Daily Image #12

More of the stupendous season of wildflowers at Myakka River State Park. This shot is just off the highway, where the river narrows into a serpentine flow.  Yellow tickseed flowers are as far as the eye can see.☙
More of the stupendous season of wildflowers at Myakka River State Park. This shot is just off the highway, where the river narrows into a serpentine flow. Yellow tickseed flowers are as far as the eye can see.☙

Daily Image #10

The winds of grace blow all the time. All we need to do is set our sails. -- Ramakrishna
The winds of grace blow all the time. All we need to do is set our sails.
— Ramakrishna

Daily Image #9

The Okefenokee Swamp in Georgia, USA 621 plant species, 50 mammal species, 64 reptile species, 37 amphibian species, 39 fish species, 233 bird species,  and insect species - more than anyone has been able to count.
The Okefenokee Swamp in Georgia, USA
Species: 621 plant, 233 bird, 50 mammal, 64 reptile, 37 amphibian, 39 fish, and insect species – more than anyone has been able to count.

With the Myakka River running at flood stage alligators in Myakka River State Park are like kids let out for summer vacation.  Throughout the late winter and spring months, alligators were forced into smaller and smaller areas in the Park.  It was easy to spot them from the Park Drive bridge. One day last May I counted more than a dozen ‘gators visible from the bridge.  They were all pushed into a small remnant of the River.  But now!  The school doors have opened and the alligators are everywhere!  The Park is nothing but water and as you drive along the Park Drive you hear the ‘gators “talking” to each other — a strange snorting noise that those unfamiliar with alligators attribute to bullfrogs.  But make no mistake, the ‘gators have courted and the rising waters have been as welcome as Levittown was to the returning soldiers of World War II.  Nests are being made, eggs are being laid, and soon the Park will have many new ‘gators to amuse the tourists.

This handsome young gator was no more than three feet off the main drive in the Park.

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