Hello Lucy! Thanks for commenting on my blog! I´m sad you are having troubles by commenting on my photo blog! Comments are allowed - so I didn´t know why it didn´t work for you. Sorry!!
Also sorry, for my longer absence in commenting. But I always look at your beautiful pictures
Hermes - isn't that interesting! I never think of oak leaves as mysterious - rather the opposite, homely and reminding me of history . . . which is a comfortable feeling of continuity.
Quite as an aside - have you ever come across a children's programme called 'Oakey Doke'? The main character has oak leaves for ears.
A bit of a contrast with the photos on your blog! It's one of the wonderful things about blogging - that we can marvel at things which for others are ordinary and every-day. It makes the world smaller and yet more enticing.
Thanks Lucy, I remember that expression but not a children's programme. Oak has a fascinating folklore and remember I don't live far from Glastonbury where the Druids still venerate it.
7 comments:
Hello Lucy! Thanks for commenting on my blog! I´m sad you are having troubles by commenting on my photo blog! Comments are allowed - so I didn´t know why it didn´t work for you. Sorry!!
Also sorry, for my longer absence in commenting. But I always look at your beautiful pictures
There is something really mysterious about Oak leaves, especially here against the sky.
Beautiful and lovely shots !! This is simply a great post !!Unseen Rajasthan
Hello Bentonflocke.
I now know that if I can't access the comments on your 365 blog, I can leave them on your other one instead.
Lucy
Hermes - isn't that interesting! I never think of oak leaves as mysterious - rather the opposite, homely and reminding me of history . . . which is a comfortable feeling of continuity.
Quite as an aside - have you ever come across a children's programme called 'Oakey Doke'? The main character has oak leaves for ears.
Lucy
Hello Unseen Rajasthan.
A bit of a contrast with the photos on your blog! It's one of the wonderful things about blogging - that we can marvel at things which for others are ordinary and every-day. It makes the world smaller and yet more enticing.
Lucy
Thanks Lucy, I remember that expression but not a children's programme. Oak has a fascinating folklore and remember I don't live far from Glastonbury where the Druids still venerate it.
http://www.treesforlife.org.uk/forest/mythfolk/oak.html
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