Tag Archives: prickly pear

Prickly: SOL24 Day 28

Do you ever get that prickly feeling? You know, when the littlest things get under your skin, rub you the wrong way, creating an irritation that you can’t seem to shake?

Prickly pear cactus-Joshua Tree National Park

Maybe it was the fire alarm with its robotic voice demanding that I leave the building. Of course that was once a colleague knocked persistently on my office door to alert me since the announcement was only audible in the hallways and not in the offices.

I didn’t even hesitate. I packed my things, locked my office, walked down five flights of stairs (“Do not use the elevator,” the voice reminded!), got in my car and headed home. (I know, what a luxury to be able to work from home when chased out of my office–and it’s Spring Break at the university so my colleagues were mostly absent.). Of course, in that fit of annoyance, I forgot about the Zoom call I had scheduled! Luckily, that colleague was flexible and forgiving and we were able to fit it in once I got home.

The pins and needles of the to-do list loomed. Emails needed sending, reports needed reading, an agenda needed planning…and then there’s the article I haven’t gotten back to. And I almost forgot–that “abusive behavior in the workplace” training module that I have pushed to the bottom of the list right up to the deadline (which was today).

But, the house was quiet and my meeting load was lighter than usual (thank you UC Spring Break). As I crossed item after item off the list, those pokes and prods lessened and I began to appreciate the beauty and functionality of those pesky prickly spines.

Of course, there are still items that need doing. And…my own Spring Break begins once school ends tomorrow! Now to switch hats, finish my lesson plans, get that newsletter written, schedule the parent email… Wait…I think that prickly feeling is getting under my skin again!

Having New Eyes

On Saturday I had the opportunity to get a sneak peek at the new exhibit at the San Diego Natural History Museum (the NAT) that will be called Coast to Cactus.  And while it is still months away from being open to the public, I was inspired by the ideas and messages I found there. This exhibit focuses on the ecosystems of San Diego county…their diversity, beauty, resilience…all that is often unseen and unappreciated.

This quote, scratched out in marker on a piece of paper and taped to a wall, spoke to me and has continued to resonate.

The real voyage of discovery consists not in seeing new landscapes but in having new eyes.      Marcel Proust

I’ve come to appreciate museum exhibits in new ways these days as I’ve learned about their conception and design.  Instead of consuming the content they offer, I see them as invitation to see my world anew.  The Coast to Cactus exhibit offered me views that I see everyday, and yet invited me to resee them…something I have also been doing through my camera lens.  In the emerging exhibit I saw native plants and animals…meticulously crafted (apparently by a company in Minnesota that hadn’t see many of the plants they were building) to look realistic. And in addition to seeing…there will be opportunities to smell, hear, and feel the environment as well.

On Sunday, we headed off to the Torrey Pines State Reserve to walk and enjoy the natural beauty of this magnificent place.  A few miles from home, this place is home to many native plants and animals, including the rare Torrey Pine tree.  And it is ruggedly natural, with sandstone cliffs and breathtaking views of the ocean, lagoon, canyons…and even the freeway!

This is my community…our school grounds host Torrey Pine trees, the ocean is the ever-present western border, hawks and other raptors cruise the skies, and native species like black sage and lemonade berry are frequently viewed as weeds.  I see them everyday…and yet often don’t see them at all.  Even the fires are a part of this ecosystem…and the exhibit features fire within it.  So many of our native plants depend on fire for regeneration, and rather than being destroyed by fire are reborn through fire.

As I hiked through Torrey Pines, I found myself looking for new ways to see this beautiful natural landscape.  Here’s a peek at some of what I saw.

beach cliffs torrey pines

Wind eroded cliffs, rich with iron oxide which gives it the reddish cast

sun through the Torreys

Sun through the Torrey Pines

succulent tree

The ocean through the yucca

prickly pear in bloom

Prickly pear cactus in bloom

prickly pear with bee

Bees pollinating cactus blossoms

ceanothus flower

Is this buckwheat or ceanothus (up close through my macro lens)?  It’s everywhere in the lagoon and at Torrey Pines Reserve.

As you might imagine, I took many more photos…and I’m sure you will catch a glimpse of a few more over the next days and weeks.  I love spending time out in my community, learning to see my everyday landscapes in new ways.  And in addition to what I see through my lens, when I am out taking photos I am also smelling, hearing, and feeling what these places have to offer.  I hope that the Coast to Cactus exhibit that will open in 2015 at the NAT will have a similar impact on others who visit it.  You don’t have to go to Torrey Pines to find this beauty…it is all over San Diego, you just need to look with new eyes.