Nature through new eyes

Richard Rohr and The Center for Action and Contemplation’s daily meditations this week are centered on seeing nature with new eyes. Nature photography is, after prayer and music, my primary form of worship. I spend a lot of time outdoors with my camera, and each time I go out I expect to be surprised by some unmistakable evidence of the presence of God. Photography is all about catching the way light works with color and texture and form to convey some truth that resonates with our souls. Nature photography in particular, for me, is all about catching the hand of the artist at work…whether it is in a flower, or a bird, or a chipmunk, a flowing stream or piled clouds…always in some encounter with wonder…some encounter that makes me smile…that delights me…that makes me feel blessed and part of the living moment of creation…this particular living moment. So I am going to share a few photos this week, with the intention of exploring how I see nature, how I see God in nature, and sharing my delight. This photo is of Trout Lily…sometimes known as Adder’s Tongue, Fawn Lily, Yellow Dog-tooth Violet, etc. They are among the first flowers of spring, following the Maple Flowers high in the trees, appearing as brown mottled leaves (like a brook trout in rippling water), poking up through the leaf litter, shaped and paired like the tips of a snake’s tongue (Adder’s Tongue). Within a few warm days, generally less than a week, the blossoms develop and open…yellow reverse curved petals with clustered yellow or bright orange stamens loaded with pollen. And then they are gone. Only a few of the plants flower each year, so mostly you find beds of the leaves…but even they are quickly overgrown. I go looking for them every spring. There are two flowers in this photo. The one in front dominates but the one in back doubles the effect. And in seeing that, in getting the camera down low on my little tripod, in framing it in the flipped out screen of the camera…checking focus…making sure the camera is set to capture what I see…the light and color and form and texture…in the act of photographing the flowers, I am, somehow, participating in God’s creation…even more in sharing what I saw. I am thinking: “God did this. What an awesome God! What a privilege to be right here, right now, and to see this…to have the eyes to see the beauty and the mind and hands to catch it…and the ability to share it. What an awesome God!” Yes, all that in the simple Trout Lily in the forest of spring.
Little boy (?)


Young Green Iguana: Selva Verde Lodge, Sarapiqui, Costa Rica, March 2025 — I mentioned in yesterday’s a post that Green Iguanas are only really green when young, and that, after seeing the huge old orange male at the dinning hall at Selva Verde, I found a young one on the way back to our cabin. I am thinking that this is a male, due to the dewlap, but it is notoriously difficult to sex a young iguana without a really close examination (and even then). The green, however, is unmistakable. 🙂 The close up shows a bit of the real beauty of the animal. Sony a6700. Tamron 50-400 at 600mm (as I moved closer). Program mode with my birds and wildlife modifications. Processed in Photomator.
Big boy


Green Iguana: Selva Verde Lodge, Sarapiqui, Costa Rica, March 2025 — Coming back from a excellent morning of photography at Dave and Dave’s Costa Rican Nature Park, we got to the dinning hall at the Selva Verde just in time for a visit from this huge Iguana. It had to be 7 feet long from snout to tail tip, and the body itself was at a least 3 feet long, and the size of a small bull dog. (It had that look too.) They are called Green Iguanas because the young are bright green. (I encountered one on the way back from lunch. Photos tomorrow maybe.) This big adult is more grayish orange and was after the remnants of the fruit put out that morning for the birds. I have seen iguanas like this high in the trees, but never this close. Impressive! Sony a6700. Tamron 50-400 at 226 and 585mm equivalents. (It is times like this when I really appreciate having a zoom.) Program mode with my birds and wildlife modifications. Processed in Photomator.
Trout Lily


Trout Lily: Emmon’s Preserve, Kennebunkport, Maine, April 2025 — This early spring flower of the New England woods has many names. Trout lily, Yellow Trout lily, Fawn Lily, Yellow Adder’s-tongue, Dogtooth Violet, or Yellow Dogtooth Violet. Dogtooth Violet is actually a different species, and is, as the name says, purple/violet in color, but many still call this yellow lily by that name. I have always called it Trout Lily. I go looking for them in late March and early April every year. I know a few spots where they grow, in addition to a couple of dense patches at Emmon’s Preserve, a short drive from home. This year I had to make three trips. The second week in April no leaves were showing. The third week I found some leaves, and only now, in the fourth week did I find the flowers. That is late. I shot photos in two different stands at Emmon’s. In one stand the pollen was yellow, and in the second patch the pollen was, as in these photos, orange. I looked it up this morning, and, indeed, there are Trout Lilies with the orange pigment, and there are Trout Lilies without. Sony a6700. Tamron 50-400 at 112mm and 114mm equivalent. The closer shot is with the Sigma Achromatic 1.75 diopter Macro attachment. On both I used my Sirui travel tripod at ground level. Processed in Photomator.
Toucan antics

