Tag: poetry

  • Forget-me-not

    Forget-me-not

    Tiny blue eyes watching the sky.
    Tiny blue eyes watching us.

    Forget-me-not tiny blue secrets, delicate petals speaking memory soft gentle touching heart. Tiny flowers dancing morning dew, scattered dreams across meadow carpet, blue eyes watching sky meeting earth tenderness.

    Sweet remembrance blooming corners garden, faithful promise never fading love keeping. Petals hold each lover, blue stars fallen ground telling stories ancient devotion, pure feeling flowing through seasons changing.

    Little blossom teaching human heart, simple beauty meaning more than grand gestures, quiet strength surviving harsh weather conditions. Memory flower growing wild places, spreading message true affection, blue dots painting landscape emotional connection.

    Fragile appearance hiding powerful symbol, forget-me-not carrying weight human bonds, relationships, lasting impressions soul. Nature gift reminding people importance cherishing moments, holding dear ones close heart, never letting precious memories slip away consciousness.

    Blue petals small but mighty, teaching lesson about permanence feelings, enduring love, faithful friendship. Forget-me-not conspire softly: remember always, forget never, love eternal like spring returning.


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    Tap here for a list of 100 endangered animals and plants.

    100 endangered plant and animal species

    * Abies beshanzuensis (Baishan fir) – Plant (Tree) – Baishanzu Mountain, Zhejiang, China – Three mature individuals

    * Actinote zikani – Insect (butterfly) – Near São Paulo, Atlantic forest, Brazil – Unknown numbers

