Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
This blog has moved: more Arboreality Tree Blogging available now at www.brainripples.com/category/forest/. - - - - - -
Greetings and welcome to Arboreality, home of the tree blog. Arboreality is a blog about trees, forests, and wood, and everything in between. Join me, Jade Blackwater, to enjoy some of my day-to-day arboreal encounters.
Follow Jade Blackwater on Twitter
Arboreality Site FeedAll material on this site is the work of J. L. Blackwater Copyright © 2005-2010 Arboreality.
If you would like to reprint, copy, or otherwise use text or images from Arboreality, you must request permission from J. L. Blackwater using the email address in my profile:jadeblackwater [at] brainripples [dot] com.
Many thanks, and enjoy! ...JLB
Occasionally I will share product and service reviews on my blogs. Typically there are two reasons why I review a product or service:
1) I really like the product / service.
2) Someone provided me with a sample in exchange for a review.
Whenever I have been provided with a sample and asked to review a product or service, that association will always be clearly defined at the beginning of each review.
Do you have a product or service you would like me to review on my blog(s)?
Contact me via email at jadeblackwater [at] brainripples [dot] com.
Thank you for your interest in Arboreality.
AppleJade – AppleJade is a blog about sustainable living, organic gardening, health, and happiness.
Arboreality - Tree Blogging – Arboreality is a blog about trees, forests, plants, wood, and everything in between.
Brainripples Blog – The Brainripples blog is a place to discuss the act of creating, the process of growing as an artist, and the business of working independently.
The leaves look like a lady's prim dress while the flowers lok like those extensive hairdos
ReplyDeleteThe lovley ladies locks never leave their being.
FrankenGirl, indeed! I'm up even earlier today, and we have a lovely sunrise ahead.
ReplyDeleteDucklover, so poetic!
We are studying onmonopia, illiteration, personification, alliteration, idioms, metaphors and similies.
ReplyDeleteI don't really remember but I believe that was Alliteration.
Sounds like a course of study after my own heart Ducklover! I believe that you used three of the above:
ReplyDeletealliteration (or consonance) of the "l" sound
personification as in referring to the branches and flowers as ladies
similie by saying that the "flowers look like those extensive hairdos"
SNAP!
I have a wandering hydrangea that was recently planted and the leaves are turning yellow and falling off. Is it dying?
ReplyDelete