July Squares: SimplyRed

Painted colonnade at the Museum of Contemporary Native Arts (MoCNA), Santa Fe
Painted colonnade, MoCNA Santa Fe

I’m bouncing back with a typically mixed bag of pictures (including one approaching a red herring) for the last gasp of Becky’s red-themed July Squares.

Cottage with a Texas flag and car tag
Celebrating Texas in Hattiesburg, Mississippi

You’d be excused for thinking this was a corner of Texas, from the lone star flag and the car tag on the door, but no.

Red amaryllis
Red amaryllis
Jackson Hole Playhouse: a Western-style building with balcony railings
Jackson Hole’s Western-style Playhouse
Assortment of hand-painted birdhouses
Hand-painted birdhouses

Suzie’s birdhouses have had at least one lick of paint and perhaps two since my original post.

Manhole cover painted like an open tin of sardines by Gabby Smith in Hattiesburg Pocket Museum, MS
Manhole cover painted as tinned sardines

I’ve not been taking as many pictures of late, so to encourage myself to do better, I’m only sharing ones taken in the last few months.

Red striped bromeliad with fern and a fern shadow
Bromeliad with ferns and shadows
Red climbing rose around the sign for Inn on the Alameda, Santa Fe
Red climbing rose

As you see, I’ve been away, but got back to the UK in plenty of time to enjoy the drama of watching our Lionesses bring home the European cup (a football reference, for those who are not fans). I wish the rest of the news was half as uplifting.

I hope everyone reading is OK – sending my very best wishes and thanks for sticking with me through my lengthy blogging droughts.

If you have a moment to spare, check out some of the other SimplyRed submissions. Thanks for hosting, Becky!

31 Replies to “July Squares: SimplyRed”

  1. Very glad to see a post from you! Yes, what a lot of dispiriting news from around the world but especially from the U.S. Love the bursts of red featured in your photos, a much-needed reminder of how gardens can bring delight even when times are hard.

    1. Thanks, Laurie. Last week, a gardener explained that she lived on her own while standing amongst flowering plants she was tending. I replied, “You’re never alone when you have flowers”, then wondered, that’s not true, is it? There’s something in that idea though. It surely applies to a good book.

      1. I think it might be true. When I am in my garden, I am aware of all the life around me plants: birds, insects, amphibians, little mammals. I certainly don’t feel alone.

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