Showing posts with label birds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label birds. Show all posts

Friday, November 13, 2015

More Sketches from Acadia National Park

Back home now (I got home a week ago), I am still putting finishing touches on some paintings, as well as getting back into the routine of life at home. Actually, I should say that I am working on developing a new routine for life at home. During my time away I had lots of time to think and evaluate how I do things on a daily basis, and I realized that, much as I have valued quiet time and solitude, I haven't done a great job of consistently living with a peaceful rhythm to my days. Somehow the demands of life in an overly connected world, along with the alluring draw of the internet have resulted in a feeling of being scattered and constantly available and pulled in several directions at once. While at Acadia National Park, I had no cell signal (what a blessing!) and, as a result, I found that I was more focused in a relaxed way that caused me to be much more "present" with myself and my environment. So now I am working on incorporating some of the lessons I learned, so that I can live with a peaceful rhythm even as I am connected and involved with the world and people around me. I haven't gotten it all figured out yet, but I am hoping to make progress.

Here are some of my sketches from my time away. I have still more that I will post sketches in another few days. I've also posted some of my finished watercolors on my website (Melissa Fischer's Art ). If you click on the images, you'll be able to see them large enough to read my notes.)


Gannets diving
Maine coast rocks


Otter sketches


Thursday, April 30, 2015

Quiet Day

Today has been my weekly Quiet Day, a day each week when Stephen goes to the office instead of working from home, so that I can have time home alone. I cherish the silence and solitude to read, pray, putter, sketch, muse, and just be. It's actually not silent today-- the birds are singing their spring songs of love, the stream is gurgling as it courses by the yard, and a light breeze has been whispering through the slightly greening shrubs all day. Those sounds have enriched my day from the very start, when I awoke at 5:30 to the sound of a Phoebe vociferously calling forth the dawn, with the faint burbling of the stream in the background. I listened briefly, then dozed a while, the birdsong a peaceful lullaby until I awoke again, ready to rise and rejoice in the gift of a new day.

I've spent most of today outside walking the dogs, reading,  sketching, and sometimes just enjoying the peace of an unscheduled day. To cap the day off, Stephen and I are going out on a date after he gets home from work. A perfect day that will leave me refreshed for another week of dog training and other work.
Bridge over our stream (Wolff's carbon pencil)
Locust Tree (Pen & Ink)
Robin's nest on a ladder

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Cardinals

Watercolor 5x7
Cardinals
From early spring through summer, I awaken to the song of a Cardinal, the first herald of the new day. In winter, the Cardinals around my home seem to prefer their cozy perches and they let other birds announce dawn, preferring to wait for the late-rising sun to fully appear. Just in the past week, though, the  Cardinals have started singing their cheerful morning song, which tells me that they believe spring is just around the corner. Much as I love winter, I will welcome the warmth, the sunshine, and the song of spring.

This Cardinal watercolor is currently on display at the East Fishkill Library in Hopewell Junction, NY. If interested in purchasing it, please contact me at naturepainter@hotmail.com.

Here are a few of my journal pages from recent days, sketched in between shoveling snow:
 
 

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Birds and Dogs in the Snow

I know, snow is not a newsy worthy event by now, with the many snowstorms we've been having this winter, but I am still loving it. Today the snow is falling with large, lazy flakes, making for a muted, serene landscape. The view may be quiet and peaceful looking, but the birds are full of vim and vigor. Twenty or more Goldfinches vie for the best spots at our feeders, chasing off larger birds and getting in repeated airborne spats with one another. Our local bully, a large, confident Mourning Dove is back, claiming a one yard length of the deck railing. Whenever another bird ventures onto "his" section of railing, the Bully fluffs up to almost twice his normal size and rushes at the other bird, which hurriedly leaves. The Cardinals started their spring songs this past week, and the Titmice have been filling the air with their clarion notes for a while, so even though it looks like winter, it's starting to sound like spring.

 Stephen and I have shoveled pathways through the snow-- our "Cat in the Hat" paths, which encircle our yard, so that I can walk and the dogs run around. Petra is usually dashing full tilt ahead of me, careening off the paths to leap up trees or just plow with delight through the deep snow, while Milo trots steadily behind me, around and around and around, wagging his tail the whole time. Rowan spends much of his time "grazing" on bird seed that has spilled beneath the feeders, but he comes running any time he thinks I'm going to throw snowballs. Both Aussies loves to leap at the snow I toss aside when shoveling, and there's been plenty of that to amuse them, and even Milo gets in on the shoveling fun sometimes.

Monday, February 17, 2014

Wise Old Owl



Wise Old Owl
One morning before dawn my children and I went to a nearby county park to see if we could see a Barred Owl that reportedly was in the area. We waited quietly a half hour or so, before an owl suddenly swooped in on silent wings, then perched in a tree in plain sight. We observed and sketched him for over half an hour, before he left as silently as he had arrived.

Here is my journal page from that day in 2001, when I observed a Barred Owl with my children. We also found a dead weasel right near the owl's area, and we wondered whether the owl had killed the weasel.
 This watercolor is currently on display at the East Fishkill Library in Hopewell Junction, NY. If interested in purchasing it, please contact me at naturepainter@hotmail.com.

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Pileated Woodpeckers

Watercolor 12x8


Pileated Pair

One day, feeling down, I walked outside hoping the fresh air would lift my spirits. One of these magnificent birds swooped low beside me and landed on a tree just feet from me—the first Pileated Woodpecker I had seen on our land! We now have a pair in our woods, and every time I see them, I am reminded of that gift.

Pileated Pair is currently on display at the East Fishkill Library in Hopewell Junction, NY. If you're interested in purchasing this painting, please contact me at naturepainter@hotmail.com. 


(This painting is based on reference photos by me and by Samantha Keith-- many thanks to Sam for permission to use her photos of the wildlife she sees around her home.)


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