Showing posts with label Nature. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nature. Show all posts

Sunday, April 14, 2013

Swiss Traditions - The Alphorn





Alphorn – the sound of natural tones.

With the passing of time, the alphorn almost totally disappeared as an instrument used by Swiss shepherds. It was only with the romanticism of the 19th century and the revival of folklore and tourism that the alphorn experienced a renaissance and even became a national symbol.

Like the didgeridoo, the Indian bamboo or wooden trumpet and the African horn, the alphorn is one of the original wooden wind instruments. The alphorn in Switzerland was first documented in the mid-16th century by natural scientist Conrad Gesner.




Communication with humans and animals

The alphorn has long been a tool used by shepherds. It was used to callthe cows from the pastures and into the barn at milking time. An engraving from 1754 shows a shepherd using the alphorn to motivate the cows to cover the last steep stretch on their big climb up into the Alps. A glass painting from the Emmental Valley dating back to 1595 shows the alphorn being blown, probably to pacify the cows during milking. The blowing of the alphorn in the evening is also a traditional theme in art. This sound served as an evening prayer, and was mainly practiced in the Reformed cantons, while in the German-speaking Catholic cantons in Central Switzerland, the call to prayer was preferred. The main function of the alphorn was, however, for communication with the herdsmen on the neighboring Alps and with the people down in the valley below.

From a shadowy existence to the national symbol

After 1800, as the production of cheese increasingly shifted from the Alps to the dairies in the villages, the alphorn was used less and less. After the alphorn was hardly heard at traditional festivals any more, the Bernese official, Niklaus von Mülinen, began to repair alphorns in the 1820s and distribute them to talented players in Grindelwald. Although the alphorn had more or less lost its original function in the mountains, it now won the hearts of its audiences as a musical instrument – and has become a tourist attraction and a symbol of Switzerland.

Brass wind instrument made of wood

The key in which an alphorn can be played depends on its length. In Switzerland, the Fis/Ges (F sharp/G flat) alphorn is used, which is 3.5 metres long. Despite or indeed because of its simple design, the alphorn is a difficult instrument to play. This is because all other wind instruments have undergone technical advancements over time (finger holes, valves) while the alphorn has retained its original form. Musicians regard instruments made of wood as being brass instruments because the tones are produced by the same blowing techniques. The distinctive sound of the alphorn, however, combines the richness of a brass wind instrumentwith the softness of a woodwind instrument.
http://www.myswitzerland.com/en/about-switzerland/customs-traditions/music/alphorn-auf-den-spuren-der-naturtoene.html Text and Photos are sources from the link included - read more about there!
There is still a lot of interesting things to read and to learn from the typical SWISS traditions - yodeling included! I'm sure you'll enjoy it! 
HAPPY SUNDAY to everyone :-) 
Susanne




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Sunday, October 14, 2012

October Colors

Captured in Columbia, South Carolina


October


October's the month

When the smallest breeze
Gives us a shower
Of autumn leaves.
Bonfires and pumpkins,
Leaves sailing down -
October is red
And golden and brown.


October leaves are lovely
They rustle when I run

Sometimes I make a heap
And jump in them for fun.


Autumn leaves float quietly down

And form a carpet on the ground.
But when those leaves are stepped upon,
Listen for the crackling sound.





I'm wishing you all a HAPPY SUNDAY - enjoy fall and take your camera with you!
~Susanne


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Sunday, June 17, 2012

HAPPY SUNDAY to You!

The little bridge in Magnolias Garden, outside of Charleston in South Carolina



If the problem has a solution, worrying is pointless, in the end the problem will be solved. If the problem has no solution, there is no reason to worry, because it can't be solved.
~Zen proverb~



Hi my friends,

It's unbelievable how fast this week went by for me! 
I had a lot on my "to do" list and I'm happy I achieved every single one. 
Now I can relax and enjoy my weekend. 
I hope you're doing it too!

HAPPY SUNDAY everybody!
~Susanne






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Sunday, May 06, 2012

SUPER - SUPER - Everything SUPER


This was yesterday the "SUPER-FULL-MOON"




And this was the "SUPER-FULL-MOON-FROG"




And this two are "SUPER-FULL-MOON-FRIENDS"


I know, these shots are not the best of mine, but I had fun to meet not only the beautiful orange-yellow SUPER-Full-Moon, I had also two unexpected companions beside me while I was shooting this phenomena of the closest moon to earth. 

Wishing you all a HAPPY SUNDAY # 16
~Susanne


***


 
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Sunday, November 13, 2011

Sunday, October 23, 2011

The Right to Be Different...



When we lose the right to be different, we lose the privilege to be free.




