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Wednesday, August 3, 2022





local circle Fire charcoal with stone, Water, Air, Fire, Earth & Ethers

Shawangunk Kill

Shawangunk NY


7/31


∆   ∆   ∆
stabilizing balance
creative expressions
activating changes



from confluence with Wallkill/Gardiner Shawangunk Kill to Pine Bush access posted private land... with map marked " Watchtower is a hamlet (and census-designated place) located in the Town of Shawangunk, Ulster County, New York, United States. The population was 2,381 at the 2010 census. It is owned and operated by the Watchtower Society (a legal entity of Jehovah Witnesses) and has been in operation since 1963.[2]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Watchtower,_New_York

"...Shawangunk was first settled by Europeans during the 1680s. The region was first designated a precinct about 1710, and became the township of Shawangunk in 1788. The town's name comes from the Dutch transliteration of the Munsee Lenape name or phrase. The approximate Lenape pronunciation was "Sha-WAN-gunk," probably meaning "in the smoky air." The name first appears in the 1682 Indian deed to Gertrude Bruyn. It is uncertain if this was the Indians' actual proper name for their nearby village and "New Fort," destroyed by the Dutch on Sept 5, 1663 during the Second Esopus War, or if the name was merely a phrase invented by the Indians in connection with the Bruyn land purchase, possibly describing some temporary feature of the landscape. Suggestions as to whether the name may have referred to smoky conditions on the day of Bruyn's first tour of the land with the Indians in the 1670s, or to the smoky ruins of the destroyed Indian village during the preceding decade, are purely speculative. Use of the name to designate the creek on which Bruyn settled (Shawangunk Kill), and the mountain range, came somewhat later. Locals pronounce the name "SHONG-gum,"[ an obvious[according to whom?] corruption or contraction of the original name, but one on record at least as far back as 1777 (Marc B. Fried, "Shawangunk Place-names" pp. ix-xi, 3-12, 96-97). Present-day citizens of Shawangunk often refer to themselves as living in particular hamlets such as Wallkill or Walker Valley rather than the town as a whole;["

"...The Shawangunk Mountains, primarily consisting of quartz, rise 2,000 feet above the town.[10] The mountains were created over 10,000 years ago during the last ice age when retreating glacial ice carved them out as part the surrounding Catskills,[11] drawing tourists and climbing enthusiasts from all over the world.[12]"...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shawangunk,_New_York

"...In the early 1990s, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, when it was researching the fate of the former Galeville air base site (now Shawangunk Grasslands National Wildlife Refuge) found that the lower Shawangunk (from its mouth to Pine Bush) supports an unusually diverse plant and animal community for the region due to the absence of any serious impoundment along the upper river. It reported no less than six species of freshwater mussels, including the rare swollen wedge mussel, and 31 species of fish. Among the latter were the rare Notropis amoenus (comely shiner), Notropis stramineus (sand shiner, Percina caproedes (logperch), Lepomis auritis (redbreasted sunfish) and Noturus insignis (margined madtom

The study found that the region supports the only known community of Diarrhena obovata (beakgrass) in the state. Other rare plants in the lower Shawangunk Kill include threadfoot on submerged ledges, sharp-winged monkeyflower, wingstem and redrooted flatsedge along the stream itself, with Davis' sedge, swamp agrimony, Aster vimeneus (small white aster) and violet bushclover joining the beakgrass in the flood plains. ..."

Due to the minimal development (mostly agricultural) within much of its watershed, there is very little pollution.[2] In 2015 the town council members of Wallkill, through which five miles (8.0 km) of the stream flows, enacted a law to protect the Shawangunk Kill. It bars any construction (including roads), clear cutting, dumping or septic systems within 100 feet (30 m) of the high water mark, Crawford, to the north, also has in place limits on new construction and rebuilding in the stream's vicinity, and in Mount Hope much of the land around it is owned by the municipality. "

- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shawangunk_Kill


Elements are Life
Love Peace CoCreativity...

art with Earth blog, charcoal, collaborative with Nature, eco-environmental land art, fractals, webh




