hello little one
I am so pleased to meet you
what a gift you are
as you look at me
what is it that you feel
are you afraid
when I look at you
delicate beauty I see
nature’s miracle
When I remodeled my house in the mid 80’s, the kitchen windows were boarded up for three months. The day the boards were taken down, I was treated to a view that was breathtaking. While the tree is much bigger now, I feel as moved by what I am seeing from my kitchen window today as I did on that day in the 80’s. (In the 80’s it reached this stage mid April. Due to the warm winter, it is in full bloom on March 9.)
I’ve shared pictures of this tree several times lately but here is a collage of the progression between February 20 and today.
Handful of petals
Offering to the Mother
From my heart to hers
The Haiku was written about a Bhagavati Puja I attended last night. The photographs were taken after the puja had ended.
Posted for Weekly Photo Challenge: Orange
When I visited Amma’s ashram in Amritapuri, India in December 2014/January 2015, I was fascinated by the banana circles that were located in one of the ashram gardens. Banana circles are a permaculture technique that is most often used in tropical and subtropical regions. They help create humus and water retention where soils are either sandy or heavy clay.
I found this description of banana circles:
“Papaya, banana and coconut circles are developed by digging pits up to two meters in diameter (for papaya and banana – 3 m for coconut) and approximately 1 meter deep. They are then filled with dampened, compacted organic material to a height of 1 meter above ground. Up to seven plants of the appropriate type are then grown on the rim of the pit. Taro or other moisture loving plants may be grown in the inside edge, as sweet potato along the outside edge to provide a living ground cover and mulch, as well as additional food production.”
Banana circles also are a way to compost organic materials, produce food, and utilize grey water. They are filled with microorganisms.
I learned something else in researching this topic. I always thought bananas grew on trees. It turns out that banana palms aren’t trees, they are plants. I was even more surprised when I read the following information from The Permaculture Research Institute:
Did you know that banana palms are actually a grass? Also, each plant only gives fruit once, so after you have cut the bunch of bananas down you can remove the whole plant at ground level. By this time, there should be new suckers coming up — only allow a couple of these to grow, as too many will make your bananas overcrowded and they won’t fruit well.
When I first looked at the banana palms in Amritapuri, I was astounded by how fast they grow. The first picture below was taken on the day the palm was planted. The second and third pictures are of banana palms three or four days after they were planted.
Here are some other pictures of the Amritapuri Banana Circles.
For more information:
http://permaculturenews.org/2014/04/08/banana-circles/
http://www.homegrownediblegardens.com/banana-circlemulch-pit-guilds.html
http://www.mitra.biz/joomla/index.php/writingssustainability/3050-howtobananacircle
http://permaculturenews.org/2008/06/23/build-a-banana-circle/
https://treeyopermacultureedu.wordpress.com/chapter-10-the-humid-tropics/banana-circle/
*****
Originally written for PNW Green Friends Newsletter, Issue 44, March 2015
*****
This morning, I walked while chanting the Sri Lalita Sahasranama. This is a sacred text that I ideally would be chanting daily. As I walked, I was pulled by the desire to be focusing on the beauty around me rather than reciting the chant. I have felt that pull many times before, but it was particularly strong today.
Then the question “Isn’t focusing on the beauty of Mother Nature a spiritual practice too?” came into my mind. Of course it is; about that I had no doubt. I realized what wanted to be doing was to immerse myself in nature, taking photographs to share on my blog and in the GreenFriends newsletter I organize monthly.
For the rest of my walk, I continued my chant, but if I felt called to stop and look at something and/or take a picture, I did. Sometimes I felt literally “called” in that it seemed like a song bird or crow was calling out to me.
I felt “rewarded” for being flexible in my definition of spiritual practice by capturing several beautiful photographs.
I suspect that tomorrow morning I will be going on a nature walk!
*****
Written for Weekly Photo Challenge: Reward
I just listened to this medley on Ronovan Writes (https://ronovanwrites.wordpress.com). What a trip down memory lane it was. And I thought the singers were amazing. I hope you enjoy it as much as I did.
Here is a treat for you all. A student from long ago can really hit some high notes, and I’m not talking about the woman.
Enjoy.
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