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Category: miscellaneous

3.5 amazing hours, Namib Desert (final episode, with musical bonus)

 

The featured image looks north/ish, to the silhouetted edge of the Namib’s “sand sea”, circa 40 kilometres east of Sossusvlei.

I took the photo at 7.37 pm – Sossusvlei’s sunset time on 21 November 2022.

This little series’ final image was captured 7 minutes later.

Had I had available the necessary time and technology, I would then have loved to listen to a particularly sublime musical creation which I first heard in 1989, and which amazes and inspires me, still.

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Word power: Natalie Merchant and Walt Whitman

 

 

Natalie and Walt have just unwittingly delayed the promised leopard post!

(it will be the next one, I promise)

The photo alludes to one of my favourite Walt Whitman poems, from Leaves of Grass.

Most printed interviews with musicians are time-wasting, publicist-driven piffle.

A notable exception is The New Yorker interview, published today – worth reading, whether or not you admire/know Natalie Merchant’s singing/songs.

There aren’t a lot of people writing love songs to Walt Whitman.

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Oft-encountered “8” – butterfly, with musical bonus (#17 in series of single-image south India series)

 

 

 

South India’s large terrestrial mammals hog the limelight, but its insects, amphibians, birds and reptiles are equally worthy of appreciative human attention.

The non-mammals offer an enormously higher number of individuals and species, with a mind-bogglingly diverse array of shapes and colours.

Butterflies abound.

The pictured individual is a member of this region’s (probably) most oft-sighted butterfly species.

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Okonjima sunset (with “astounding” musical bonus)

This post’s musical bonus really is astounding, I think.

November 4 2022, at Okonjima, was one of the most rewarding days of our lives.

The immediately-preceding post’s leopard encounter was its most electrifying moment, but we also saw another leopard, giraffes galore, cheetahs, many other animals, and some beautiful country.

Circa 7 pm, we adjourned to a hilltop, to enjoy “sundowners”…and/or the actual sundown.

I took the featured photo at 7.06 pm.

The other images, below, are in chronological order.

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Revelatory covers (#23 in series – Brad Mehldau plays The Beatles)

Imagine (no, not that song) this:

The Tardis delivers a very surprised J.S Bach into the present day, with no briefing.

He finds himself seated at an interesting “new” keyboard – a grand piano.

Atop it is a device, pre-loaded with a diverse selection of music/s from the second half of the 20th century.

He is given absolutely no “background information”.

The printed instruction to him says, “press button to listen to these pieces, then improvise upon whichever one most pleases you”

JSB is intrigued by I Am The Walrus.

Q: what would he do with/to it?

A: perhaps, something like what you are about to hear….

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Footprints: literally, mostly (with musical bonus)

 

 

This post’s actual footprints come from bears in Alaska, birds on the Indian subcontinent  and continental Australia, a Tasmanian wombat, and humans in an African desert and Australian suburbia.

The musical bonus is courtesy of one of the greatest jazz musicians – equally so as composer, virtuoso instrumentalist and inspired improviser.

There’s also a metaphorical footnote which involves New Zealand’s largest farm…

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Happy Gnu Year, with musical bonuses (final, double-edition of Namibia “single”-image series)

 

Gnu/wildebeest are bona fide antelopes.

However, as the Blue Wildebeest’s scientific name – Connochaetes taurinus – suggests, most human newcomers assume that wildebeest are bovine beasts.

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Venerable dunes, with “Father Time” musical bonus (#19 in Namibia single-image series)

 

The Namib is generally considered the world’s oldest desert; certainly, it is many millions of years older than the Sahara.

Some of the Namib’s dunes are uncommonly stable, exquisitely coloured, remarkably tall.

Contrary to common belief – and to claims made by promoters of various African and Eurasian deserts – the world tallest dunes are not in Africa, nor Arabia, nor China; by a considerable margin, they are in South America.

The Namib’s “sand sea” is, however, singularly beautiful, most especially around Sossusvlei.

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