Sunflowers … not ready for prime time yet.  #Wordless Wednesday #Gettin’ there!

#Wordless Wednesday – allow your photo(s) to tell the story.

About Linda Schaub

This is my first blog and I enjoy writing each post immensely. I started a walking regimen in 2011 and in 2013 I decided to create a blog as a means of memorializing the people, places and things seen on my daily walks. I have always enjoyed people watching, so my blog is peppered with folks I meet or reflections of characters I have known through the years. Often something piques my interest, or evokes a pleasant memory from my memory bank, so this becomes a “slice o’ life” blog post. I respect and appreciate nature and my interactions with Mother Nature’s gifts is also a common theme. Sometimes the most-ordinary items become fodder for points to ponder over and touch upon. I retired in March 2024 after a career in the legal field. I was a legal secretary for almost 45 years, primarily working in downtown Detroit, then working from my home. I graduated from Wayne State University with a degree in Mass Communications (print journalism) in 1978, though I’ve never worked in that field. I would like to think this blog is the writer in me finally emerging!! Walking and writing have met, shaken hands and the creative juices are flowing in Walkin’, Writin’, Wit & Whimsy. I hope you think so too. - Linda Schaub
This entry was posted in #Wordless Wednesday, nature, walk, walking and tagged , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

67 Responses to Sunflowers … not ready for prime time yet.  #Wordless Wednesday #Gettin’ there!

  1. Those sunflowers are spectacular!

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Perfect mix of flower and lighting.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Laurie says:

    Thanks for brightening my day with these beautiful sunflowers. They always make me smile! 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

    • Linda Schaub says:

      Glad you liked them Laurie. I really liked the orange striped sunflowers which you don’t see around as much and a goldfinch was enjoying some seeds this morning, since they have ripened since I took the photos.

      Liked by 1 person

  4. But still beautiful at any stage! ☀️

    Liked by 1 person

    • Linda Schaub says:

      I agree Barbara – our sunflowers ripened so much later than yours as we’ve noted before. Today, the seeds were black and ripe and a goldfinch was in his glory. 🙂

      Like

      • I like how many different kinds of sunflowers you captured. They don’t seem to plant different varieties around here. We passed a field yesterday, the stems were all bent over and flowers long gone to seed.

        Liked by 1 person

      • Linda Schaub says:

        The yellow ones were really tall Barbara – towering well over me and I’m 5′ 9″ tall. The orange ones seem to be a unique color and much smaller than a traditional sunflower. Today I went past and got some more pictures – the seeds have ripened and the middles are black oilers, ready for eating. I saw more bees than birds though.

        Liked by 1 person

  5. Sunflowers always seem to be smiling! Do they know something we don’t?

    Liked by 1 person

  6. AnnMarie R stevens says:

    Miss Linda…………………………………those large, bright, colorful daisies look like they’re in Prime Time to me!

    Liked by 2 people

  7. Fantastic group of sunflower pics!! You even got a shot with a flying visitor on the flower. The first sunflower seems like a huge one and the orange tinted one is unique.

    Liked by 1 person

    • Linda Schaub says:

      Glad you liked them Esther. The yellow ones were very tall, way taller than me and I’m 5′ 9″ tall. I like the orangey ones – very unique and quite a big smaller. I took those pictures about 10 days ago and today they were ripe so I took some more pictures to put in an upcoming post.

      Like

      • There’s a pumpkin patch open every September to October with rows and rows of tall sunflowers!

        Liked by 1 person

      • Linda Schaub says:

        I hope one day to locate the farm where they have the sunflower festival and lavender festival. I went to a big nursery one year and photographed the rows of them. But out in a field or a pumpkin patch is much more fun!

        Like

      • The pumpkin patch is a fall must! I try to take the kids each year. When they were smaller, they’d cry at the sight of inflated animals on top of the bounce houses. Easter bunny is also a scary one for them although that may have changed now.
        Are you going to visit a pumpkin patch this year?

        Liked by 1 person

      • Linda Schaub says:

        The rows and rows of pumpkins look inviting to go and take the camera. No I am thinking I’ll wait one more year due to COVID, despite having both shots. I just worry as too many are not vaccinated, though it would be an outside event. Do you just visit the pumpkin patch or pick out the pumpkins there for carving as well?

        Like

      • Covid has put a damper on all those yearly traditions. We always visit a pumpkin patch, either big or small, each autumn but last year we missed. You never know when you’re at risk so all this unknown makes us stay home. Hopefully, we’ll go this month on a weekday when it’s quiet: one major benefit of homeschooling of going places off-time.
        I remember your pictures from last year of the squirrels who devoured the carved pumpkins. Did you hear the news about a squirrel/s who squirreled away over hundreds of pounds of walnuts in the car’s engine? https://www.insider.com/squirrel-packs-walnuts-north-dakota-mans-truck-2021-10
        They make it into the news quite often!

