Clicking Our Heels – Our Thoughts on the Most Beautiful Thing in Nature
Clicking Our Heels – Our Thoughts on the Most Beautiful Thing in Nature
Some of us are city folks, some love the outdoors and nature. Today, the gang members share our thoughts on what we each believe to be the most beautiful thing in nature.
Donnell Ann Bell – Banff Canada and the amazing waterfalls and hiking trails. Zion National Park in Utah for its colorful rock formations. The Atlantic and Pacific Ocean. The wildlife in my former neighborhood, everything from deer, bobcats, bears, turkey, geese, oh my!
Bethany Maines – Probably Bryce Canyon. It’s unforgettable, unique and different in every light. Go visit.
Gay Yellen – Almost any National Park will do, but back when there were actual glaciers in Glacier National Park, every sight was breathtaking.
Mary Lee Ashford – There are so many beautiful places and gorgeous spaces around us. I’m a beach person and the first thing that came to mind with this question was a particular sunset in Hawaii. The colors were mind-blowing, the sea air was so soft, and the sound of the waves so calming that it was like time stood still for a breath.
T.K. Thorne – I have written about beauty and how it is entirely a construct of our minds. It does not exist outside of our interpretation of the world. LOL, that is a “TK answer,” isn’t it? Most beautiful things I have seen: a baby’s first smile; missing my father and stumbling upon a field of sunlit blue wildflowers; the majesty of the Grand Canyon and New Zealand’s Milford Sound; and the ever-changing diversity of my little garden pond.
Lois Winston – A star-filled sky. Because of ambient light, it’s been decades since I’ve seen one.
Saralyn Richard – The calving of the Hubbard Glacier in Alaska. It was an extraordinarily hot day, and the pieces of ice literally exploded from the glacier, forming smoke, shapes, and splashes.
Paula G. Benson – A clear, blue, sunny sky—what my Grandfather called, “October’s bright blue weather, after Helen Hunt Jackson’s poem.
Judy Penz Sheluk – Watching the sun set while sitting on our waterfront deck on Lake Superior, especially in summer. It’s a new view every night, and it’s almost always spectacular.
Anita Carter – The Redwoods. It’s vibrant, lush, and surprisingly quiet. So quiet you can hear nature grow. Absolutely amazing.
Donalee Moulton – Sable Island, Nova Scotia, a thin crescent of shifting sand at the edge of the Continental Shelf that wild horses, grey seals, and one-of-a-kind plants, birds, and insects call home. There are also more than 350 shipwrecks surrounding this Graveyard of the Atlantic.
Debra H. Goldstein – Niagara Falls.
love everything about this book and yes I believe she’ll be able to reach and solve her problems before someone gets hurt hard to say, she decides to her problems I think she’ll do her best
That butternut cake sure looks delicious
Will review book in print format if I win
HOPE I I WIN
Weddings in Pastel colors at Niagara Falls is really a gorgeous site to see
Love your answers, all. Yes, TK, yours is a TK answer:) like writing our answers are subjective!
So many beautiful places! I’ve been to many of these, and am eager to see more. Thanks, Gang, for sharing yours.
Any ocean beach