A Farewell to Tsuki 月 — Part 2 of 4

04.21.22 - 04.25.22


If you enjoy Where’s Waldo? you might have fun with “Where’s Tsuki 月?”

Tsuki 月 has distinctive eyes. She has beautiful, long eyelashes!

To get you started finding Tsuki 月, the first photograph in the 04.25.22 set shows off Tsuki’s 月’s gorgeous eyes!


04.21.22



Sometimes I think that the point of birdwatching
is not the actual seeing of the birds,
but the cultivation of patience.
—Lynn Thomson (author)





Birds will give you a window, if you allow them.
They will show you secrets from another world–
fresh vision that, though it is avian,
can accompany you home and alter your life.

—Lyanda Lynn Haupt (author)






Birds are indicators of the environment.
If they are in trouble, we know we'll soon be in trouble.

—Roger Tory Peterson (ornithologist)




It is not only fine feathers that make fine birds.
—Aesop




Adopt the pace of Nature; her secret is patience.
—Ralph Waldo Emerson (essayist, philosopher)



04.22.22



Gliders, sail planes, they're wonderful flying machines.
It's the closest you can come to being a bird.

—Neil Armstrong




5 white terns in one frame!

5 white terns in one frame!

5 white terns in one frame!


‘Carpe Diem,’ does not mean ‘fish of the day.’
—Unknown



So long, and thanks for all the fish.
—Douglas Adams




Once you have tasted flight,
you will forever walk the earth with your eyes turned skyward,
for there you have been, and there you will always long to return.

—Leonardo Da Vinci (inventor, artist)




04.25.22



I believe the world is incomprehensibly beautiful —
an endless prospect of magic and wonder.

—Ansel Adams (photographer)




As children, we are very sensitive to nature’s beauty, finding miracles
and interesting things everywhere. As we grow up, we tend to forget how beautiful
and magnificent the world is. There is magic and wonder for eyes who know
how to look with curiosity and love.

—Ansel Adams (photographer)




In all things of nature there is something of the marvelous.
—Aristotle (philosopher)



In nature, we find silence and tranquility, yet nature has its own language
by which it speaks to those who are paying attention.

—Radahath Swami (monk)