Tuesday, August 2, 2022








8/2 AM & PM


stillness conects with action


rain and light passing to close as well
with body shedding frameworks with reality shed and a new stability comforts
we possess the consequences, not the cause
rain passages dry rhythmically
down pour and strong wind lower Summer heat to a more comfortable for now is the time
approaching Lammas, Lughnassadh, Lugnasad with August, celebrating first grain harvest, a time for gathering and thanks for abundance, and color change with Sun descending
leaf revolves around a pivot, like an old clock dial
are those spots getting lighter
with disintegration and fading leaves there are living processes just beginning
breathless heat
sluggish shadows disperse
3rd day with 90˚+ heat wave with radial fine hair cracking
filtering our justice
memory fades
Water memories follow day
demons, halos and bright lights may wake us
with times time may linger
caregiving changes with light and dark
saturation permeation satiety surfeit 
Moon struck
perfect hot Summer evening with Pesto and penne...
power and strength with fallen Pin Oak twig w/dead leaves adorn living passing
awakenings bring with them freshened realities
caretaking stillness
cloudiness brings a diffused light form with clarity
quietly enfolding interdependent forms
nature elements move piece setting it below with stepped design extention
slippage over night stabilizes today
slugs, mollusks without a shell visit when it rains
thunderous heavy rain roundings
hot breezes releasing layer
circular patterns shifting space
changes with physicality can be a focus as passage
all day dream
dying tempered with life
another day 90˚ stillness
slowly with 90˚ heat
light and dark passages
morning and evening balance
second day with 60s, darkness with rain
with equilibrium Summer Solstice
48˚F > 80˚F arc
pair Pin Oak catkins arc pair Eastern Hemlock needles arc pair spiral whatdyacallems arc and windy arc
windy 60˚ arc 
windy 85˚ arc
cooling rain arc 
Sun arc
vine with shadow
Boo working with morning forms
Catalpa blossom landing
scanning vine circumambulating and joined by another, with a breeze
vine tentacle, checking out the circularity?
night time .8" rain rinse with Maple and Oak canopy and day long dry breezes
Roly Polys and other critters condominium
dis integration with life continuing
flowerings somewhere in between
old structures no longer applicable break away
awareness stills
there is breath
crossroads with loosening layers
thunder with horizon, darkening presence
sometimes we note a day has gone by
objects may appear shinier with retrospect
Water content expanding with an inch of rain and contracting with days' drying creates 
friction, wear away
Roly-Poly are multiplying with composting, drowning or sated with an all day rain, heavy at times
Roly-Poly composting with rain showers
a wood ant hill... Hu...
kaleidoscopic past cascades with wholeness
an assuring stillness visitsa nights' new storm cell passes with following cooler winds with new cells' ease grieving memorieswith leaf let go
64˚ with morning, 91˚ with 5 PM feels like 98˚
rain, fog, overcast, raining starting, leading in 90˚s tomorrow
rain stained
Sun shine and Sun filtered
more rain rinses and cooler breeze day
with site;White blossom whorled leaf Bedstraw Galium aperine, pink flowering Herb Robert Geranium robertianum with deeply dissected leaves, Blue Violet Viola sororia, fallen immature Oak Quercua palustris/a red Oak and Maple Acer sp leaves and seeds/helicopters...
after, between and after heavy thunderstorms with more due during the night
had rain and have raining
different views with same viewpoint
subtle changes with second day with 80˚ bake
exploring new levels 
stacked dimensions
hand brushing charred flakes with 35 mph wind gusts and 75˚ Sun
quiet anticipation
Boo marking her statement
setting
stirring
adding Water
shifting light shifting
rain over night with morning and drying this evening, waves with Water saturation
new layer opening
all day soaking rains
enJoy with Beltane!
New Moon, partial Sol eclipse
a twig lands
heavy cold winds blow dry with contractions
rain deepens tone with color, earth, animal and plant life
flashback corn
Earth breathes in warming air
gray day revelations
top blows away with Earth
stories unfold we watch
Spring shadows
a light dusting cools then melts
another wind today trims, awaiting heavy rain, possibly with snow, tonight
more wind gusts up to 30 mph aren't shaking the charred
a morning shot today with sprinkles, rains due later
with gusting winds lately, and this hasn't drifted about
83˚ with gusting winds and threatening bands dark clouds
gusts break away
Sun, 73˚ and fallen Pin Oak Quercus palustris blooms
knobs with tree trunk guide wind and Water trimming char to their form
a drying day
another night and morning rain
warming breezes dry and trim
two days with rain
light with dark shape and form with photo
a gesture of the grid pattern with the charred edges...
circumambulating char... shadows of the 
flames that preceded/pre seeded them...

