~ Cee’s B & W Photo Challenge – Flowers ~

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~ Wordless Wednesday ~

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~ Weekly Photo Challenge – Partners ~

This challenge comes just after my annual lunch date with “the gang,” four counselors who were colleagues, collaborators and friends for many years when we worked together at Evergreen High School.  Along with assisting many students through the rough waters of their teenage years, we supported one another through personal hardships — and we still do.

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John Wellman, Lindy Le Coq, Ruth Stone-Scheer, Greg Merrill

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Ruth, Lindy, Greg, John

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Greg, Lindy, John, Ruth

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John, Ruth, Greg, Lindy

Love you guys!

 

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~ Heirloom Photograph ~

On the back of the original frame was a note written by my Grandfather, George Sutherland Low (1884-1957): In Glen Tilt ~ Perthshire Scotland, by Charles Reid ~ Gold Medal ~  London Exposition of Photography

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I’ve always loved this photograph, which we lovingly called “Highland Sheep,” when I was growing up. It is now in my studio newly matted and framed with museum glass to protect it.

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If you have any information on Charles Reid, please feel free to send it along to me!  Here’s what I’ve gleaned so far.

Charles Reid (Scottish, active 1880 – 1900)

Born 1838 in the Aberdeenshire market town Turriff, Reid appears to have spent the majority of his career as a professional photographer in Wishaw, North Lanarkshire. He gave lectures to the Edinburgh Photographic Society in the 1880s and 1890s and published an article ‘Some Notes on Animal Photography’ in the journal ‘The Practical Photographer’ 1895. http://prints.nationalgalleries.org/artist/34360/charles-reid

Charles Reid (1838-1929) was a noted Scottish photographer. The 1881 census reported that he was married and had seven kids. His eldest, Charles, was fourteen years old and worked as Reid’s assistant. In 1877  Reid conducted his business in New Pitsligo. Between 1882 and 1900, Reid operated a studio on Young Street in Wishaw. Reid is well known for the many wildlife photographs that he produced. He lectured the Edinburgh Photographic Society on animal and bird photography in 1882, 1890, and 1896. He produced a book, Animal Studies, published in 1901. His son, Charles, took over the studio from his father. Later, an Andrew Reid, became the proprietor. Perhaps he was the elder Charles Reid’s grandson.  https://cabinetcardgallery.wordpress.com/category/photographer-reid/

http://www.edinphoto.org.uk has a great photo of Charles Reid and a couple photographs very much in the genre of this one.

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~ Ocean Sand Curves – WPC 2 ~

Yes, it is late – I seem to be a day behind on just about everything – but this too shall pass.

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Like the sand imprints, life will wash me over and create a clean slate.

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Here’s to nature’s healing elements.

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~ Wordless Wednesday ~

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~ In My Garden on Sunday + WPC – Curves + The Essence of Summer ~

It’s been a fantastic spring for Hydrangea (Hydrangea macrophylla).  All my shrubs are in glorious flower — from light carnation pink and lavender, to creamy blooms tinted chartreuse and cornflower…

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…to full mops of cerulean intensity.

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Wishing everyone joy upon the arrival of the summer solstice.

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~ Wordless Wednesday + Weekly Photo Challenge – Pure ~

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Jen H. asks us to find “beauty in the mundane, and purity in the midst of our chaotic, over-connected world.” Immediately I thought of the cool refreshing waters of Crescent Creek.
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~ In A Vase ~ In My Heart ~

“Memories, you see, last longer than anything else.”  Margaret Sangster

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Lillium ‘Roma’ – Asiatic Lily

Harvey Littlejohn Low

February 28,1922 – Spokane Washington ~ June 3, 2016 – Corvallis, Oregon

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My younger sister, Lori and I collaborated to write a quality obituary of our father. It is long, just as his life was full and generous. I hope you take a quiet moment to reflect upon a life well-lived.

Harvey Littlejohn Low, of Corvallis Oregon, passed peacefully at Timberwood Court Memory Care in Albany, Oregon on June 3, 2016 after spending the day surrounded by his children and grandchildren. The son of George Sutherland Low and Jessie Fraser Harvey Low, Harvey was born February 28, 1922 in Spokane, Washington. He attended North Central High School where he “excelled in wood and metal shop, and had great fun participating in school plays and musicals.” There he met the love of his life, Agnes Margaret Twitchell (1924 -1996). They married in 1942.

