See also the previous posts:
• Reciprocal Lovemaking
• Mindful Lovemaking
• Celebrating the Joy of Gay Sex
• A Source of Joy for the Beauty of Life Itself
• The Body: A Holy Place of Romp and Renewal
• Animal Energies
• Year of the Phoenix
• Morning Touch
• Morning Light
• Poolside
• Versatile Phoenix
• Released and at Ease
• Sweet Offering
Monday, September 30, 2024
Friday, September 27, 2024
Golden Eyes in Golden Light
Image: Photographer unknown.
See also the previous posts:
• Golden-Coloured Eyes
• In Golden Light
• Golden One
• A Still Moment
• Eyes of the Hare
• The Golden Hare
• The Beauty of the Hare | II | III | IV | V | VI | VII | VIII
See also the previous posts:
• Golden-Coloured Eyes
• In Golden Light
• Golden One
• A Still Moment
• Eyes of the Hare
• The Golden Hare
• The Beauty of the Hare | II | III | IV | V | VI | VII | VIII
Tuesday, September 24, 2024
Wednesday, September 18, 2024
Seasons of the Hare
Artwork: Source.
See also the previous posts:
• A Calendar of Hares
• Summer Hare
• Autumn Hare
• Winter Hare
• Among Spring Blooms
See also the previous posts:
• A Calendar of Hares
• Summer Hare
• Autumn Hare
• Winter Hare
• Among Spring Blooms
Thursday, September 12, 2024
Wednesday, September 4, 2024
Raising Hare
Writes Anna Bonet of Chloe Dalton's Raising Hare: A Memoir. . . .
Not long after Chloe Dalton left London during the pandemic, moving back to the countryside of the North East where she grew up, Dalton was out on a walk when she came across a baby hare. Newly born and the size of her palm, the leveret had been abandoned with clearly little chance of survival. Dalton, a political adviser, knew nothing of animals – and yet she felt compelled to care for it, rearing the hare herself before re-releasing it into the wild. Already tipped by The Bookseller as “a future classic of nature writing,” Raising Hare is one of the most gorgeous tales of human-animal connection out there.
See also the previous posts:
• The Year of the Hare
• Capturing Images
Not long after Chloe Dalton left London during the pandemic, moving back to the countryside of the North East where she grew up, Dalton was out on a walk when she came across a baby hare. Newly born and the size of her palm, the leveret had been abandoned with clearly little chance of survival. Dalton, a political adviser, knew nothing of animals – and yet she felt compelled to care for it, rearing the hare herself before re-releasing it into the wild. Already tipped by The Bookseller as “a future classic of nature writing,” Raising Hare is one of the most gorgeous tales of human-animal connection out there.
See also the previous posts:
• The Year of the Hare
• Capturing Images
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