Elements are Life
Love, Peace & CoCreating with universe...

art with Earth blog, bioenergetics, charcoal, collaborative with Nature, eco-environmental land art, fractals, webh








local circle Fire charcoal with stone, Water, Air, Fire, Earth & Ethers

Shawangunk Kill

Shawangunk NY


7/31


∆   ∆   ∆
creative expressions
activating changes



from confluence with Wallkill/Gardiner Shawangunk Kill to Pine Bush access posted private land... with map marked " Watchtower is a hamlet (and census-designated place) located in the Town of Shawangunk, Ulster County, New York, United States. The population was 2,381 at the 2010 census. It is owned and operated by the Watchtower Society (a legal entity of Jehovah Witnesses) and has been in operation since 1963.[2]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Watchtower,_New_York

"...Shawangunk was first settled by Europeans during the 1680s. The region was first designated a precinct about 1710, and became the township of Shawangunk in 1788. The town's name comes from the Dutch transliteration of the Munsee Lenape name or phrase. The approximate Lenape pronunciation was "Sha-WAN-gunk," probably meaning "in the smoky air." The name first appears in the 1682 Indian deed to Gertrude Bruyn. It is uncertain if this was the Indians' actual proper name for their nearby village and "New Fort," destroyed by the Dutch on Sept 5, 1663 during the Second Esopus War, or if the name was merely a phrase invented by the Indians in connection with the Bruyn land purchase, possibly describing some temporary feature of the landscape. Suggestions as to whether the name may have referred to smoky conditions on the day of Bruyn's first tour of the land with the Indians in the 1670s, or to the smoky ruins of the destroyed Indian village during the preceding decade, are purely speculative. Use of the name to designate the creek on which Bruyn settled (Shawangunk Kill), and the mountain range, came somewhat later. Locals pronounce the name "SHONG-gum,"[ an obvious[according to whom?] corruption or contraction of the original name, but one on record at least as far back as 1777 (Marc B. Fried, "Shawangunk Place-names" pp. ix-xi, 3-12, 96-97). Present-day citizens of Shawangunk often refer to themselves as living in particular hamlets such as Wallkill or Walker Valley rather than the town as a whole;["

"...The Shawangunk Mountains, primarily consisting of quartz, rise 2,000 feet above the town.[10] The mountains were created over 10,000 years ago during the last ice age when retreating glacial ice carved them out as part the surrounding Catskills,[11] drawing tourists and climbing enthusiasts from all over the world.[12]"...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shawangunk,_New_York

"...In the early 1990s, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, when it was researching the fate of the former Galeville air base site (now Shawangunk Grasslands National Wildlife Refuge) found that the lower Shawangunk (from its mouth to Pine Bush) supports an unusually diverse plant and animal community for the region due to the absence of any serious impoundment along the upper river. It reported no less than six species of freshwater mussels, including the rare swollen wedge mussel, and 31 species of fish. Among the latter were the rare Notropis amoenus (comely shiner), Notropis stramineus (sand shiner, Percina caproedes (logperch), Lepomis auritis (redbreasted sunfish) and Noturus insignis (margined madtom

The study found that the region supports the only known community of Diarrhena obovata (beakgrass) in the state. Other rare plants in the lower Shawangunk Kill include threadfoot on submerged ledges, sharp-winged monkeyflower, wingstem and redrooted flatsedge along the stream itself, with Davis' sedge, swamp agrimony, Aster vimeneus (small white aster) and violet bushclover joining the beakgrass in the flood plains. ..."

Due to the minimal development (mostly agricultural) within much of its watershed, there is very little pollution.[2] In 2015 the town council members of Wallkill, through which five miles (8.0 km) of the stream flows, enacted a law to protect the Shawangunk Kill. It bars any construction (including roads), clear cutting, dumping or septic systems within 100 feet (30 m) of the high water mark, Crawford, to the north, also has in place limits on new construction and rebuilding in the stream's vicinity, and in Mount Hope much of the land around it is owned by the municipality. "

- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shawangunk_Kill


Elements are Life
Love Peace CoCreativity...

art with Earth blog, charcoal, collaborative with Nature, eco-environmental land art, fractals, webh