 I'm just here for a quick "HELLO" to my friends:
Wishing you all a wonderful Sunday today!

~Susanne :-)









Friday, October 14, 2011

I think this is a cosmos



I look out of this window and I think this is a cosmos, this is a huge creation, this is one small corner of it. The trees and birds and everything else and I'm part of it. I didn't ask to be put here, I've been lucky in finding myself here. 





Hi my friends,

I know, it's not Sunday now - I just want to say a quick "hello" to you all.

 I'm wishing you a very nice weekend, relax and enjoy life!
Susanne









Tuesday, September 06, 2011

Nature is so powerful...


Nature is so powerful, so strong. Capturing its essence is not easy - your work becomes a dance with light and the weather. 
It takes you to a place within yourself. 





Hi my friends,

thank you all for your kind comments to my wordless Sunday post!

This new picture above is about weather, stormy clouds and rain. I made the picture yesterday in the same park where my "Wordless Sunday" photograph was taken. I had two minutes only to shoot, the wind was picking up like crazy and it begun to rain. Weather can change very quick here in the rainy season - I love to feel the big rain drops on my skin!

I hope I could catch the pretty spooky atmosphere that always reigns before the storm and the rain set in. I love the weather like this!!

Have y'all a wonderful Wednesday.
See you later....
~Susanne







Monday, February 21, 2011

The Pelicans are back!



The pelicans are migrating and took over "The rocks" in Jetty Park, at Cape Canaveral



Get out of my way, that was my spot last year and it's my spot this year also!


Hi my friends,
The white pelicans are migrating and back. Taking over "The Rocks" out in Jetty Park at the Cape Canaveral shores. I have captured some of them and it's fun to watch their cleaning rituals.

A large flock of White Pelicans winter also in the Indian River near Scottsmoor Landing. You might see them flying and feeding anywhere on Merritt Island.

Thank you very much for all your kind comments to my "Wordless Sunday" post. 
I'm gladly appreciate them.

Wishing you a good start in the new week.
~Susanne




http://tinyurl.com/37jkbtz        Dave's paintings on FAA
http://tinyurl.com/yatdh5x       My photography on FAA
http://tinyurl.com/2wf9qsh      My photography and Calendars 2011 on RedBubble
http://tinyurl.com/37ckddf      David's paintings + My photography on ImageKind
http://tinyurl.com/2bsfvk9      Meine Europaeischen Fans kaufen meine Fotos hier auf myGall

Friday, February 04, 2011

Yeah, weekend is here...

Yeah, weekend is here!



Hi my friends,

I wish you all a good start in your weekend.
Be happy like this pelican it seems to be and enjoy your coming weekend - hopefully not with to much snow shoveling work - -stay warm! Or, come down to sunny Florida, 79F today  :))

Sunshines to you,
~Susanne





http://tinyurl.com/37jkbtz        Dave's paintings on FAA
http://tinyurl.com/yatdh5x       My photography on FAA
http://tinyurl.com/2wf9qsh      My photography and Calendars 2011 on RedBubble
http://tinyurl.com/37ckddf      David's paintings + My photography on ImageKind
http://tinyurl.com/2bsfvk9      Meine Europaeischen Fans kaufen meine Fotos hier auf myGall

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Agave Tequilana

Agave Tequilana in an artistic color - captured in Casa GrandeAZ


Agave tequilana,
commonly called blue agave, tequila agave, mezcal or maguey is an agave plant that is an important economic product of Jalisco, Mexico, due to its role as the base ingredient of tequila, a popular distilled spirit. The high production of sugars—mostly in the form of fructose—in the core of this plant, are the most important element for the preparation of alcoholic beverages.
The tequila agave is a native of Jalisco, Mexico. The tequila agave favors high altitudes of more than 1,500 meters and grows in rich and sandy soils. While commercial and wild agaves have different life cycles, both grow into large succulents, with spiky fleshy leaves, that can reach over two meters in height. Wild Agaves, however, sprout a shoot when about five years old, that can grow an additional five meters and are topped with yellow flowers.

The flowers are pollinated by a native bat (Leptonycteris nivalis) and produce several thousand seeds per plant. The plant then dies. The shoots are removed when about a year old from commercial plants to allow the heart to grow larger. The plants are then reproduced by planting these shoots; this has led to a considerable loss of genetic diversity in cultivated blue agave.

It is rare for one kept as a houseplant to flower; nevertheless, a fifty year old blue agave in Boston grew a 10 m (30 ft) stalk requiring a hole in the greenhouse roof and flowered in the summer of 2006.

Tequila is produced by removing the heart of the plant in its twelfth year. Normally weighing between 35–90 kg (77–198 lb). This heart is stripped of its leaves and heated to remove the sap, which is fermented and distilled. Other beverages like mezcal and pulque are also produced from blue and other agaves by different methods (though still using the sap) and are regarded as more traditional.

