Saturday, May 29, 2021

The Saturday Morning Post - Deep Rich Colors



Though my house is painted in soft pastels, I have always loved deep rich colors. There may be 50 shades of grey, but at this time of the years to trails have 10,000 maybe 1,000,000 shades of green.  They say arctic natives have 100 words to describe snow, words fail me when trying to describe the colors of the trees, shrubs and grasses.  

The Cardinals have a distinctive shade of red.  Brighter than the arm bands of the red-wing blackbirds.  But the black birds also have bands of yellow. 

The plant at the bottom is indigo.  I never knew what it looked like.  The golden bloom on the deep purple flower stalks is distinctive.  This is the original organic source for the blue in denim. Valued for its durability, fade resistance and beauty. 

I haven't downloaded this weeks photos yet.  The Eaglets have fledged, as in started to fly from the nest.  And we have three Owlets, and their parents hanging out in the trees this year.  The Owls are easy to find, look for the guys and gals with the $10,000 lenses pointed into the trees and look at what they are pointing at. 

Beyond that my printer/scanner failed, it downloaded a software update and quit working.  I swear the manufacturer send these things self destruct orders after a few years. I bought a new one, a different brand, it worked fine on everything except printing from Chrome on my Mac desktop computer. It would print from Chrome on my Chromebook, or Ipad. It printed and scanned from other applications on desktop. A new software update loaded, and now it works as intended.    

I had brunch one day in a cozy restaurant on Castro Street in San Francisco.  There was a table of marketing people for one of the big computer and printer manufacturers next to me.  From listening to them, I am convinced they plan for obsolescence, it is part of their marketing plan.  (Sit next to me in a restaurant, when I am eating alone, and I will listen in.) Don't you?    

13 comments:

  1. Beautiful picture and much needed respite.

    Listen in? My ex used to send me in to dine alone in the political haunts here in Bucks County to get dirt from my good listening skills. I felt like a drug mule.

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    1. Better than setting you up on "dates" with politicos.

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  2. Beautiful photos. I love listening in and I'm shocked at times by what I hear, like: “They let their drug-addict son live with them and they give him money for heroine, but would they bail my husband out of jail? No way! [Effin] hypocrites!"

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    1. And now you can listen effectively in a new language.

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  3. Aren't humans lucky that our eyes have the complex ability to see colour in all its varieties?

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    1. I have painted on and off since I was a kid, painting taught me so much about color and shading,

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  4. I'm positive they plan for obsolescence and it has cause much of the problem we have with trash. Love that redbird.

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    1. I have a couple of printers I need to get rid of

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  5. I will tune in to nature, but I ignore people if I'm alone in a crowd. I keep a book with me and get lost in it. I don't listen in. Love the bird.

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    1. The cardinals are especially vibrant right now.

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  6. I've learned sitting alone in a restaurant makes people think you are deaf, unable to hear their conversations. Sometimes I hear humdingers.

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    1. With what you do for a living, I'd love to know what it takes to surprise you!

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    2. Groups of men are always boring as they either talk sports or business. Women talk about themselves and their problems, which often sounds too much like work to listen to for too long. Once in a while I hear a humdinger though.

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