sovay: (Haruspex: Autumn War)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2022-12-27 01:13 pm

Even in these tightening lanes, the seasons cycle around and around

I have been terrifically wiped out by this set of holidays. The major accomplishment of Boxing Day was taking a walk and a couple of pictures, which I did shortly before sunset. I was very taken with the intertwining of the ember-bright berries and the fruits with their frost-feathers which I imagine would have been even more striking against snow. Both were tangled through the chain-link of a yard.



I believe the feathery vine to be old man's beard, although I am making this identification almost strictly from the illustration in Cicely Mary Barker's Flower Fairies of the Seasons (1988). I can't tell if the red fruits are winterberries or something else seasonally apropos and unwise to eat.



They look like the X-rays of snakes.

This afternoon is Boxing Day Observed, meaning the presence of my niece and my brother. I did not appreciate the prompt return of the contractors at an hour when I had already been unable to sleep all night.
ethelmay: (Default)

[personal profile] ethelmay 2022-12-28 12:22 am (UTC)(link)
I am reminded that when I was little, if I was sick enough to stay in bed, I was allowed to look at my mother's old copy of Mother Earth's Children: The Frolics of the Fruits and Vegetables. (Content note: racism, national stereotypes.) I don't think we had the companion Flower Children book. The artist, Marion T. Ross, doesn't seem to have a Wikipedia entry: https://www.lambiek.net/artists/r/ross_p.htm "M.T. Ross, who was affectionately nicknamed "Penny", was an illustrator and comic artist in the early twentieth century. He lived in Oak Park, Illinois and had his studio in downtown Chicago. He was one of the first co-workers of Walt Disney, as well as a close friend of R.F. Outcault, with whom he developed 'Buster Brown'. M.T. "Penny" Ross moved to Southern California in 1926 to work for RKO and other studios as a set designer."