Yellow-throated Toucan: Dave and Dave’s Costa Rican Nature Park, Sarapiqui, Costa Rica, March 2025 — Another visit from the Yellow-throated Toucan at Dave and Dave’s. They certainly put on a show! Sony a6700. Tamron 50-400 at 600 and 489mm equivalents. Program mode with my birds and wildlife modifications. Processed in Photomator. Assembled in FrameMagic.
Male and female White-necked Jacobin Hummingbird

Male and female White-necked Jacobin Hummingbird: Dave and Dave’s Costa Rican Nature Park, Sarapiqui, Costa Rica, March 2025 — On the day we visited, the White-necked Jacobins were dominating the hummingbird vista at Dave and Dave’s. They are the most aggressive of the local hummers, and some days, they are all you see. Sony a6700. Tamron 50-400 at 600mm equivalent. Program mode with my birds-in-flight and action modifications. (1/2000th). Processed in Photomator. Assembled in FrameMagic.
Male and Female Maple

Female and male Red Maple Flowers: Kennebunk, Maine, USA, April 2025 — I was not aware until yesterday, when someone commented on my photo of Red Maple flowers, that there are male Red Maples and female Red Maples, and that the flowers are different. I have never, apparently, seen a female Red Maple tree…or at least not looked close enough for it to register. Both of the big maples in our yard are, it turns out, male, and the ones I have photographed in the neighborhood over the years have all been male. So, of course, I had to go out to find a female Red Maple yesterday. It wasn’t hard and I did not have to go far. The neighbors behind us have at least one female Red Maple in their yard. It has no low branches so the photo above is of flowers high in the tree, taken with a long zoom and cropped in to show the detail. The second photo is male flowers for comparison. Those were on a low hanging branch. A little googling around has taught me that, not only are there female and male Red Maples, but some trees have both flowers, and some trees, apparently, change gender over the years. I also was able to confirm my impression that there are more male Red Maples in a local population than females, sometimes by a ratio of 3 to 1. That makes sense, at least to me, since maples have to rely on wind-blown pollen for reproduction, and the more pollen in the air, the better chances the female tree will be fully fertilized. I am always surprised by how little I actually know about the world around me…and delighted by how much there is to learn. Female and male maples. Who knew?
Maple blossoms

Maple Blossoms: Kennebunk, Maine, USA, April 2025 — I am always eager for the Maples in our yard and our neighborhood to blossom. The flowers often go unnoticed, and under appreciated…just a red haze in the tall maple trees. But up close they are quite beautiful. If you can find a low hanging branch, take a look. Sony a6700. Tamron 50-400 at various focal lengths for framing. Program mode.
Toucan

Yellow-throated Toucan: Dave and Dave’s Costa Rican Nature Park, La Vergin, Sarapiqui, Costa Rica, March 2025 —After hanging out in tops of the trees over the crest of the drop to the river below, the Yellow-throated Toucans finally came in to the bananas hanging on the jungle vine right in front of us…so close I could not use the full 600mm reach of my Tamron lens. Magnificent, if somewhat clowny looking, birds. Sony a6700. Tamron 50-400 at 513mm equivalent. Program mode with my bird and wildlife modifications. Processed in Photomator.
Rapid run

Batson River, Emmon’s Preserve, Kennebunkport, Maine, April 2025 — Relatively high water on the Batson River (more of a brook really) in Emmon’s Preserve (Kennebunkport Land Trust). Still no leaves on the trees so this is just about as bright as this stretch of water gets. Sony a5100 with Sony 10-18 f4 at 15mm equivalent. Shutter Preferred at 1/40th. Processed in Photomator.