    * Aipysurus foliosquama (Leaf scaled sea-snake) – Reptile – Ashmore Reef and Hibernia Reef, Timor Sea – Unknown numbers * Amanipodagrion gilliesi (Amani flatwing) – Insect (damselfly) – Amani-Sigi Forest, Usamabara Mountains, Tanzania – < 500 individuals * Antisolabis seychellensis – Insect – Morne Blanc, Mahé island, Seychelles – Unknown numbers * Antilophia bokermanni (Araripe manakin) – Bird – Chapado do Araripe, South Ceará, Brazil – 779 individuals * Aphanius transgrediens (Aci Göl toothcarp) – Fish – south-eastern shore of former Lake Aci, Turkey – Few hundred pairs * Aproteles bulmerae (Bulmer’s fruit bat) – Mammal – Luplupwintern Cave, Western Province, Papua New Guinea – 150 * Ardea insignis (White bellied heron) – Bird – Bhutan, North East India and Myanmar – 70–400 individuals * Ardeotis nigriceps (Great Indian bustard) – Bird – Rajasthan, Gujarat, Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka and Madhya, India – 50–249 mature individuals * Astrochelys yniphora (Ploughshare tortoise) – Reptile – Baly Bay region, northwestern Madagascar – 440–770 * Atelopus balios (Rio Pescado stubfoot toad) – Amphibian – Azuay, Cañar and Guyas provinces, south-western Ecuador – Unknown numbers * Aythya innotata (Madagascar pochard) – Bird – volcanic lakes north of Bealanana, Madagascar – 80 mature individuals * Azurina eupalama (Galapagos damsel fish) – Fish – Unknown numbers – Unknown numbers * Bahaba taipingensis (Giant yellow croaker) – Fish – Chinese coast from Yangtze River, China to Hong Kong – Unknown numbers * Batagur baska (Common batagur) – Reptile (turtle) – Bangladesh, Cambodia, India, Indonesia and Malaysia – Unknown numbers * Bazzania bhutanica – Plant – Budini and Lafeti Khola, Bhutan – 2 sub-populations * Beatragus hunteri (Hirola) – Mammal (antelope) – South-east Kenya and possibly south-west Somalia – < 1,000 individuals * Bombus franklini (Franklin’s bumblebee) – Insect (bee) – Oregon and California – Unknown numbers * Brachyteles hypoxanthus (Northern muriqui / Woolly spider monkey) – Mammal (primate) – Atlantic forest, south-eastern Brazil – < 1,000 * Bradypus pygmaeus (Pygmy three-toed sloth) – Mammal – Isla Escudo de Veraguas, Panama – < 500 * Callitriche pulchra – Plant (freshwater) – pool on Gavdos, Greece – Unknown numbers * Calumma tarzan (Tarzan’s chameleon) – Reptile – Anosibe An’Ala region, eastern Madagascar – < 100 * Cavia intermedia (Santa Catarina’s guinea pig) – Mammal (rodent) – Moleques do Sul Island, Santa Catarina, Brazil – 40–60 * Cercopithecus roloway (Roloway guenon) – Mammal (primate) – Côte d’Ivoire – Unknown numbers * Coleura seychellensis (Seychelles sheath-tailed bat) – Mammal (bat) – Two small caves on Silhouette and Mahé, Seychelles – < 100 * Cryptomyces maximus (Willow blister) – Fungi – Pembrokeshire, United Kingdom – Unknown numbers * Cryptotis nelsoni (Nelson’s small-eared shrew) – Mammal (shrew) – Volcán San Martín Tuxtla, Veracruz, Mexico – Unknown numbers * Cyclura collei (Jamaican iguana / Jamaican rock iguana) – Reptile – Hellshire Hills, Jamaica – Unknown numbers * Daubentonia madagascariensis (Aye-aye) – Mammal (primate) – Deciduous forest, East Madagascar – Unknown numbers * Dendrophylax fawcettii (Cayman Islands ghost orchid) – Plant (orchid) – Ironwood Forest, George Town, Grand Cayman – Unknown numbers * Dicerorhinus sumatrensis (Sumatran rhino) – Mammal (rhino) – Sabah, Sarawak and Peninsular Malaysia, Kalimantan and Sumatra, Indonesia – < 100 (more recent estimates suggest 34-47) * Diomedea amsterdamensis (Amsterdam albatross) – Bird – Breeds on Plateuau des Tourbières, Amsterdam Island, Indian Ocean. – 100 mature individuals * Dioscorea strydomiana (Wild yam) – Plant – Oshoek area, Mpumalanga, South Africa – 200 * Diospyros katendei – Plant (tree) – Kasyoha-Kitomi Forest Reserve, Uganda – 20 individuals in a single population * Dipterocarpus lamellatus – Plant (tree) – Siangau Forest Reserve, Sabah, Malaysia – 12 individuals * Discoglossus nigriventer (Hula painted frog) – Amphibian – Hula Valley, Israel – Unknown numbers * Dombeya mauritiana – Plant – Mauritius – Unknown numbers * Elaeocarpus bojeri (Bois Dentelle) – Plant (tree) – Grand Bassin, Mauritius – < 10 individuals * Eleutherodactylus glandulifer (La Hotte glanded frog) – Amphibian – Massif de la Hotte, Haiti – Unknown numbers * Eleutherodactylus thorectes (Macaya breast-spot frog) – Amphibian – Formon and Macaya peaks, Masif de la Hotte, Haiti – Unknown numbers * Eriosyce chilensis (Chilenito (cactus)) – Plant – Pta Molles and Pichidungui, Chile – < 500 individuals * Erythrina schliebenii (Coral tree) – Plant – Namatimbili-Ngarama Forest, Tanzania – < 50 individuals * Euphorbia tanaensis – Plant (tree) – Witu Forest Reserve, Kenya – 4 mature individuals * Eurynorhyncus pygmeus (Spoon-billed sandpiper) – Bird – Breeds in Russia, migrates along the East Asian-Australasian Flyway to wintering grounds in India, Bangladesh and Myanmar – 100 breeding pairs * Ficus katendei – Plant – Kasyoha-Kitomi Forest Reserve, Ishasha River, Uganda – < 50 mature individuals * Geronticus eremita (Northern bald ibis) – Bird – Breeds in Morocco, Turkey and Syria. Syrian population winters in central Ethiopia. – About 3000 individuals * Gigasiphon macrosiphon – Plant (flower) – Kaya Muhaka, Gongoni and Mrima Forest Reserves, Kenya, Amani Nature Reserve, West Kilombero Scarp Forest Reserve, and Kihansi Gorge, Tanzania – 33 * Gocea ohridana – Mollusc – Lake Ohrid, Macedonia – Unknown numbers * Heleophryne rosei (Table mountain ghost frog) – Amphibian – Table Mountain, Western Cape Province, South Africa – Unknown numbers * Hemicycla paeteliana – Mollusc (land snail) – Jandia