![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh6M_1wystx5TKgnZsYENCFWHANB76FpiSK3KFTp934MsCepuZVLdGFKH8X-8mKW_nWQMXNHZdkzgkvTrhSQiO7iykbZD3ZYLQb9Rrcd1paBHiBjgRqXtK7UABFBvSttjNv3Z7qKaFaA3E/s200/_MG_6756WF.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjP0ww3gxepKsT7rSY9UCcf5bZOO5v3ShbkkwHkgKY2pV7DCxQ1S6b3msXnDjChItJrMOnEVLLcSTarQBeahirlMN9-3hka_hWd9oHVktZoQ7RGAQxZJV0EwzRgfqL0_3H630aeqyJ0vrU/s200/_MG_6758SeeingWF.jpg)
There are bluffs above the high tide line that have brilliant colors and amazing mosaic-like patterns in the rocks and on overcast days the colors practically glow. No one ever walks up here! The first photo shows you what I created out of a little patch of rock and the second photo shows you what I initially saw. We photographers, we "visualists," notice things like this, we find things, frame things, and then display them to the rest of the world saying, "See? See!" ©Carol Leigh
2 comments:
Excellent visual example today!
I love that last sentence! So many people don't 'see' so many things. They have nature deficit disorder.
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