Morning Bees

This is actually self-portrait #6. I have been trying to figure out how to capture the amazing swarm of honey and bumble bees that visit my weeds each morning as I sit on the porch and practice. Video was the way!

Amaranth is a prolific weed in Phoenix.  It is easy to pull out when it is young, but once it goes to flower it is covered with stalks of prickly flower/seed heads.  The bushes get about five to six feet tall with about the same diameter width.  Weeding them once they are full grown means enduring scratches.

Despite the unpleasantness of dealing with mature amaranth, at TESLI some of the amaranth is left to seed because it supports the ecosystem.  The video shows bees busily harvesting the pollen and the seeds are a welcome treat for the birds.

I think this is a facet of gardening that people miss out on. Many people are focused on production of a crop and/or the garden looking good.  These are not bad choices, but imagine what is possible when you let nature do the work and you can enjoy the co-creation of a balanced ecosystem.  Simple living is about increasing awareness in regards to what our choices create.

Dorena in Boulder

Boulder is a natural medicine cabinet. Motherwort, poppy, mullein, grindelia, Oregon grape, feverfew, sage, and more all growing wild in abundance.  My heart was filled with joy.  I was like Frederick collecting the energy to store up for my six week retreat that begins tomorrow.

Boulder Wildflower - Feverfew - migraines

Boulder Wildflower – Feverfew – migraines

Boulder-Grindelia

Boulder Wildflowers – Grindelia – respiratory tract issues

Boulder-Mullein

Boulder Wildflowers – Mullein with bee – asthma, ear infections, emphysema

Boulder Creek

Boulder Creek – Downtown Boulder, Colorado – July 2015

Boulder-Creek2

Boulder Creek – West of town. July 2015

Boulder-Dorena

Dorena in hills above Boulder, Colorado

Boulder-Pearl-St

Flower and leaf art on stone fountain at the Pearl Street Mall

Boulder-Namkhai

Chogyal Namkhai Norbu – July 10th 2015 Dzogchen Teaching

Boulder-Thankas

Padmasambhava and Mandarava

Boulder-Vajra

Vajra dancing on the mandala at the dzogchen retreat

Boulder-Walk

Pond along Boulder Creek path on the way to Naropa University

Frederick

Frederick is my favorite children’s story. Frederick  It is about a community of field mouses living in an abandoned barn.  All of the mice work together to stock up grain and supplies for winter, except Frederick.  Frederick is busy basking in the sun and staring at the sky.  When his companions question him about his activity, he tells them he is saving up supplies for the winter.

When winter comes the mice quickly eat all their supplies before spring has arrived.  They turn to Frederick and ask him for the “supplies” he gathered.  Gathering around him as an audience, they receive Frederick’s supplies as he invokes in them the warmth of the summer sun and the beauty of a summer day.  Their hunger and cold dissipate.Frederick-colors

I have always loved how the community of mice simply accepted Frederick and never asked him to contribute to the community as anything less than himself.  Is it possible for each of us to contribute to our community by simply being?  Do we really have to do the things dictated by convention?  Can we accept others as they are and value them?