Tag Archives: nature
Lily, IYF
A sign of summer around here and one of the many things I’ll miss about this place.
I love how these lilies look distinctly orange from a distance, but the closer you get to them, the less orange they look.
Peek-a-Boo
I see you!
Now, Thatโs Determination!
This stoop is about five steps up from the ground, and still this weed finds a way!
We need to take a lesson.
Nothing Mellow
A different shot of a different yellow flower outside Golden Corral … photoshopped like crazy. #madfun
Yellow Flower
Outside Golden Corral
River Walk
We headed to Dan Daniel Memorial Park today to enjoy the southern (and mostly shaded) end of the Riverwalk Trail. What an awesome way to spend the good part of a day! It’s definitely the best thing Danville ever did!!
When I asked them about their favorite part of the day, both Lucas and Atticus said they liked throwing sticks and rocks into the river best. ๐ Kevin said the best part was that he got to kiss me. ๐ And I liked holding Kevin’s hand and taking lots of pictures (and not having to be in a single one). ๐
Some other things we liked and didn’t:
- Awesome giant sycamores on “Ghost Tree Island.” ๐
- Lucas stopped to pick up every caterpillar and worm he saw on the trail. ๐ ๐
- Atticus fell and scraped up his knee. It bled a lot. ๐
- A biker told us about a black snake up the trail, but we never saw it. ๐ ๐
- A big group of people came out from a little path to the river with their fishing equipment, but when we looked down the path to see where they’d been, we also saw all the trash they’d left behind. ๐
And it’s in the gallery above, but I just can’t resist posting this rainbow picture separately!!! ๐
Thanks for looking. ๐
Filing Cabinet Greenery
One corner of my classroom.
The Tale of the Badger Ring
(By Kevin)
When my friend and coworker of about eight years, Scott, was a teenager, his dad was a Baptist minister and missionary to the Seminole Indians in Hollywood, Florida.
The Seminoles respected him so much that they gave him a ring they had made for him, and a couple of years ago, Scott gave the ring to me.
Silver with turquoise and jadeite stones, the ring is engraved with a badger claw on either side.
At first, I thought they were bear claws, but when I pulled the ring out of my drawer back in January, I started doing a little more research and realized the paws are much longer than a bear’s. Definitely badger.
According to Native American tradition, badgers represent passion, courage, leadership, health and strength.
Scott didn’t know why the Seminoles chose to make this particular ring for his father. Since much like Catholics, Native Americans see meaning in everything they do, though, it seems likely that it was because his father represented the qualities they saw in the badger.
Looking into the ring’s significance also spurred me to ask my grandmother about my own Native American ancestry. She told me that Loudema Shelton, my grandfather’s grandmother, was a full-blooded Cherokee.
That same day, Lucas, Atticus and I spent the afternoon running through the woods around my grandmother’s house, the woods I grew up in.
I told them about the ring and the badger, and we gave each other Indian names. I knelt down and let the creek water flow over the badger ring. That creek is like a part of my soul.
That day was the last time I saw my grandmother before she went to the hospital, where I lost her forever. ๐
Later, I researched the possibility of living on the Cherokee reservation and found out that, since I’m 1/16 Cherokee, I would be eligible for it with further documentation.
There’s a part of me that would love to immerse my family in that culture because of its symbolism and spirituality, much like the Truth, the Catholic Church.
Mother’s Day Macro
These gorgeous irises were a gift to my mother from my brother. They were originally growing in Franklin County, I believe, where our grandmother Ruby Barbour grew up. She brought some back to Danville, and gave some to Bobby to take to Lynchburg before she died.