Soul Food (Numbats are Love)
May. 28th, 2007 11:15 amI like this one, so I'm putting a copy here as well as at my Ravenari journal (once I decide on a price).
Soul Food (numbat + termites)

Link to a larger version is here:
http://www.deviantart.com/deviation/56281329/
Unfortunately I had to use flash photography to get a decent image of this piece, so a lot of the colours are distorted and a lot of the detail hasn't picked up, I think that's always the way when it's a large pastel piece. Oh well.
I'm rather enamoured of Numbats, they were one of my first animal guides. Information on the totem can be found here:
http://www.wildspeak.com/vilturj/totems/wnumbat.html
Soul Food (numbat + termites)

Link to a larger version is here:
http://www.deviantart.com/deviation/56281329/
Unfortunately I had to use flash photography to get a decent image of this piece, so a lot of the colours are distorted and a lot of the detail hasn't picked up, I think that's always the way when it's a large pastel piece. Oh well.
I'm rather enamoured of Numbats, they were one of my first animal guides. Information on the totem can be found here:
http://www.wildspeak.com/vilturj/totems/wnumbat.html
no subject
Date: 2007-05-28 11:21 am (UTC)Come visit Dryandra. I've seen them about 10 times now.
no subject
Date: 2007-05-28 11:22 am (UTC)I just sadly can't do more than about half an hour's walking these days because of the botched knee surgery. It really puts a dampener on bushwalking. I miss seeing western brush wallabies all the time when I walked through koondoola.
no subject
Date: 2007-05-28 11:25 am (UTC)Or at least, I've seen all of those from the driveway.
no subject
Date: 2007-05-28 11:27 am (UTC)Hehehe. I get Landscope, and I remember a few issues back them doing a good spread on Dryandra and thinking what an awesome place it would be to visit and stay at.
Do you love working there? :)
Bush stone curlews are awesome, they have such weird looking faces, very direct. They have 'tood.
I've seen an echidna in the wild, once at Rocky Pool near John Forrest National Wildlife Park; I had stopped on the steep path, and next think I know, thirty centimetres in front of me this wild echidna just bulldozes its way out in front of me, stops and then just keeps on going on its merry way.
I love encounters like that. You must get a great deal of those. :D