



This is my second entry into Cee’s Fun Foto Challenge: Two Very Different Items or The Number Two.
Land clearing. I could watch this machine work all day.

A cute, fluffy lamb and his fierce looking mum.

A musical frog?

Once a week Cee from Cee’s Photography Blog runs a Which Way Photo Challenge – everyone is welcome to take part.
You can read the rules for the challenge here.

Coconut Bay – near Inhambane in Mocambique
This man looks very happy with life – despite (or perhaps because of) the wet weather.


My Dad wrestling with a crocodile – not something you see every day.

These penguins look very much alike, but there are two of them and they do look very cute.

As do these adorable young vervet monkeys.

Man and machine – applying lime to the wheat fields.


Have a look at Cee’s Fun Foto Challenge to see more entries in this week’s challenge – Two Very Different Items or The Number Two.


Before I left Zimbabwe I lived in a beautiful house on the banks of Mazwikadei, a large lake which serviced our farmer neighbours. Being in a rural area we often had wildlife in the garden; kudu, duiker, genet and the odd wild cat.
Once a farmer’s cattle roamed into the garden, creating quite a stir with the dogs – and with First Born. He had just got home from school when I heard him calling from his bedroom:
“Muuum! We have too many animals in this house already! What have you gone and bought now?” I looked out of the window to see what he was talking about:
But the most unusual and disturbing visit by far occurred in the middle of a cold winter’s night. The boys and I were alone in the house (their Father was away) and I had all the dogs inside – for our protection and for their warmth.
At about 2am the dogs woke me, barking frantically to be let out. I could see nothing obviously threatening through the window so I opened the door and was nearly knocked off my feet in the dogs’ desperate scramble to get outside. They tore off to the water’s edge, still barking and snarling and then suddenly went silent. There was a quiet whimper, a thunder of feet on the lawn and they all tore back towards the house, and me. By now I was standing barefoot on the grass, a few feet from the front door and in an instant all the dogs were huddled behind me, shaking and whining and peering around me towards the water. These were not all small dogs – two Great Danes, a couple of Labrador-sized rescue dogs and a miniature poodle – we must have made an amusing sight, had anyone been around to witness this.
It was very dark and I could see nothing but then a sound began to register – a strange shuffling noise accompanied by a scrunching, scraping noise which I could not identify. The noise stopped for a moment, everything went quiet and I took the opportunity to dash back into the house, dogs close on my heels, to fetch a torch. Armed with some light we all ventured back into the garden and I crept as close to the water as I dared, shining the torch in all directions and looking for Goodness knows what.
The scrunching began again, I flashed the light towards the noise and saw two specks of light – about a foot apart – that seemed to be dancing in time to the scraping, a few feet above the ground. My blood ran cold and every hair on my body stood up. My legs became dead weights and for a minute or two I was rooted to the spot, unable to move, think, react. What alien being was this?
Then one of the dogs growled, the light specks stopped moving and in a moment a large, grey shape came into focus.

Not someone you would want to bump into in the middle of the night
We were looking at a hippo making a midnight feast of the long grass growing on the edge of the dam in the front garden!
Both boys slept through the excitement but I wish I had woken them up. This was the first sighting of a hippo in our lake and no one believed my story – I took no photographs and for a long time jokes were made about ‘pink hippos’ and alcohol.
A few days later I was vindicated when the hippo appeared in the bay in broad daylight. The dogs were a lot braver this time around.
The hippo hung around for a few more days and then disappeared forever.
This is my first entry into Cee’s Odd Ball Photo Challenge.
“Odd Ball Photos are those great photos that you take which really don’t seem to fit into a common category. We’ve all taken them and like them, because we just can’t hit delete and get rid of them. There is never a theme to this challenge, so what is an odd ball is all up to discover and photograph.”
I’ve always loved the first photo, of the cattle in the garden (it is a scanned copy and unfortunately I have lost the original) and thought it would fit nicely into this challenge. And it is pretty odd to have cattle gazing at you from your front garden.
Thank you to 4 Year Old Adult for nominating me to take part in this fun – and challenging – challenge. Hopefully the exercise will nudge me out of my apathy and get the creative juices flowing again.
It was a cold misty night in May, I was dozing. With a start, I sat up. A sound … A crash, a thud, a growl and a hiss. What was that? Not a python – too loud. Nor a croc; too far inland. I slowly spun around, looking into dark shifting shadows trying to spy a hungry wild animal lurking – stalking its human snack. A touch, soft and light against my shin and a low rumbling purr. That darn cat!
Who? Moi?
Did anyone see what I did there? A paragraph written without using the letter ‘E’ – it’s not as easy as it seems!
Anyone who wants to can take part but to keep the chain going I nominate these bloggers (I know the rules say to respond within 24 hours and I understand not everyone has time on their hands so, because I can, I have changed this to 5 days. Also, it is not compulsory to take up the challenge but it would be fun if you did):
Perth Words… Exploring Possibilities
The formal rules for accepting this challenge are:
1) Write a whole paragraph ( a paragraph sounds easy right?) without any word containing the letter “e” (still easy for ya?) then comment here and link back to this URL: https://redefiningrandom.wordpress.com/2015/06/09/allergic-to-e-challenge/
2) By reading this you are already signed up.
3) Challenge at least five bloggers to do the challenge. They must do it within 24 hours or it is considered as failure.
4) If you fail or pass, suffer in the Page of Lame.
5) If you win, wallow in the Page of Fame.
Go ahead, show us your creativity. Good luck.
Do your bit to draw attention to online book piracy