Monday, August 1, 2022









8/1 AM & PM


rain and light passing to close as well


with body shedding frameworks with reality shed and a new stability comforts
we possess the consequences, not the cause
rain passages dry rhythmically
down pour and strong wind lower Summer heat to a more comfortable for now is the time
approaching Lammas, Lughnassadh, Lugnasad with August, celebrating first grain harvest, a time for gathering and thanks for abundance, and color change with Sun descending
leaf revolves around a pivot, like an old clock dial
are those spots getting lighter
with disintegration and fading leaves there are living processes just beginning
breathless heat
sluggish shadows disperse
3rd day with 90˚+ heat wave with radial fine hair cracking
filtering our justice
memory fades
Water memories follow day
demons, halos and bright lights may wake us
with times time may linger
caregiving changes with light and dark
saturation permeation satiety surfeit 
Moon struck
perfect hot Summer evening with Pesto and penne...
power and strength with fallen Pin Oak twig w/dead leaves adorn living passing
awakenings bring with them freshened realities
caretaking stillness
cloudiness brings a diffused light form with clarity
quietly enfolding interdependent forms
nature elements move piece setting it below with stepped design extention
slippage over night stabilizes today
slugs, mollusks without a shell visit when it rains
thunderous heavy rain roundings
hot breezes releasing layer
circular patterns shifting space
changes with physicality can be a focus as passage
all day dream
dying tempered with life
another day 90˚ stillness
slowly with 90˚ heat
light and dark passages
morning and evening balance
second day with 60s, darkness with rain
with equilibrium Summer Solstice
48˚F > 80˚F arc
pair Pin Oak catkins arc pair Eastern Hemlock needles arc pair spiral whatdyacallems arc and windy arc
windy 60˚ arc 
windy 85˚ arc
cooling rain arc 
Sun arc
vine with shadow
Boo working with morning forms
Catalpa blossom landing
scanning vine circumambulating and joined by another, with a breeze
vine tentacle, checking out the circularity?
night time .8" rain rinse with Maple and Oak canopy and day long dry breezes
Roly Polys and other critters condominium
dis integration with life continuing
flowerings somewhere in between
old structures no longer applicable break away
awareness stills
there is breath
crossroads with loosening layers
thunder with horizon, darkening presence
sometimes we note a day has gone by
objects may appear shinier with retrospect
Water content expanding with an inch of rain and contracting with days' drying creates 
friction, wear away
Roly-Poly are multiplying with composting, drowning or sated with an all day rain, heavy at times
Roly-Poly composting with rain showers
a wood ant hill... Hu...
kaleidoscopic past cascades with wholeness
an assuring stillness visitsa nights' new storm cell passes with following cooler winds with new cells' ease grieving memorieswith leaf let go
64˚ with morning, 91˚ with 5 PM feels like 98˚
rain, fog, overcast, raining starting, leading in 90˚s tomorrow
rain stained
Sun shine and Sun filtered
more rain rinses and cooler breeze day
with site;White blossom whorled leaf Bedstraw Galium aperine, pink flowering Herb Robert Geranium robertianum with deeply dissected leaves, Blue Violet Viola sororia, fallen immature Oak Quercua palustris/a red Oak and Maple Acer sp leaves and seeds/helicopters...
after, between and after heavy thunderstorms with more due during the night
had rain and have raining
different views with same viewpoint
subtle changes with second day with 80˚ bake
exploring new levels 
stacked dimensions
hand brushing charred flakes with 35 mph wind gusts and 75˚ Sun
quiet anticipation
Boo marking her statement
setting
stirring
adding Water
shifting light shifting
rain over night with morning and drying this evening, waves with Water saturation
new layer opening
all day soaking rains
enJoy with Beltane!
New Moon, partial Sol eclipse
a twig lands
heavy cold winds blow dry with contractions
rain deepens tone with color, earth, animal and plant life
flashback corn
Earth breathes in warming air
gray day revelations
top blows away with Earth
stories unfold we watch
Spring shadows
a light dusting cools then melts
another wind today trims, awaiting heavy rain, possibly with snow, tonight
more wind gusts up to 30 mph aren't shaking the charred
a morning shot today with sprinkles, rains due later
with gusting winds lately, and this hasn't drifted about
83˚ with gusting winds and threatening bands dark clouds
gusts break away
Sun, 73˚ and fallen Pin Oak Quercus palustris blooms
knobs with tree trunk guide wind and Water trimming char to their form
a drying day
another night and morning rain
warming breezes dry and trim
two days with rain
light with dark shape and form with photo
a gesture of the grid pattern with the charred edges...
circumambulating char... shadows of the 
flames that preceded/pre seeded them...

