Tags
beauty, cycle of life, life, Nature, oak trees, photography, Roman ruins
Recently we had visitors who had just returned from Italy. We talked of how easily you can stumble upon ancient Roman ruins lying beside the road or tumbled along the edge of a parking lot. Paving stones from some ancient road where the legendary 13th Legion once marched; the foundations of a fallen aqueduct; broken urns and shards of pottery. None of it cordoned off to protect. None of it of much value.
It’s a common sight for the native populations, but an unexpected pleasure and exciting discovery for visiting tourists. In some ways these ruins impact us more deeply than the ruins we find with tourist guides or behind museum walls.
As we were talking, I pointed to the “Roman Oaks” in the meadow outside our window.
I’ve come to see these fallen giants, the ruins of ancient oaks that lie scattered in the hills outside our home, with the same sense of tender regard and respect. Once they had been huge and thriving ecosystems, little cities providing shelter and food for a vast variety of creatures large and small. Some dominated the landscape for centuries. Children were born and grew old and died in full view of their robust splendor. The trees that now surround these ruins were tiny saplings or green shoots or still bound within round acorns when these giants spread their roots across the hillsides and threw vast shadows across the land.
I’ve come to love these ruins. There’s beauty in the sleek stripped limbs, sculptured by the wind and rain and passing predators. Beauty in their moss and lichen painted bark. Beauty in the way their sharp ruins rise like flames against the sky. Beauty in their hollowed trunks and upturned roots. I walk among them with their fine mulch crumbled underfoot and feel a sense of timelessness. The past and present tangled together.
I’ve gathered a few photos here to share with you.
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Wonderful Italy! If only these trees could talk what they have witnessed!
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Thank you! I wish the same thing.
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Beautiful!
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[smile] 🙂
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Beautifully reverent and commemorative, a pleasure to read.
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I am so happy you found it so. Thank you.
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Ancient sisters. I love the lichens.
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Yes, I think of them that way too.
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Just lovely. Live oaks and Spanish moss – gorgeous.
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Thank you, I love the Spanish moss too!
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That is wild and unusual. I love it
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I am so glad you think so. Thank you!
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great pictures !
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Thanks!
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I really like how you have managed to capture the light in your photos.
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Thanks so much for sharing these touching photographs. I am a huge tree lover!
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Beautiful!! Deborah, where were these photos taken?
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The photos were taken in the open space behind our home near Paso Robles, CA.
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Happy Earth Day!
You are being initiated into the earth goddess sisterhood with the Sisterhood of the World Bloggers award: http://fiestaestrella.wordpress.com/2014/04/22/enter-the-earth-goddess-from-self-to-community-and-back-again-love-circle-3/
~love & joy~ Ka Malana @ fiestaestrella
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Thank you! What a lovely surprise.
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Oh, I love trees. Those are magnificent. All the ones around our house are being cut down because of the ash borer.
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How sad! I have a special love of oak trees.
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Truly lovely oaks. All sorts of nostalgia comes rushing back to me for the Spanish moss… I can only see it here in the botanical gardens. There aren’t many oaks in Japan, but there are plenty of cedar, like miniature redwoods, sprinkling the mountainside and making the forest smell like incense. Love your analogy as well.
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Ruins of all sorts are sacred places…thank you for letting me (us) glimpse those outside your own window…lovely.
peace
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I have a particular fondness for oak trees and especially the “grand ones” of the far west and the south. I am always excited to see the great live oaks of the deep south with their mosses or the canyon live oaks of California. They have a majesty that always makes me pause and want to come closer.
Thank you for sharing these photos with us. I’d love to have that view from my window too. 🙂
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