
My States official flower…the Rocky Mountain Columbine

My States official flower…the Rocky Mountain Columbine

Tasty grass, a sunny day and an ocean view all enjoyed sitting on a bed of lush green succulents. What more could you ask for if you were a costal ground squirrel.

Where there are rocks there is life.

This photo was taken using a Holga pinhole camera on a recent trip to Greenland. The wind was blowing and the arctic cotton was in full bloom in front of the mountains and glaciers.

Water Lilly photographed on a quiet lake in GTNP.

I would like to thank everyone for supporting Nature Has No Boss since its inception six months ago. I have found blogging to be a fun and enriching experience allowing me to connect with people from all around the world. It is time to unplug for the next month or so, experience some wilderness, collect new and exciting images to share on Nature has no boss and reconnect and recharge the batteries.


Looking into Paonia Reservoir on a hot summer day it seems that something is missing.

Using a standard Holga 120 pinhole camera I got some unique pinhole style lens(less) flare while photographing this cottonwood tree one afternoon. A happy accident.

Taken at a local park where bulldozers were pushing over dead trees that I normally see Kestrels perched in. Dead trees provide habitat for numerous living organisms, including fungi, mosses, lichens, invertebrates, birds, mammals, reptiles, and amphibians.
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