Monday, January 9, 2023

On the Sense of Awe

 

Central Coast Cloudscape

I don't think I've ever recommended a radio program before, but I just listened to an episode of KQED's Forum on the subject of awe and couldn't resist. Hopefully this link goes to the recorded program. What a pleasant surprise to hear a radio show about how to find awe. In a world where it seems we are all becoming more jaded or ironic, where we take this incredible world for granted, the farther we recede from the source of awe that lives within us. May 2023 be the year we get in touch with awe and reconnect with the profound magic of being alive in this intrinsically mysterious, fascinating, and, yes, awe-inspiring world.


New Year's Bobcat

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Wednesday, January 4, 2023

Mushroom Walk

 

Amanita magniverrucata

I'm loving all the rain and only wish my body could rid itself of the flu bug that's been slowing me down the last couple of weeks. I'd like to put on my rain gear and experience the storm out around Mt. Tam the way I did during some heavy weather in February 2014, but we'll see. I took advantage of the mostly rain-free day yesterday to poke around the mountain and start trying to get my strength back while looking for interesting fungi to photograph.


Clavaria fragilis


Amanita vaginata


Tremella aurantia


Pseudohydnum gelatinosum


Lycoperdon perlatum


Wood Sprouters on Jan. 3


The same "wood sprouters" phone-snapped on Dec. 28.


Laccaria amethysteo-occidentalis


Omphalotus olivascens


Camera Trap Composite


Camera Trap Video

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Monday, December 26, 2022

Silvery Morning

Silvery Dawn, Ocean Beach

It was good to see the silvery light of morning today, instead of the orange-brown glow of air pollution we've experienced the last week or so. And with rain on the way, and snow coming to the mountains, it feels like a new beginning is at hand. Also, when I suddenly awoke in the wee hours last night I sensed that I'd finally turned the corner on my journey through an influenza infection which inspired me to pull Planet of Microbes by Ted Anton off our bookshelf. 

I've enjoyed encountering phrases highlighted in a previous reading, such as "most of the capabilities of plants and animals derived from bacteria. They make our oxygen and soil, recycle everything that dies, and create most of the processes, such as respiration and metabolism, on which life depends.... Other microbes in the human gut helped us to produce the vitamins we needed to survive."

"Identity is not an object, it is a process," says Lynn Margulis, whose groundbreaking idea that symbiosis is an integral part of the evolution of life was met with ridicule, and not all that long ago either. Even scientists hate to let go of a treasured dogma.

As for having the flu, it was also interesting to read that "our energy-producing mitochondria are descended from typhus-causing Rickettsia" (attributed to Michael Gray). 

I've come to see the influenza virus infecting my body as a fellow traveler in the process that is life on Eartha guest in my body whose departure I hope to joyfully celebrate very soon.


Minutes After the Silvery Dawn


Lunar Eclipse of December 2011, Ocean Beach


Tube Ride, Ocean Beach


Luffenholtz Beach, Humboldt County


Nautilus on the Half Shell


King Tide, Big River, Mendocino, Dec. 21, 2022

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