peninsula, Fuerteventura, Canary Islands – Unknown numbers * Heteromirafa sidamoensis (Liben lark) – Bird – Liben Plains, southern Ethiopia – 90–256 * Hibiscadelphus woodii – Plant (tree) – Kalalau Valley, Hawaii – Unknown numbers * Hucho perryi (Sakhalin taimen) – Fish – Russian and Japanese rivers, Pacific Ocean between Russia and Japan – Unknown numbers * Johora singaporensis (Singapore freshwater crab) – Crustacean – Bukit Timah Nature Reserve and streamlet near Bukit Batok, Singapore – Unknown numbers * Lathyrus belinensis (Belin vetchling) – Plant – Outskirts of Belin village, Antalya, Turkey – < 1,000 * Leiopelma archeyi (Archey’s frog) – Amphibian – Coromandel peninsula and Whareorino Forest, New Zealand – Unknown numbers * Lithobates sevosus (Dusky gopher frog) – Amphibian – Harrison County, Mississippi, USA – 60–100 * Lophura edwardsi (Edwards’s pheasant) – Bird – Quang Binh, Quang Tri and Thua Thien-Hue, Viet Nam – Unknown numbers * Magnolia wolfii – Plant (tree) – Risaralda, Colombia – 3 * Margaritifera marocana – Mollusc – Oued Denna, Oued Abid and Oued Beth, Morocco – < 250 * Moominia willii – Mollusc (snail) – Silhouette Island, Seychelles – < 500 * Natalus primus (Cuban greater funnel eared bat) – Mammal (bat) – Cueva La Barca, Isle of Pines, Cuba – < 100 * Nepenthes attenboroughii (Attenborough’s pitcher plant) – Plant – Mount Victoria, Palawan, Philippines – Unknown numbers * Nomascus hainanus (Hainan black crested gibbon) – Mammal (primate) – Hainan Island, China – 20 * Neurergus kaiseri (Luristan newt) – Amphibian – Zagros Mountains, Lorestan, Iran – < 1,000 * Oreocnemis phoenix (Mulanje red damsel) – Insect (damselfly) – Mulanje Plateau, Malawi – Unknown numbers * Pangasius sanitwongsei (Pangasid catfish) – Fish – Chao Phraya and Mekong basins in Cambodia, China, Lao PDR, Thailand and Viet Nam – Unknown numbers * Parides burchellanus – Insect (butterfly) – Cerrado, Brazil – < 100 * Phocoena sinus (Vaquita) – Mammal (porpoise) – Northern Gulf of California, Mexico – 12 * Picea neoveitchii (Type of spruce tree) – Plant (tree) – Qinling Range, China – Unknown numbers * Pinus squamata (Qiaojia pine) – Plant (tree) – Qiaojia, Yunnan, China – < 25 * Poecilotheria metallica (Gooty tarantula / Metallic tarantula / Peacock tarantula / Salepurgu) – Spider – Nandyal and Giddalur, Andhra Pradesh, India – Unknown numbers * Pomarea whitneyi (Fatuhiva monarch) – Bird – Fatu Hiva, Marquesas Islands, French Polynesia – 50 * Pristis pristis (Common sawfish) – Fish – Coastal tropical and subtropical waters of Indo-Pacific and Atlantic Oceans. Currently largely restricted to northern Australia – Unknown numbers * Hapalemur simus (Greater bamboo lemur) – Mammal (primate) – Southeastern and southcentral rainforests of Madagascar – 500 * Propithecus candidus (Silky sifaka) – Mammal (primate) – Maroantsetra to Andapa basin, and Marojeju Massif, Madagascar – 100–1,000 * Psammobates geometricus (Geometric tortoise) – Reptile – Western Cape Province, South Africa – Unknown numbers * Pseudoryx nghetinhensis (Saola) – Mammal – Annamite mountains, on the Viet Nam – PDR Laos border – Unknown numbers * Psiadia cataractae – Plant – Mauritius – Unknown numbers * Psorodonotus ebneri (Beydaglari bush-cricket) – Insect – Beydaglari range, Antalaya, Turkey – Unknown numbers * Rafetus swinhoei (Red River giant softshell turtle) – Reptile – Hoan Kiem Lake and Dong Mo Lake, Viet Nam, and Suzhou Zoo, China – 3 * Rhinoceros sondaicus (Javan rhino) – Mammal (rhino) – Ujung Kulon National Park, Java, Indonesia – < 100 * Rhinopithecus avunculus (Tonkin snub-nosed monkey) – Mammal (primate) – Northeastern Vietnam – < 200 * Rhizanthella gardneri (West Australian underground orchid) – Plant (orchid) – Western Australia, Australia – < 100 * Rhynchocyon spp. (Boni giant sengi) – Mammal – Boni-Dodori Forest, Lamu area, Kenya – Unknown numbers * Risiocnemis seidenschwarzi (Cebu frill-wing) – Insect (damselfly) – Rivulet beside the Kawasan River, Cebu, Philippines – Unknown numbers * Rosa arabica – Plant – St Katherine Mountains, Egypt – Unknown numbers, 10 sub-populations * Salanoia durrelli (Durrell’s vontsira) – Mammal (mongoose) – Marshes of Lake Alaotra, Madagascar – Unknown numbers * Santamartamys rufodorsalis (Red crested tree rat) – Mammal (rodent) – Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta, Colombia – Unknown numbers * Scaturiginichthys vermeilipinnis (Red-finned blue-eye) – Fish – Edgbaston Station, central western Queensland, Australia – 2,000–4,000 * Squatina squatina (Angel shark) – Fish – Canary Islands – Unknown numbers * Sterna bernsteini (Chinese crested tern) – Bird – Breeding in Zhejiang and Fujian, China. Outside breeding season in Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Taiwan, Thailand. – < 50 * Syngnathus watermeyeri (Estuarine pipefish) – Fish – Kariega Estuary to East Kleinemonde Estuary, Eastern Cape Province, South Africa – Unknown numbers * Tahina spectabilis (Suicide palm / Dimaka) – Plant – Analalava district, north-western Madagascar – 90 * Telmatobufo bullocki (Bullock’s false toad) – Amphibian (frog) – Nahuelbuta, Arauco Province, Chile – Unknown numbers * Tokudaia muenninki (Okinawa spiny rat) – Mammal (rodent) – Okinawa Island, Japan – Unknown numbers * Trigonostigma somphongsi (Somphongs’s rasbora) – Fish – Mae Khlong basin, Thailand – Unknown numbers * Valencia letourneuxi – Fish – Southern Albania and Western Greece – Unknown numbers * Voanioala gerardii (Forest coconut) – Plant – Masoala peninsula, Madagascar – < 10 * Zaglossus attenboroughi (Attenborough’s echidna) – Mammal – Cyclops Mountains, Papua Province, Indonesia – Unknown numbers

