'Senatus Populus Que Brugensis' means 'the Senate and the people of Bruges'.
It can be found on the Bruges coat of arms and an ornate water pump featuring a swan in Bruges, as I found in 2014 during my time there.
s.p.q.b. [bruges, west flanders, belgium, 2014]
untitled #240 [bruges, west flanders, belgium, 2014]
'Senatus Populus Que Brugensis' means 'the Senate and the people of Bruges'.
It can be found on the Bruges coat of arms and an ornate water pump featuring a swan in Bruges, as I found in 2014 during my time there.
side by side
beach aster [hythe, kent, england, 2016]
lifebuoy [folkestone harbour, folkestone, kent, england, 2016]
god will link the broken chain [laidley shire council cemetery, laidley, queensland, australia, 2009]
untitled #26
Banksia integrifolia or coastal banksia.
untitled #25
untitled #27
untitled #28
untitled #29
bingo with boats [river cherwell, oxford, oxfordshire, england, 2016]
Take a punt on River Cherwell.
past dew [st kilda general cemetery, st kilda, victoria, australia, 2007]
untitled #139 [st kilda general cemetery, st kilda, victoria, australia, 2007]
magnolia on blue (oxford) [oxford, oxfordshire, england, 2016]
untitled #122 [brighton palace pier, brighton, east sussex, england, united kingdom, 2011]
Three of my images are included in issue #112 of F-Stop Magazine, Amusement 2022.
untitled #204 [minera, wales, 2021]
of springtimes past [grove park cemetery, grove park, london, england, 2022]
angel in red
untitled #9
I photographed this "weed" in my backyard in Brunswick East the day I got my (then) brand new Nikon D50.
untitled #10
It's a perfect example of how all plants can be weeds if in the "wrong" location. The common sowthistle is deemed an invasive weed in Australia and other countries.
But one of its common names is sowthistle because of its "attractiveness to pigs, and the similarity of the leaf to younger thistle plants". It's also commonly referred to as hare's colwort because of its "purported beneficial effects on hares and rabbits".
Native Americans, Chinese and Māori people are believed to have used (and perhaps still do) the leaves as part of their diet and/or herbal remedies.
Whatever your thoughts on these plants, they made a good study for me to try out my new camera back in 2005.
For whatever reason, I didn't edit these at the time, but I enjoy the buds at various stages of blooming and the greens in these images.
And maybe there's a message here about how each of us can have value in particular environments but be unwelcome pests in others.
untitled #6 [rievaulx bridge, rievaulx, north yorkshire, england, 2012]
Rievaulx is a lovely little spot in the North York Moors.
untitled #1 [rievaulx bridge, rievaulx, north yorkshire, england, 2012]
Visiting there in 2012 (when these photos were taken) inspired me to encourage my parents to visit there during their visit in 2017.
untitled #4 [rievaulx bridge, rievaulx, north yorkshire, england, 2012]
Unfortunately, on that visit, we had sleet and rain instead of smatterings of snow.
untitled #5 [rievaulx, north yorkshire, england, 2012]
It was a lovely spot to visit on Valentine's Day.
les raisins de la mort [abney park cemetery, stoke newington, london, england, 2022]
untitled #7
untitled #6
parish church of st cuthbert [edinburgh, scotland, 2011]
pietà [nudgee cemetery, nudgee, queensland, australia, 2006]
untitled #920 [old amersham memorial gardens, amersham, buckinghamshire, england, 2020]
untitled #931 [old amersham memorial gardens, amersham, buckinghamshire, england, 2020]