A naturalist, sportsman, machinist, carpenter, gunsmith, farmer, educator, environmentalist and human rights advocate, Harvey’s twinkling eyes expressed intellect, quick wit and resolve.  Always, he was a force to be reckoned with.

During WWII, Harvey served in the Army Marine Engineers in Europe, building the Mulberry Pontoons, and later in the Army Special Services Marine Maintenance Corps completing port reconstruction following Patton up the Rhine. After the war, Harvey returned to Spokane, his wife, and their toddler daughter, Diana Elizabeth (1944), where he pursued advanced studies in education at Eastern Washington College of Education (now EWU), and became the proud father of Michael Harvey (1947), and Lindy Louise (1949). The family moved to Newport, WA in 1950, where Harvey taught industrial arts at Newport High School, while continuing graduate studies at EWC. Harvey and Agnes moved the family to Wenatchee, Washington in 1955, where he served as Counseling Department Head/Dean of Students at Wenatchee High School for six years.

One of only thirty-two people selected from a nationwide pool of applicants, Harvey received a full-ride scholarship to attend Harvard University’s ‘Leadership in Education Summer Fellowship Seminar’ in 1960. He then set his sights on acquiring an EdD degree from Washington State College (now University) in Pullman, where the family next settled, and Lori Leanne was born (1963). His studies launched Harvey into a professorial position at WSU, where he taught educational counseling and administration until his retirement in 1985. One of Harvey’s proudest achievements during his tenure at WSU was establishing a High School Equivalency Program (HEP) on campus. The program provided children of migratory and seasonal farm workers an opportunity to obtain the equivalent of a high school diploma, and subsequently gain employment or begin post-secondary studies.

Throughout his life, Harvey was a forceful advocate for the disenfranchised, at a time when doing so was often disdained. By his courageous actions and words, Harvey provided a voice to the voiceless, a hand up to the discouraged, and instilled in his children a deep respect for the value of all people.

Harvey and Agnes purchased a home, out-buildings and forty acres of farm land, three miles south of Pullman. “As a kid farming with horse and plow, forty acres was as much as a man could do on his own!” Harvey said, when asked why such a small plot in the middle of many thousand-acre farms in the Palouse. He loved the many aspects of farming, and especially enjoyed his string of pack horses which he took elk and deer hunting with friends and family in the high Cascade and Blue Mountains. Upon retiring from WSU, Harvey and Agnes moved to Corvallis, Oregon, where he became an active member of the local Duck’s Unlimited Club, continued to support the educational pursuits of his family, and lived independently until late 2015.

Bundling the family into a pickup to immerse his children in the beauty and wonder of wilderness and national parks, was a priority for Harvey — something his father, George Sutherland Low, had given both Harvey and his brother, George. Fishing, hunting, exploring and honoring the natural world is a value that lives on in his clan. Like landing a mighty Rainbow Trout or making a clean shot of a bird, Harvey loved telling tales of the many adventures of his life and singing around a campfire with his family. This tradition will carry on, as the remaining Low clan make new adventures, and tell the tales, bringing Harvey’s grace and kind spirit forward into their shared future.

Harvey cherished his family.  His most inviolable wish was that we remain strong and true to one another. In that spirit, we encourage all to look into the eyes of those you love and be grateful for the gifts they offer.

Harvey found renewal and sanctuary in nature.  To fully honor his spirit, his clan urge you to take a moment this day to be in nature — to absorb its deep truth and lasting universality.

Harvey was preceeded in death by his parents, older brother George Sutherland Low, and wife, Agnes (Twitchell) Low. Surviving kin include his children: Diana Elizabeth Dunnington (Leslie), Michael Harvey Low (Carmen), Lindy Louise LeCoq (Creighton), Lori Leanne Soli (Scott); grandchildren: Lynn Elizabeth Faulkenberry (Todd Bybee), Marie Kathleen Dunnington, Meghan Sarah McArt, Molly Margaret McArt (David Marcus); and great-grandchildren: Andrew David Faulkenberry, Justin Robert Faulkenberry, and Micah Harvey Marcus. In lieu of flowers, the family requests donations be made to The Sierra Club, Earth Justice, or Ducks Unlimited.

In a Vase on Monday: Cathy@Rambling in the Garden

 

 

 

 

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~ Wordless Wednesday ~

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Dad and Lindy on Crescent Lake, Oregon for sunrise fishing ~ July 16, 2009

 

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