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androphilia:

Okefenokee Water Garden, Georgia By Sam Abell, 1998
From the National Geographic book ‘Seeing Gardens’, 2000
If a garden is supposed to remove us from ordinary existence, then the  wilderness of the Okefenokee Swamp, in Georgia and Florida, accomplishes  this separation more surely than any garden I have ever entered. Canoeing across the Okefenokee is to travel far back in biologic time  to a world of plants and animals that seems disconnected from the known  world. The experience of disconnection is deepened because Okefenokee is  a blackwater swamp. Tannic acid from the dark peat floor of the swamp  makes it so. In its inky water, reflections are almost perfectly  mirror-like. Every aquatic plant, every flower, every cypress tree, and  the eye of every alligator is doubled. 
- Sam Abell

androphilia:

Okefenokee Water Garden, Georgia By Sam Abell, 1998

From the National Geographic book ‘Seeing Gardens’, 2000

If a garden is supposed to remove us from ordinary existence, then the wilderness of the Okefenokee Swamp, in Georgia and Florida, accomplishes this separation more surely than any garden I have ever entered.
Canoeing across the Okefenokee is to travel far back in biologic time to a world of plants and animals that seems disconnected from the known world. The experience of disconnection is deepened because Okefenokee is a blackwater swamp. Tannic acid from the dark peat floor of the swamp makes it so. In its inky water, reflections are almost perfectly mirror-like. Every aquatic plant, every flower, every cypress tree, and the eye of every alligator is doubled.

- Sam Abell


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11.23.2010 |
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