        Like

      • Linda Schaub says:

        Yes, that is a benefit of home school, like me working from home, so going on errands and grocery shopping on a weekday morning to avoid crowds. They are remodeling my grocery store, so I had to go on a weekend as the whole store is torn up, but it is closer than the others. I had thought to get some mini pumpkins today and keep them for when the trees start turning color but there were none. They had bagged gourds but they were waxed as they looked shiny, so I will have to try another time. I did see that story Esther – thank you for sending it to me. I saw it on the radio station all-news site I listen too. How it stored all those nuts in such a short amount of time is incredible – they are very industrious and can remember where they bury them as well.

        Like

  8. Great colours so bright and make you smile – sadly the farm that grew sunflowers near us last year and opened the fields up to visit did not repeat again this year.

    Liked by 1 person

    • Linda Schaub says:

      Yes I took some photos today of the ripe sunflowers – so beautiful. That is too bad Andy. I remember you took your parents there to visit and had a photo of them at that farm. At least that is a good memory for you about the sunflower field.

      Like

  9. Joni says:

    What bright and beautiful flowers! I always find sunflowers so cheery, and yet have never grown them myself, although we used to have them on the farm sometimes when I was a kid. Did you venture out to the sunflower farm again Linda?

    Liked by 1 person

    • Linda Schaub says:

      I thought so too Joni. And the yellow ones were so tall! I lucked out seeing them growing in someone’s garden in August and started watching them every day when I passed to get photos. They now have black seeds. No, I did not go back yet but will try to go next year (with better directions). It is a pretty crowded event (from what I saw on their Facebook site). So I’ll wait … it is going on now. They had their lavender festival in July 2020 and again this year. I went on their FB site to see it. Same place – surely I can’t get lost again as I ended up at a Metropark in the same zip code!

      Liked by 1 person

  10. Thank you for brightening up my day Linda!

    Liked by 1 person

  11. Susie says:

    Hi Linda
    Those colours are orangellowiscious.
    Like summer in fall.
    Susie

    Liked by 1 person

  12. Prior... says:

    Masterful photo series Linda
    The different angles and variation on color – going back now to look again at such a fun sunflower post!

    Liked by 1 person

  13. Amorina Rose says:

    The stand tall and proud and full of stories.

    Liked by 1 person

  14. Pam Lazos says:

    beautiful hues, Linda.

    Liked by 1 person

  15. I love sunflowers! Luckily my neighbor plants them for me (that’s my story anyway) every year. Love the happy colors and happy bees!

    Liked by 2 people

    • Linda Schaub says:

      Me too Janis. Lucky you! I got these shots from a house I pass every day and watched them grow from about a foot tall. You cannot help but smile when you see sunflowers – they are so cheery looking!

      Like

  16. Fab photos of your gorgeous sunflowers, Linda! If I could grow them all year round and keep real ones in my house, I would be happy. You captured these beautifully with your lens and harvesting the seeds soon fits right in with the Sunday Stills theme of harvest gold this week. Welcome and please join me every week or when you can.

    Liked by 1 person

    • Linda Schaub says:

      Thank you Terri. These are sunflowers growing in a house on a corner. I watched them daily from just a foot high to these towering sunflowers, some higher than me (5′ 9″ tall). I will have some more flowers next week for Wordless Wednesday, some beautiful mums I saw at a big produce market, so I will join you again. Thank you for inviting me Terri.

      Liked by 1 person

      • We have wild sunflowers that grow different times of year here. In one of the empty lots on our new subdivision, some volunteers popped up (from neighboring yards) so we grabbed a few and planted them in ours. Still growing strong!

        Liked by 1 person

      • Linda Schaub says:

        Terri – I have heard of sunflower seeds missed by the squirrels and popping up in gardens. I don’t blame you for grabbing a few volunteers. My Russian Mammoth sunflower was as tall as the neighbor’s garage and then some, but, as it grew heavy with ripe seeds, it fell over one night and the next morning I went out to water and the “pan” was on the ground and squirrels were feasting on it, with the birds lined up on the chain link fence looking sad.

        Liked by 1 person

      • I would love to grow a big one like that someday. Sorry it fell over 😔

        Liked by 1 person

      • Linda Schaub says:

        I wish I had a photo of the look on my face when I saw the stalk bent down and squirrels chomping merrily away. 🙂

        Liked by 1 person

  17. Pingback: Sunday Stills: #Signs of …Autumn? Spring? – Second Wind Leisure Perspectives

  18. Kirstin says:

    These are gorgeous. And welcome!

    Liked by 1 person

Comments are closed.