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White-handed Gibbon (Hylobates lar), Kaeng Krachan National Park, Phetchaburi, Thailand: photo by JJ Harrison, 23 November 2012
rain forest
white knuckles
grasping the branch
vivid flurry of wings
ancient chromatic
explosion
in that last green patch
butterflies alighting
on elephant dung
white knuckles
grasping the branch
vivid flurry of wings
ancient chromatic
explosion
in that last green patch
butterflies alighting
on elephant dung
Dusky Langur (Trachypithecus obscurus), Kaeng Krachan National Park, Phetchaburi, Thailand: photo by JJ Harrison, 24 November 2012
Northern Pig-tailed Macaque (Macaca leonina) mother with baby, Khao Yai National Park, Nakhon Ratchasima, Thailand: photo by JJ Harrison, 16 January 2013
White-fronted Scops Owl (Otus sagittatus), Kaeng Krachan National Park, Phetchaburi, Thailand: photo by JJ Harrison, 24 November 2012
For more of the work of this remarkable wildlife photographer from Hobart, Tasmania, please do have a look at:
ReplyDeleteJJ Harrison: Birds of Tasmania and Queensland
humbleness and retrieval in nature...
ReplyDeleteThese and yesterday's photos are gorgeous.
ReplyDeleteancient chromatic
ReplyDeleteexplosion
Harrison's caught this wonder. Such photography is a work of conservation. There'll be nothing left of that explosion but these lovely echoes; that's the grand fear.
What an amazing picture, those yellow butterflies. Feeding... Funny to think that of all the goodies available around them, this is the delicacy they prefer. Hands down. It must be packed with nutrients. This photo is just superb...
ReplyDeleteHave you ever used elephant dung paper? it's really nice.
I really like the eyes of the chap on the branch, the second photo from the top. He is all eyes. Talking about eyes, would you like a slice of unbearable cuteness?
ReplyDeleteAye, Marie--the ayes have it!
ReplyDeleteSo beautiful. The butterflies always do like dung. I remember the Monarchs clustering on fresh cow pies,
ReplyDeleteopening and closing their wings as they feasted.
Oh that Dusky Langur. The heart leaps simply at the imagination of the tree top uses to which that tail is put, there in the triple canopy.
ReplyDeleteHarrison's work done in the wild (what's left of it, less every day) has an elegiac feeling that is sad in a way quite unlike the doomed sadness of zoo photos (most of the "wildlife" photos one sees are zoo photos -- working in the wild obviously poses greater challenges, just as it yields richer rewards).
So then dung is making a comeback -- and none too soon, in our humble view.
(But were I those butterflies, I'd be keeping an eye out for the notoriously undiscriminating Bee-eater -- )
Marie, I love that textured elephant dung paper.
Once upon a time I had the opportunity to assist in a small-scale cottage papermaking enterprise with a bookmaker who had made himself skilled at producing beautiful paper from discarded fabrics, American flags, blue jeans and other materials (no elephant dung alas).
Though I had used paper for a long time before then, I don't think it had ever sunk in, that those marks we were making (back then) on the surface of the page, were actually sinking into something.
Thinking on this outdated technology these past few nights under media bombardment... recalling that "news media" once meant, mostly, marks sunk into paper, so much slower than what we have now... though at the same time, maybe, the "user community", if larger, has nonetheless not changed all that much in its capacity for suspension of disbelief.
Walter Benjamin: Journalism
Marie, the touching quandary of the homeless fish caught in the middle in that video is funny, but then I looked again and saw (or projected) a certain pathos in the situation, there in the tank.
Or then again, might one view the situation otherwise, reversing the vantage: the Greta Garbo fish peering out from its solitary housing unit is missing out on all the fun?