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  • Whispers on a Twig

    Whispers on a Twig

    Fling of wing, rustle of feather—small bird, clothed in cloudy splendour, perches light upon the slender arm of a greeny branch. Its eyes hold ancient silence, as if awakened just now by the wind’s first breeze. A gentle flame of coral hue ripples through its downy chest, as though morning itself has taken roost for a breath, for a thought.

    Flowers budding near, their petals curled in pink pause, shine not of sun but of secret light—nature’s quiet hymn to the world’s wonder. Each leaf, each breath of wind, speaks a language understood not in mind, but in the deep-knowing soul. A wave of wing, like a hand brushing sky, tells us: everything is possible. The fire of being, though soft and flickering, teaches us to rise. To build. To cherish.

    This bird, like the child’s future, hangs delicate in balance. Its form is of the familiar—society’s gaze, country’s breath, the world’s echo—but its path is uncertain. Intelligence may flicker bright in minds of many measure, profession may praise the cleverest spark, yet the bird’s heart, wild and still, is where true life pulses.

    Mind alone cannot cradle the soul. A bird caged in intellect forgets how to fly. And so, the lesson rests here: not in knowing, but in being. In listening to the leaf, in trusting the wind, in carrying the blooming branch not for survival, but for joy.


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    Your support makes a difference in my life and helps me create more of what you, and I, like. Thank you!
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  • Lily Pads: Nature’s Art

    Lily Pads: Nature’s Art

    “Canvas of stillness
    Water lily’s quiet dance,
    Monet’s brush whispers”

    Anthony
    Took this photo at the botanical garden Wales.
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    Monet’s Musings

    Monet: Ah, my dear water lily, you seem to have mastered the art of silent reflection. Your petals, a palette of nature’s finest hues.

    Water Lily: Thank you, Monsieur Monet. Your artistry has captured my essence, immortalising the dance of light upon the water.

    Monet: Your presence transforms the pond into a living masterpiece. How do you maintain such serenity amidst the ripples of life?

    Water Lily: It is in stillness that I find my strength. Embracing the water’s surface, I learn to dance with both the sunlight and the shadows.

    Monet: A dance indeed, and with every ripple, a new verse is written. Tell me, do you converse with the frogs and dragonflies?

    Water Lily: In whispers, Monsieur. The frogs share their tales of the land, and dragonflies speak of the breeze’s adventures. We form an opus of nature’s secrets.