Researchers from Mexico's University of Guadalajara believe blue agave contains compounds that may be useful in carrying drugs to the intestines to treat diseases, such as Crohn's disease and colitis.



I hope you'll enjoy the read! Thank you foe all the comments on my last post!
Susanne




http://tinyurl.com/37jkbtz       Dave's paintings on FAA
http://tinyurl.com/yatdh5x      My photography on FAA
http://tinyurl.com/2wf9qsh     My photography and Calendars 2011 on RedBubble
http://tinyurl.com/37ckddf     David's paintings + My photography on ImageKind
http://tinyurl.com/2bsfvk9      Meine Europaeischen Fans kaufen meine Fotos hier auf myGall

Friday, January 21, 2011

Looking for something good

When birds burp, it must taste like bugs.
Bill Watterson



Hi my friends,
I have no idea what kind of bird this is. He looked for me like a big Ibis, my husband thought it's somewhat like a stork.... do you know the name of this species? :))
 
Thank you for the comments on my last post, they are all very much appreciated.
 
After 2 days stay in the hospital, I hope I can bring hubby back home today. We are waiting for the results of the Cardiologist... cross your fingers for us!
 
I wish you a good start in the weekend! 
See you on Sunday for my "wordless photo" again, right? :)
~Susanne





http://tinyurl.com/37jkbtz       Dave's paintings on FAA
http://tinyurl.com/yatdh5x      My photography on FAA
http://tinyurl.com/2wf9qsh     My photography and Calendars 2011 on RedBubble
http://tinyurl.com/37ckddf     David's paintings + My photography on ImageKind
http://tinyurl.com/2bsfvk9      Meine Europaeischen Fans kaufen meine Fotos hier auf myGall

Thursday, November 25, 2010

Photo-Swap-Thursday #2

Edge View From Horseshoe Bend

Heather: Sometimes, the view itself is the adventure… Last spring I spent a week hiking around Arizona with my oldest son. I shot this photo from my own breath-taking cliff’s edge position at Horse Shoe Bend in Page, Arizona where there are no barriers except your own common sense.


Sunset photos of Horseshoe Bend near Page, Arizona take a bit of planning.  Bursting, changing light and a cliff side tripod perch are just a couple of the challenges.  Wind and blowing sand can make the experience even more interesting…”

More photos, audio and the full story can be found here: Photo’s Edge




Heather Dugan is a writer/photographer and voice-over/on-camera talent based in Central Ohio with clients worldwide. A frequent traveler and lover of the outdoors, she is never without her camera and running shoes.

Her travel adventures are chronicled on "Footsteps" www.heatherdugan.com/blogNEW
Writing samples/article links and recording demos can be found at www.heatherdugan.com. "

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Where are they going to?

Where are they going...???


Hi my friends,
thanks for all the wonderful comments yesterday - you all made my day with your words!

Tomorrow is not only Thanksgiving Day - it is also my "Photo-Swap-Thursday". 
Heather and I have decided to do a post swap together and we hope you'll find still the time to have a look to our both post after all that turkey and smashed potatoes - and not to forget all the yummy pies! 
Reading our blogs is a great excercice....LOL...

HAPPY THANKSGIVINGS DAY to all of you and see ya' tomorrow here!
~Susanne


Tuesday, November 23, 2010

The Lighthouse on Cape Canaveral


The current Cape Canaveral Light is not the first lighthouse on Cape Canaveral

A 60-foot (18 m) tall brick structure was built on the Cape in 1848. The light consisted of 15 lamps each with a 21-inch (530 mm) reflector. The first lighthouse keeper left the lighthouse during a Seminole War scare, and refused to return to his post. Sailors heavily criticized the lighthouse, with complaints that the light was too weak and too low to be seen before ships were on the reefs near the Cape. the government contracted for construction of a new lighthouse in 1860, but the start of the American Civil War stopped work. The lamps and mechanism for the light were removed from the lighthouse and buried in the lighthouse keeper's orange grove to protect them from Federal raids.

At the end of the war construction resumed on the lighthouse. It was completed in 1868, receiving a first-order Fresnel lens. Erosion of the shoreline threatened the lighthouse, and the United States Congress appropriated funds to move the lighthouse inland. The old (1848) was blown up and the rubble used to prepare a foundation of the lighthouse. The cast-iron tower was disassembled, moved and reassembled at the new location. The move took 18 months, and the lighthouse was re-lit at its new location in 1894.