Elements are Life
Love, Peace & CoCreating with universe...

art with Earth blog, bioenergetics, charcoal, collaborative with Nature, eco-environmental land art, fractals, webh








local circle Fire charcoal with stone, Water, Air, Fire, Earth & Ethers

Shawangunk Kill

Shawangunk NY


7/31


∆   ∆   ∆
activating changes



from confluence with Wallkill/Gardiner Shawangunk Kill to Pine Bush access posted private land... with map marked " Watchtower is a hamlet (and census-designated place) located in the Town of Shawangunk, Ulster County, New York, United States. The population was 2,381 at the 2010 census. It is owned and operated by the Watchtower Society (a legal entity of Jehovah Witnesses) and has been in operation since 1963.[2]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Watchtower,_New_York

"...Shawangunk was first settled by Europeans during the 1680s. The region was first designated a precinct about 1710, and became the township of Shawangunk in 1788. The town's name comes from the Dutch transliteration of the Munsee Lenape name or phrase. The approximate Lenape pronunciation was "Sha-WAN-gunk," probably meaning "in the smoky air." The name first appears in the 1682 Indian deed to Gertrude Bruyn. It is uncertain if this was the Indians' actual proper name for their nearby village and "New Fort," destroyed by the Dutch on Sept 5, 1663 during the Second Esopus War, or if the name was merely a phrase invented by the Indians in connection with the Bruyn land purchase, possibly describing some temporary feature of the landscape. Suggestions as to whether the name may have referred to smoky conditions on the day of Bruyn's first tour of the land with the Indians in the 1670s, or to the smoky ruins of the destroyed Indian village during the preceding decade, are purely speculative. Use of the name to designate the creek on which Bruyn settled (Shawangunk Kill), and the mountain range, came somewhat later. Locals pronounce the name "SHONG-gum,"[ an obvious[according to whom?] corruption or contraction of the original name, but one on record at least as far back as 1777 (Marc B. Fried, "Shawangunk Place-names" pp. ix-xi, 3-12, 96-97). Present-day citizens of Shawangunk often refer to themselves as living in particular hamlets such as Wallkill or Walker Valley rather than the town as a whole;["

"...The Shawangunk Mountains, primarily consisting of quartz, rise 2,000 feet above the town.[10] The mountains were created over 10,000 years ago during the last ice age when retreating glacial ice carved them out as part the surrounding Catskills,[11] drawing tourists and climbing enthusiasts from all over the world.[12]"...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shawangunk,_New_York

"...In the early 1990s, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, when it was researching the fate of the former Galeville air base site (now Shawangunk Grasslands National Wildlife Refuge) found that the lower Shawangunk (from its mouth to Pine Bush) supports an unusually diverse plant and animal community for the region due to the absence of any serious impoundment along the upper river. It reported no less than six species of freshwater mussels, including the rare swollen wedge mussel, and 31 species of fish. Among the latter were the rare Notropis amoenus (comely shiner), Notropis stramineus (sand shiner, Percina caproedes (logperch), Lepomis auritis (redbreasted sunfish) and Noturus insignis (margined madtom

The study found that the region supports the only known community of Diarrhena obovata (beakgrass) in the state. Other rare plants in the lower Shawangunk Kill include threadfoot on submerged ledges, sharp-winged monkeyflower, wingstem and redrooted flatsedge along the stream itself, with Davis' sedge, swamp agrimony, Aster vimeneus (small white aster) and violet bushclover joining the beakgrass in the flood plains. ..."

Due to the minimal development (mostly agricultural) within much of its watershed, there is very little pollution.[2] In 2015 the town council members of Wallkill, through which five miles (8.0 km) of the stream flows, enacted a law to protect the Shawangunk Kill. It bars any construction (including roads), clear cutting, dumping or septic systems within 100 feet (30 m) of the high water mark, Crawford, to the north, also has in place limits on new construction and rebuilding in the stream's vicinity, and in Mount Hope much of the land around it is owned by the municipality. "

- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shawangunk_Kill


Elements are Life
Love Peace CoCreativity...

art with Earth blog, charcoal, collaborative with Nature, eco-environmental land art, fractals, webh