Spending a winter away last year has helped me appreciate the beauty of winter. Please visit my blog to learn more about why I love the winter landscape here at Flower Hill Farm Retreat. Happy Solstice and Best Wishes for the Holiday Season and New Year!
Showing posts with label Winter Solstice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Winter Solstice. Show all posts
Wednesday, December 21, 2016
Wednesday, December 21, 2011
Spinning Tilting Towards Winter Solstice Sunlight Painting Clouds
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The Most Dramatic Sunrises Occur Near the Winter Solstice |
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Waning Moon at Sunrise |
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A Mirror to Our Sun |
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Wide Angle Shot Makes the Mount Holyoke Range and Mount Tom Much Smaller and Farther Away Than Reality. |
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This Image Side by Side With The One of Mount Tom Below Would Reveal My View More Fully |
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Gathering Greens from the Blueberry Field |
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Carrying White Pine Seedlings Up the Hill |
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Half Way Home Coming Through the Apple Gateway |
Each year I thin out white pine seedlings growing within the blueberry field and use the greens to celebrate the Winter Solstice and Christmas. It is quite a chore to carry the pine boughs and seedlings up the hill to the farmhouse. I am thankful for all the help I have in this ritual. I love bringing the fragrant green pine boughs inside, for it makes me feel closer to the forest and the verdant color helps to make up for the absence of green in the landscape. I usually cut a Christmas tree from the forest on Christmas Eve.
We . . . in the Northern Hemisphere . . . have made it through the darkest day. Tomorrow our days begin lengthening and the sunrises I see from my windows, appearing to rise over the Mount Holyoke Range, will slowly start to move more left climbing and cresting over Carey Hill. Each day . . . inch by inch . . . minute by minute . . . we will enjoy more sunlight.
I so wish that our wide world and all its life could be enveloped in Joy and Light.
Monday, December 21, 2009
Midwinter's Darkest Day Towards Rebirth of Light
It only lasts a second . . . the tilt of the earth's axis being the furthest away from the sun. Thus we live through the shortest day of the year and wake to a bit more sunlight each day thereafter. The light will grow longer throwing her warm golden rays across fields, mountains and distant shores . . . minutes more added day by day, as we spin towards spring. According to a government site, the Winter Solstice 2009 begins today at 12:47 PM EST.
Cultures around the world celebrate the return of light through traditional rituals, but not all on the same date. Some in Japan celebrate the reemergence of their Shinto Sun goddess Amaterasu, from her dark cave. In Sweden, Finland and Norway there are those that honor Beiwe (meaning day) the sun goddess of sanity and fertility. In Wiltshire, England there are celebrations at Stonehenge. Here in United States Native Americans had built great numbers of stone structures to determine the solstices and equinoxes. Sacrifices and feasts were held the world over to mark the renewal of light. However you might celebrate . . . I wish you a Happy Winter Solstice!!
My offering of images are from last year about this time. The 110th Christmas Bird Count is under way. I will be featuring, over the next several posts, seasons of bird portraits from Flower Hill Farm, in honor of this great feat across the country. Today we have Wild Turkeys and a Robin enjoying the crabapples just outside the barn studio. The tiny apples help many birds make it through the winter months.
Labels:
Robin,
Wild Turkey,
Winter Solstice
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