Showing posts with label Prospect Park South West. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Prospect Park South West. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

between cobblestones


I think of it as chamomile but have no idea what it really is. I've seen it growing in various places around the park, looking like an aquatic plant shyly masquerading as a terrestrial one. Here it's mixed in with the heart-shaped pods of Sherherd's Purse.

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Frozen
















Who have we here on this PPSW park bench? What a delicate profile, an ice nymph for sure. I hope she gets there before she melts.



Within the 16th Street entrance to the park, I came across the most carefully rounded snow figure I've ever seen, looking at me from her radiant sweetgum fruits above her drooping pine cone nose and silky pink scarf. Eyes of Liquidambar, oh my!

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Asters


Twilight of summer is the season of the purple asters, blooming all along Prospect Park South West now, along with puffy white flowers I can't identify but seem to foreshadow frosty weather. A new show was being filmed on 11th and PPSW called "French." Or at least that's what someone there told me. I was surprised and relieved I hadn't come across yet another set of "Law & Order."

On the walk to the circle we passed a man with two dogs I couldn't identify. Their owner told me they were Golden Retrievers, which surprised me because they weren't gold, they were the color of cappuccino foam. I learned they were the English variety of the dogs, you see, light on the cinnamon unlike their American cousins. Easy to imagine they'd been powdered like wigs.

On the subway a red-headed woman in a blue turtle neck was reading a text book open to a page with a diagram of a uterus. In a blow up, an ovum wheeled down the Fallopian tube, splitting and dividing within its orb. It pricked my heart a bit, to think that you and I and everyone else was once so simple and innocent, so elemental.

I had lunch with a woman from Antwerp today. She was eating French Fries, which she reminded me were actually a Belgian delicacy. I knew they wouldn't effect her immaculate figure in the slightest. Grrrr. She mentioned one of her favorite dishes, something called Vol au Vent, her comfort food with a name meaning "flight with the wind." I couldn't help but wonder what was flying with the wind. Then she spoke of the animosity in her country between the French speakers in the South and the Flemish speakers in the North. You have to wonder what makes people so desperate for a sense of superiority. It's some kind of ancient malignancy. As I was reminded on the F train, differentiation is primary to our nature, differentiation in service to the whole, that is.

Saturday, September 27, 2008

Rock Dove, Pigeon


This is Brooklynometry post number 666.

Sunday, August 10, 2008

august dragons far and near


























The whispy cloud that drifted over as I lay on Rockaway Beach looked like a dragon, or maybe a jumbo shrimp, and kept its shape longer than I expected it to. I came across smiley on PPSW on my way into the park this morning, and he didn't seem to mind the closeup at all.

But why is his eye out of focus when those hairs on his head aren't? My depth of field couldn't be that short, could it? Blimey!

Double click for hair action. For more dragonfly action, the real dope is here.

Thursday, June 19, 2008

PPSW Flower Thief on the Loose

















There's neighborly, and then there's neighborly. Apparently, someone's assumption that "your hydrangea is my hydrangea" was a little presumptuous. The note reads "To the 'Neighborly-type' person who came up my stoop and cut SIXTEEN STEMS off my Hydrangea: This plant is in memory of my deceased mother. I hope you sleep well at night."

I can't imagine coming home to my plant and finding someone hacked away at it. But then again, none of my plants look as nice as that one, so why would they? For some reason I find it really easy to picture that bunch of flowers sitting in a big vase on a brand new ikea table somewhere. Everything fresh, new and easy.