn't stink anymore.
It's a pleasant spot for trees and bushes and birds and perhaps other animals to live productive lives. And I'd been alerted to a Lincoln's sparrow down there.
I didn't find the sparrow, but I like the path. Even here -- where the brook disappears underground again to get past a couple of gigantic mansions finally to reappear a couple of hundred metres on.
Back then, I was walking the length of a river that had been put underground twenty years previous to then. Its headwaters were in the then-City-Dump. Even in the early 'seventies, the Dump had been closed and covered for decades. But the brook still stank so it was still covered.
In the late 'seventies, the City put through a major sewer line parallel to the underground river, making a kind of path over the sewer. And then twenty years later, the City decided to release the river itself.
Since then the path, walking above the big sewer line, follows the brook which still adds a red tinge to the rocks it flows over (from the iron leaching out of the Old Dump). But it doesn't stink anymore.
It's a pleasant spot for trees and bushes and birds and perhaps other animals to live productive lives. And I'd been alerted to a Lincoln's sparrow down there.
I didn't find the sparrow, but I like the path. Even here -- where the brook disappears underground again to get past a couple of gigantic mansions finally to reappear a couple of hundred metres on.
Don Sutherland, Fred Fouarge have particularly liked this photo
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2025
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
Sign-in to write a comment.