Tag: Farm flora&wildlife

  • Rock Pigeons over the Sunflower Fields of the Freestate.

    Rock Pigeons over the Sunflower Fields of the Freestate.

    2 rock pigeons
    2 rock pigeons. Watercolour. 330 x 240 mm.

    Some orders are just beyond challenging! They are enough to make one wonder why we take on commissions. This one is for an American hunter who targets the pigeons that raid the sunflower fields of the northern Freestate.

    The fields are ready for harvesting, but the Rock pigeons descend in large flocks to eat the seeds. How dull the painting would have been with only fields ready for harvesting, as it is no doubt in reality. But this is art and needs to suggest the situation without looking like a war zone. So I have added a separate field with flowers still young, to brighten the painting and enhance the subject. It is unlikely that there would be crops at such different stages in development on any sunflower farm, but it was important for the painting.

    The sunflower farmers have no alternative but to hire hunters to come to their aid. I don’t like killing anything, but as we face the same problem with Jackal and Lynx raiding our sheep flocks; I do understand their situation. All I can do now is hope that the client will be satisfied.

    Rock Pigeons over the Sunflower Fields
    Rock Pigeons over the Sunflower Fields. Watercolour. 500 x 700 mm

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Porcupines & Aloes

    Porcupines & Aloes

    Porcupines & Aloes

    This last week my husband, John, discovered that the Aloe Broomii which grow on one particular hillside on the farm, were suddenly being stripped, defoliated and killed. Over the years the colony of aloes have increased dramatically on this particular hill, and have been a stunning sea of golden spires in the flowering season. Now about 80% of the colony has been eaten by porcupines, which is so sad! While on the subject, I found some porcupine quills lately and enjoyed studying their variations with paint. How intricate and curious are the patterns and form to be found in both the Porcupine quills and the Aloes.