The Lighthouse today

When rockets began launching from the Cape in the early 1950s, all residents except the lighthouse keeper were relocated to other areas. In 1954, the need for a keeper to live nearby was eliminated by automating the light. Soon after, the keeper's homes were demolished. After it was discovered that strong vibrations that accompany launches were damaging the first-order Fresnel lens, it was removed in 1993 and placed on display in a museum at the Ponce de Leon Inlet Light. Since toxic lead paint was used to paint the lighthouse, in 1995, a restoration project began to sand blast the harmful paint off.

Ownership of the lighthouse was transferred to the United States Air Force in 2000 (the lighthouse is located inside the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station). 
It is the only fully operational lighthouse owned by the United States Air Force.

In 2003, the oil house was restored to its original (1890s) state (strong winds had damaged the roof in the 1970s and a window was added in the early 1900s). In 2006, another project restored the lantern room and the structure was repainted using modern materials. Ground sample tests, however, still show a very high level of lead in the soil around the tower. As a result, visitors are not allowed within fifty yards of the base until it is cleaned up.
 
The Cape Canaveral Lighthouse Foundation and volunteers are instrumental in restoration projects and in interpreting the lighthouse history. The Foundation has a website at http://www.CanaveralLight.org
 
 
 
 
Hi my friends,
I hope you find this interesting. The picture above of the lighthouse I made some days ago, the text is from Wikipedia. If interested to read more go to their site.

Thanks also for all your wonderful comments and compliments to my last post.
Next Thursday is "Photo-swap-Thursday" again, keep it in mind :))
Have a wonderful Tuesday!
~Susanne




A little bit of self promotion now:

Buy my photography printed, framed or stretched on Canvas here:

My European Fans buy my photography and CALENDARS 2011 here:

Tuesday, November 02, 2010

Don't worry - Be Happy

If you want to be happy, be.
Leo Tolstoy
 
 
Hi my friends,
I like the quote from Leo Tolstoy! 
It's that simple, yes: just BE happy and the best thing to do: start today!! :))
Maybe I should do more life coaching than my photography...*smile*... 

Thank you very much for all the wonderful comments to my airshow photos. I'm - happy - you liked it!
Wish you all a happy day!
~Susanne



Yes, the CALENDARS 2011 are still available to buy! Go tot he right column in my blog and you can buy them directly from there - click in the links, o.k.? THANK YOU!

Saturday, October 02, 2010

Pelican Island National Wildlife Refuge

We took a trip to Pelican Island, Sebastian, FL


Pelican Island National Wildlife Refuge 

is a United States National Wildlife Refuge located just off the western coast of Orchid Island in the Indian River Lagoon east of Sebastian, Florida. The refuge consists of a 3-acre (12,000 m2) island that includes an additional 2.5 acres (10,000 m2) of surrounding water and is located off the east coast of Florida of the Indian River Lagoon. Established by an executive order of President Theodore Roosevelt on March 14, 1903, Pelican Island was the first national wildlife refuge in the United States. It was created to protect egrets and other birds from extinction by plume hunters.

Pelican Island National Wildlife Refuge holds hundreds of species of animals including birds, fish, plants, and mammals. The wetlands of Pelican Island are a major ecological system supporting the huge biological diversity. Fifteen federally listed threatened and endangered species live in Pelican Island NWR and around Indian River Lagoon. Of the endangered species, West Indian Manatees and sea turtles occupy parts of the lagoon. Around the lagoon in the refuge are two Wood Stork refuges. These birds along with other wading birds that nest on the island thrive on the tremendous fish population. Pelican Island is home to many nesting birds including Brown Pelicans, Great Egrets, Snowy Egrets, Reddish Egrets, Great Blue Heron, Little Blue Heron, Tricolored Heron, Black-crowned Night Heron, American White Ibis, Glossy Ibis, Double-crested Cormorant, Anhinga, and American Oystercatcher.




Thanks for all the kind comments, my friends :)
Tomorrow will be my Wordless Sunday again - stay tuned...
Susanne



Buy my photography printed, framed or stretched on Canvas here:

My European Fans buy my photography here:

Saturday, July 31, 2010

A thousand foot fishing line...



Possessing much knowledge is like having a thousand foot fishing line with a hook, 
but the fish is always an inch beyond the hook
ZEN proverb


Hi my friends,
I don't know anymore, where I have this proverb from. But I know for sure where I made this photo of  these cute two fishing girls....*smile*.... My memories are not all gone in this heat, thanks God! :))
I wish you a great Saturday. Tomorrow is my "Wordless Sunday" again, come back and visit me.
It's HOT down here in Florida, the best thing to do to stay cool is: Stay home! :))
See ya'...
Susanne



Buy my photography printed, framed or stretched on Canvas here

My European Fans buy my photography here:

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