“But… my tennis ball launcher!” the small dog exclaimed,
“That will mean that it’s further away!”
“But small dog,” I told her, “just see it like this,
If it’s pirated no-one will pay!
“It’s not as if book sales will keep you in bones,
They just bring in a dollar or two…”
“You speak for yourself,” said the laughing small dog,
“’Cause you know that they read me, not you!”
It is true that the fan mail that comes through the door
Is addressed to the small dog herself.
And her little face could launch thousands of books
While all mine do is sit on the shelf.
“Well, you’ve got a good point,” she replied looking glum,
“Go ahead, then, we’ll do it for free,
Put the article out, let them download my book,
Just be sure that you say it’s from me!”

Laughter Lines: Life from the Tail End…
View original post 180 more words
Once a week Cee from Cee’s Photography Blog runs a Which Way Photo Challenge – everyone is welcome to take part.
You can read the rules for the challenge here.
We came upon this bridge while travelling in Mocambique some years ago. It didn’t even look safe enough to walk across but we had to get to the other side …

On my last trip to Zimbabwe I happened across this accident. It was late afternoon and I didn’t want to be on the road after dark, so after an hour of sitting around waiting while nothing happened I decided to ‘bundu bash’ through the bush to get around the truck and continue my journey. Thankfully no one was injured.

One of my neighbours hung this hopeful sign on her vegetable garden fence. I wonder if the hippos take any notice?

To see last week’s wonderful Which Way entries click on the thumbnail below.
Free Range Learning, Creative Living, Gentle Encouragement, Big Questions, Poetry, Occasional Drollery
Captivating Timeless Beauty
Hi! my name is Sebastian (You can call me Seb!) ...welcome to my Blog. I'm a photographer from Worcester, Worcestershire, England. Thanks for dropping by! I hope you enjoy my work.
Atheist approach to truth through promoting science and challenging faith.
A picture, some words and a bit of harsh reality
A Peace Corps Journey
Tripping the world, slowly
"Summer is the Season of Inferior Sledding" -- Inuit Proverb. Martha Ann Kennedy's Blog, Copyright 2013-into perpetuity, all rights reserved to the author/artist.
The ramblings and photos of a Naturalist
For Exceptional People Everywhere
Join me in the cold, dark, life-sustaining NE Pacific Ocean to discover the great beauty, mystery and fragility hidden there.
Keeper of fluttery thoughts
Exploring the Reptiles and Amphibians of Africa
Medieval History, Pop Culture, Swearing
Live Life Write
Columns. Letters. Rants. Stuff.
My thoughts, sentiments, and scribbles on womanhood
Steve Harrison and Janine King's other Hot and Sticky web site
Little windows into my world.
Just Doing My Best to Communicate Science
Fun With SCIENCE!
trials and tribulations of a quaterlife crisis
For people with Non-24-Hour Sleep Cycles
Lisa Batten Kunkleman
BLIND WILDERNESS
an irreverent look at UK politics
Ruminations and reflections on the world of literature...
debunking the reasons people don't vax
A LOT OF P'S WITH A BIT OF QUIRKINESS THROWN IN FOR GOOD MEASURE.
Growing with gratitude for life's challenges
Wits End Photography
Exploring my world with pictures and words.
photography, poetry, paintings
Photographing.... that one moment in time...
All Is One With Our Creator
age is just a (biggish) number
Everyone Has Something To Teach Us
To participate in the Ragtag Daily Prompt, create a Pingback to your post, or copy and paste the link to your post into the comments. And while you’re there, why not check out some of the other posts too!
Creative Exploration in Words and Pictures
To See a World in a Grain of Sand...
I write to figure out what is left
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Looking at the conflict around the world.