1 May 2018 – Day-length leaps ahead now, and nature leaps with it. We’re in the UBC Botanical Garden, a perfect place to join the dance.
Yes, of course, great bursts of colour smack the eye in every direction …
but our eyes skitter away. We look instead for tiny details, such as minute red dots on emerging white buds, for example …
and also for the the fresh green play of light and shadow.
A towering Gingko biloba, clothed in emerging baby leaves, is radiant in the morning sunshine.
There is luminous green everywhere we look.
In skunk cabbage leaves, shadows etched against light …
and in a mossy tree crotch, bouncing its textures back & forth.
All the contrasts of early spring.
New fern growth just starting to uncoil above existing mature fronds — the one so tiny, so baby-tender-green; the other coarse, dark, brilliant.
Defiant new growth, here one sprig shooting upright from the top of a lopped tree trunk …
and defiant old growth as well. Four or five centuries old.
This tree also wears its defiance at the tip — except here it is scorched and bare, not green.
We had already read the sign at its base.
A bit farther down the path, we turn back and pick out Eagle Tree in the canopy.
We stand there a moment, silent. For Eagle Tree.
For the whole great dance of light & life.