29 March 2026

Toy Boats

Leaf 345 – Reflections

 

Edward Hopper - Coast Guard Cove (1929)


As a child, I always enjoyed playing with toy boats – losing my imagination in made-up stories of sea voyages and shipwrecks on far away islands. And compared to the raw power of the sea, real boats can be tossed about and meet their ends like simple toys too.

 

 

Toy boats

in rock pools

on a rugged shore.

 

 

 

Eleanor Hughes - On the Cliff (Penlee House Gallery & Museum)



28 March 2026

Cushioned in Dream

Leaf 344 – Reflections

 

Harold C. Earnshaw - The World Forgetting (1927)


There’s nothing like a good book for totally transporting the soul …

 

 

NEVER-ENDING STORY

 

Cushioned in dream –

each page alighting

another world away.

 

 

 

27 March 2026

Tea or Coffee?

Leaf 343 – Reflections

 

David Palmer - How to Make Tea (1977)


I’m more of a tea, rather than a coffee drinker myself …

 

 

Red Label (loose leaf)

– my mother,

warming the pot.

 

 

 

26 March 2026

Osaka Castle

Leaf 342 – Looking Back

 

Kawanishi Yuzaburo - Osaka Castle (1967)


One is often apt to see some odd pets here in Japan. Not just the wide variety of little dogs that get taken regularly to massage parlours and hair salons that are dedicated to caring for such pampered pets (see, Leaf 281). I’ve seen videos of people keeping otters in their apartments, feeding them sashimi. And I once saw a man out walking with a meerkat on a lead. But one of the strangest sights I ever saw was back in 2009:

 

 

Gazing up at Osaka Castle.

 

An iguana –

wearing a

pink feather boa.

 

 

 

25 March 2026

London Lights

Leaf 341 – Looking Back

 

Ronald Lampitt - London Nightscape


An homage to my home city, so far away …

 

 

Lights of the city

spanning the river

– London aglow!

 

 

 

24 March 2026

The Copse

Leaf 340 – Art Inspired

 

Shima Tamami - Forest Song (1962)


This poem was loosely inspired by two things: Firstly, by Shima Tamami’s print, ‘Forest Song’ (1962). And secondly, by a long walk to Chanctonbury Ring on England’s South Downs when I was around ten years old. Chanctonbury Ring itself is a ring of beech trees, originally planted in 1760, along the remnants of a circular, prehistoric earthen rampart atop Chanctonbury Hill. The prehistoric site’s exact purpose is not known, although it is thought to have been used variously, either as a hill fort, a civic refuge, a livestock enclosure, or as a religious sanctuary; although it was certainly used for the latter purpose during the later Roman occupation of Britain, with two distinct temple or religious cult-like buildings having been found on the site. At the time of visiting, this unknown, pre-Christian religious association really caught hold of my overly-fertile imagination and I felt as though there was something darkly magical moving with the wind roaring loudly through the boughs of these tall trees and the raucous cawing of sinister, black-feathered crows. Sadly, not long afterwards, the ring was broken, as many of the trees were destroyed by the Great Storm of 1987.

 

 

Wind shivers a copse,

where druids once

communed with crows.

 

 

 

Ian Hawfinch - Chanctonbury Ring (Geograph)


Chanctonbury Ring and other archaeological sites (Ordnance Survey, 1934)


23 March 2026

Earth and Sky

Leaf 339 – Reflections

 

Alexandra Buckle - Winter Reflections (2023)


As above, so below ... (see also, Leaf 9 & Leaf 156).

 

 

Mirroring

earth and sky

– Rushmere.