    Monet: Nature’s symphony, a melody only few can hear. Your petals, a delicate crescendo in this harmonious composition.

    Water Lily: And your brush, Monsieur, orchestrates the colours of our aquatic ballet. Each stroke a note of our shared existence.

    Monet: Together, we create a timeless duet – you, the muse of stillness, and I, the humble composer of your liquid stage.

    Water Lily: A duet that echoes through ponds and galleries alike, uniting the realms of art and nature.

    Monet: Merci, my dear water lily, for gracing my palette with your quiet elegance. Together, we paint the poetry of a tranquil pond.

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  • Valley’s Call to Soar

    Valley’s Call to Soar

    Upon yonder snow-kissed peak, I stand, a lone voyager, a wanderer in a world dressed in pristine white. The valley below, a cradle of dreams and whispered tales, beckons to my very soul. In this moment, I am possessed by a longing, a fervent desire to defy gravity’s chains, to soar as if I were a feather carried by the winds of eternity.

    Standing atop a snow-covered peak, I’m reminded that nature is the purest form of poetry

    View form Pen-y-fan in the Brecon Beacons, Wales. Tap to view my redbubble gallery.

    The valley, a canvas of undulating shadows and glistening promises, unfolds before my eyes, an expanse of dreamscape and memory. The world, adorned in the icy silence of winter, is a chalice of endless possibility, where the spirits of all that once was, and all that could be, commune in a timeless dance.

    As the sun dips below the horizon, casting long shadows across the valley, my heart quickens with a fierce yearning to leap from this precipice. To become one with the soaring eagles, to taste the air of the gods, and to trace my path across the heavens with wings of dreams.

    But, alas, I am bound by the earthly tether, my feet planted on this frozen throne. Yet, in my mind’s eye, I am unburdened, a phoenix ascending, liberated from gravity’s relentless grip. The valley below whispers secrets of flight, of dreams unfettered, and for a brief moment, I am convinced that I could fly, for I am a poet of the heart, embracing the universal longing to transcend the ordinary and become part of the elemental poetry of the world.

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  • Ghostly Whispers of Dylan Thomas at Laugharne Castle

    Ghostly Whispers of Dylan Thomas at Laugharne Castle

    Laugharne Castle stands as a testament to the poetry of history, a place where the pen and the sword have etched a narrative that continues to stir the depths of the human soul.

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    In Laugharne, where the waves whisper secrets to the shore, stands a castle steeped in history. A timeless sentinel, its weathered stones tell tales of bygone days, echoes of lives once lived. Here, in this quaint Welsh town, where the past and present entwine like lovers beneath a harvest moon, I found my muse, my refuge, my Laugharne.

    The castle, ancient as the hills, cradles the whispers of centuries, a silent guardian of time. Its crumbling walls have seen kings and rebels pass through their arches, and the ghosts of their stories still dance in the moonlight. Its turrets, like the worn spines of dusty books in an old, forgotten library, touch the heavens with silent pleas for remembrance, just as I longed to reach the depths of my soul with words.

    From this vantage point, I gazed upon the estuary, where the River Taf kisses the sea in a slow, sensuous dance. The mudflats and salt marshes spoke of eternity, of life’s ceaseless ebb and flow. The gulls call like ghosts of sailors long gone, crying out in a language only the heart can understand. It was here that I found the music of my verses, in the rhythm of the tides and the cadence of the breeze.

    The boathouse, a sanctuary of solitude, cradled my thoughts as they tumbled from my mind like leaves in the autumn wind. Surrounded by the lilt of the Welsh accent, the laughter of the locals, and the whispers of the landscape, my pen danced on paper, giving life to the words that would become my legacy.

    The charming town of Laugharne, with its cottages and lanes, its pubs and its people, became the canvas for my stories, the backdrop for my dreams. The magic of this place, where time itself seemed to linger, inspired me to spin tales of love and loss, of beauty and decay. Each cobblestone street held a story, each gust of wind a secret, waiting to be uncovered.

    As the sun dipped below the horizon, casting the castle in shadow, I found solace in the embrace of Laugharne. It was a place where poetry and reality blurred, where my words flowed like the Taf’s waters, and where I, like the castle, stood as a testament to the enduring power of stories. In Laugharne, I found my voice, and the echoes of that voice still linger in the whispers of the castle, the sigh of the estuary, and the laughter of the gulls.

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