This week's picture is of a Sequoia tree (Redwood) that has fallen and regenerated from the old trunk - branches have become new trees. It was taken by Ron Levy of the Redwood World website, which follows and tracks the Redwood groves in the UK, which is a big thing going on to combat climate change. This particular photo was taken at the Royal Forestry Society's Redwood Grove in Leighton, Montgomeryshire, in Wales. There are few sites in Wales and several across the UK.
A brief glimpse into Tricky as I'm getting ready to start writing Book 3 tomorrow for JuNoWriMo. The last Tricky piece was on Week 295.
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How to create a clickable link in Blogger comments can be found on lasts week's post here.
There is also a Facebook group for Mid-Week Flash, if you fancy getting the prompt there.
“You showed us how to be, how to grow, how
to stick together. You fed each other and built a community of sturdy solid
wood. And even when you fell you showed us how to regenerate and build stronger
and better.
“We haven’t yet managed to do that. We
almost wiped ourselves out entirely and though we are growing back I am not
sure it will be stronger or better. Again it begins: the manipulation, the
fighting, the greed. An endless cycle of ‘mine is better than yours’, and ‘I
want what you have so I will take it’.
“We haven’t learned from you – most of us
at least. We haven’t understood the way to just be and exist. We always want
more; always believe there should be more; that we have a right to have more.
We’re a dissatisfied species.”
Tricky sat on the fallen Red talking to it,
and admired its offspring which had grown tall, and majestic. She wished humans
would understand how much it mattered to the continuance of their species to
learn those lessons. But sadly the few had to always ruin it for the many.
She heard the flock fidget in the branches
above and glanced up. Merlin alighted on one of the lower branches. He squawked
at her and she understood his warning, packing up the tiny lunch of nuts and
seeds and tucking it into her pocket.
It was time to move on; they were tracking
her and Merlin clearly thought they were too close for comfort. But she wasn’t
far now. Though she didn’t know these trees personally, she knew which species
lived where, and from here it wasn’t much further until she would hit the
river, Blood River as it was called. She shuddered at the meaning behind the
name.
She just needed to get across it and she
was home and dry – so to speak. Then she had to face the next tricky situation.
But Tricky knew tricky and it wasn’t half as tricky as what she had just been
through. So she quickly dusted off her skirts and go moving.