Lee, 

   It isn't the dunes alone. It is the dunes in context with the magnificent 
country around them. There are so many juxtaposed superlatives. I dig a little 
deeper and find more to get excited about. However, the Sleeping Bear Dunes are 
on my list. 


Bob 

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Lee Frelich" <[email protected]> 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Monday, July 20, 2009 6:30:55 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern 
Subject: [ENTS] Re: Dune Adventures 


Bob: 

You seem to be obsessed with dunes. You definitely need to see the 
Sleeping Bear Dunes--where huge open dunes occur on the lake side and 
forests occur on the inland facing side of the dunes. 

Lee 

[email protected] wrote: 
> ENTS,WNTS, 
> 
>    The attached images reflect an infinitesimal fraction of dune moods 
> and patterns to which the eye is treated in a scene that unfolds each 
> day from dawn to dusk.  These are all images that were taken with my 
> little iPhone camera. 
> 
> 1. S-BlendedEcosystems:  This image was taken at the edge of the 
> dunes. The unrelenting battle between sand and vegetation is featured 
> here against the backdrop of the massive 13,294-foot Mt. Herard. 
> Clouds spill over Medano Pass to heighten one viewscape. 
> 
> 2. S-Footprintsinthe Sand: All sand prints are ephemeral. One walks 
> into and out of the dunes, looking back to see the lingering trace of 
> one's presence. The physical manifestations of that presence pass to 
> be replaced by others, and so on. The only constant of the dunes is 
> change. 
> 
> 3. S-LookingBack: When in the dunes, one's attention is drawn first to 
> micro-patterns then macro-patterns, and back. The boldness and 
> expansiveness of this extraordinary landscape first captures ones 
> imagination, followed by the heart, and then the soul. There is more 
> here than can be absorbed in an hour, day, year, or century. Some 
> parts change in the blink of an eye. Other parts seem eternal. 
> 
> 4. S-Sandscapes:  There are no dull moments spent in dune wanderings. 
> Sudden changes brought by windy gusts; shifting patterns highlighted 
> by the dancing interplay of light and shadows; cresting a high dune to 
> be confronted by a still higher one; it all unfolds in an endless 
> expanse. But there is a constant. It is the ever bold backdrop of the 
> lofty Sangre de Cristos. I could never tire of the dunes. 
> 
> Bob 
> 
> - 



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