Sunday 24 December 2017

A sequel ..



My second Africa book is out! 




240 pages with large format pictures from the safari in the northern Serengeti in August where we watched the spectacular Great Migration. 

We stayed at two different camps: Olakira and Nomad Lamai Serengeti. Both are close to the Kogatende Airstrip, but in very different settings. Olakira is very basic and rustic, sturdy army tents with bucket showers, in the plains on the Mara river. The tents move twice a year with the migration.  Nomad Lamai is very different, very luxurious in solid huts, constructed unobtrusively hidden in the kopjes of the Lamai wedge with a wide view over the plains. A hard copy of my book graces the coffee table there in the lodge's lounge :)! 


The Great Migration - Northern Serengeti


As with the last book about Tarangire, you can browse the photographs for free. Clicking on the link above will take you to the Blurb-website, where you can preview all the pages in large format on your screen.

Enjoy!




Have a nice Christmas holiday -  see you next year! 



Tuesday 19 December 2017

From My Garden: Seasons' Greetings !


In the deepest German winter, when the lights come on in the morning and are never turned off until bedtime, it is hard to imagine that spring and the reawakening of nature is just around the corner, a few months away. 
As I know for sure that a winter depression will befall me each year, I decided last spring to make a series of photographs of my garden in all seasons to have something to look forward to. I chose the daily view from my kitchen window for this project. 


Autumn view

The window goes north, so this corner of my garden is quite dark at all times of the year. When planning this corner, I devised a theme in green and white with bright leaves and white flowering shrubs that would be nice to brighten up the area. 

Evergreen shrubs with interesting varied leaves dominate both sides of the path. Cephalotaxus harringtonia, the "head yew" with its distinctive needle heads, one for each year of growth, sits in a sheltered position in front of the wall of the house next to Camellia "Shiragiku" (behind) who needs a sheltered spot as well. It has been growing and thriving in this spot for the past 14 years. It prefers not to be exposed to wintry sun, so a spot facing west against a wall is always good for not so hardy camellias. In front, on the right hand side of the Cephalotaxus, I used to have a Buxus elegantissima, a white box tree, very rare, since 2003. Unfortunately, last year it succumbed to the ugly Chinese Buchszünssler moth and had to be removed. 


April

Underneath we have hellebores, Symphytum grandiflorum album and on the corner the unusual Saxifraga pennsylvanica with its memorable name, which sends up a flowering stem each May. 





On the left hand side, we have several white-flowering Viburnums, underplanted with hosta, wild strawberries, sweet woodruff (Galium odoratum) and pink azaleas in spring.



May


In the back before the path turns to the right and on around the house there is a white-leaved Euonymus, an ivy trimmed as hedge and Viburnum plicatum to the right. A red hazelnut is towering over them.

Between Cephalotaxus and the white Buxus we had planted Rodgersia. Now that the Buxus is gone, it enjoys the added space and has grown and filled the spot with its large pinnate chestnut-like leaves which turn a beautiful bright yellow-orange before they fall off.





October





Seasons' Greetings! 

Friday 15 December 2017

Garden Visit : The Royal Botanic Garden, Madrid




To get away from this dreary nasty German winter weather, let's take a trip back to a garden that I visited last June:  the Real Jardin Botanico de Madrid. 

It is a beautifully maintained scientific garden in the middle of the city next to the Prado and the much larger Retiro Park. 




A very good selection of huge trees and shaded areas give respite from the Spanish midday heat.



 Sometimes the labelling could be a improved. Who might you be?


day-lilies

 my old favourite: Romneya coulteri in flower

 Kniphofia "Amsterdam" , a very good colour, that does not grow in Germany.


a heavily scented Jasmine wall


  on Ceratostigma  flowers


Curious parakeet couples in a huge communal nest at the entrance to the Botanic garden.


Wednesday 6 December 2017

Berlin Visit : Alexander-Platz to Frankfurter Tor

Starting from Alexanderplatz in former East-Berlin, the stately "Karl-Marx-Allee" leads down eastwards to Frankfurter Tor and on for quite a few miles and out of the city. It is the old "Große Frankfurter Straße" that carries on to Frankfurt on the Oder on the Polish border. From 1949 to 1961 the magnificent boulevard was renamed to "Stalin-Allee" and from then on "Karl-Marx-Allee". Up until today it was able to keep its name despite efforts to change it to its original pre-war version. The Alley is so impressive that it is easy to stay with one's history. It is a wide alley, with large lawns on either side of the road and a wide green lawn in the middle. Its grand architecture derives from a rebuilding from 1952 in Soviet classicist style. 
It is a photographer's paradise with many details that remind us of the GDR and its Soviet influence and grand aspirations from a bygone era. One seems to wander between the 1930s and the 1950s with some odd modern surprises.  
We start from Alexanderplatz.




Alexanderplatz with the TV-Tower and its quirky 1960s base construction


 Why would one want a window in the elevator cabin roof? 

the view from up towards Regierungsviertel


... and towards the other direction, Karl-Marx-Allee

A nicer aspect of Alexanderplatz with a view towards Under den Linden and the Cathedral.



The GDR loved murals and reliefs



 The "House of the Teacher" with murals about life in the "Arbeiter- und Bauernstaat"






the Kosmos - Cinema




another cinema: Kino International









Platte -  custom-made




Strausberger Platz at the western end of the boulevard



The fountain on Strausberger Platz







"Haus des Kindes" - House for the child








 These signs are well looked after.




The facades are often covered in ceramic tiles

  

 A surprisingly well-kept garden.

Mostly, these blocks still contain cheap housing. Not much has been converted to luxury living. 

 side-entrance to a kindergarten

Another monument for the intercultural understanding between sister peoples 


an odd mix of advertisements: 




the old Karl-Marx-bookshop


Frankfurter Tor at the other end with its lighthouse-style towers standing guard at the entrance to Karl-Marx-Allee from the east. 





Why not have a break here?