Poet and Writer Anthony Anaxagorou. He is of Cypriot origin and he is from North London.
Becoming a Writer
To become a
Writer
You must read
Books
And
Often write your
Story
In mind-numbing solitude,
Alone.
Jimmie Aaron Kepler
2012
Photo Credit:
English: Taken at the Royal Shakespeare Company
Date: 15 October 2010
Source: Hard Drive
Author: Anthony Anaxagorou
Licensing: Public domain
I, the copyright holder of this work, release this work into the public domain. This applies worldwide. In some countries this may not be legally possible; if so: I grant anyone the right to use this work for any purpose, without any conditions, unless such conditions are required by law. — Anthony Anaxagorou
Most Saturdays I get up around 5:30 AM. I head to my favorite Starbucks arriving about 6:00 AM. I spend the next two hours writing. After I complete my morning writing, I drive to the Arbor Hills Nature Preserve in Plano, Texas. It is located in west Plano where the boarders of the cities of Plano, Carrollton, and The Colony meet.
Arbor Hills Nature Preserve Entrance
It is located on West parker Road, in Plano, Texas. The photo is of the entrance sign looking toward the east. In the background of the above picture is one of the City of Plano’s fire stations.
Parking Lot
As you drive into the Arbor Hills Nature Preserve you will find adequate parking. They have sidewalks were you don’t have t walk in the street.
Arbor Hills Nature Preserve welcome area
The Arbor Hills Nature Preserve is located on the western border of Plano, Arbor Hills Nature Preserve is a 200-acre park featuring vast areas of natural beauty for walking, jogging, hiking, orienteering, and other outdoor activity. The paved recreational trail is approximately 2.6 miles in length. There are also a natural unpaved trails for pedestrians only that is approximately 2.6 miles). There is a designated off-cycling trail of 2.8 miles. It also has a natural biofilter for cleaning surface run-off from the parking lot before it reenters the ground water tables as well as an observation tower, playground, restrooms and pavilion. I’m sharing many pictures I took during my walks.
The Arbor Hills Nature Preserve has three distinct areas.
It is located in the city of Plano.
Here is a map to help you explore and discover the preserve.
One of the areas of the preserve is the Upland Forest.
A second area is Blackland Prairie
A third area is Riparian Forest (that is forest along the creeks and streams).
Here are a few pictures of the pavilion area.
Another pavilion picture.
A third picture of the pavilion area.
The cornet in the pavilion area has some designs in them.
A few from the pavilion
One last pavilion picture.
From the pavilion you can see he playground.
Near the pavilion is the rest room. It is near the parking area as well.
As you leave the pavilion area you head south. The concrete walkway has a center yellow stripe. The ask that you keep right except to pass. A large number of people walk the trails and ride their bikes on the trails. The go and come in both directions.
Many people bring their dogs. The dog must be on a leash and you have to clean up after your four-legged friend.
Another view of the playground.
The grass along the trail is well maintained.
The are signs with instructions along the trail. There are off-road bicycle trails.
Trash cans and benches are along the trail.
The scenery is diverse.
Instruction signs greet you from time to time.
Here is a trail off the main trail that returns to the pavilion.
The views are amazing.
There is lots of Blackland Prairie.
Signs warn you to beware of critters.
A view from the main walking trail back up at the pavilion.
The trails go through many different settings. I tried to take pictures without people on the trail. Some folks get upset if they think you are photographing them.
As you walk you cross several bridges. There are creeks and streams throughout the preserve.
I took this picture from the bridge looking north.
More Blackland Prairie.
Along the concrete trail are off road trails. The one just ahead is the prairie trail.
Prairie Trail sign.
Continuing down the main trail. The scenery can change as you go around a bend on the trail.
You go down hill and into the Riparian Forest (that is forest along the creeks and streams).
I gives you a good mix of moving from sun to shade.
Some of the trees are tall.
Here is the entrance to the Outer Loop Trail.
Benches are found along the trail.
Parts of the trail are on flat ground.
It crosses the Blackland Prairie.
Another off road trail is ahead on the right.
The off-road trails are well marked and worn from use.
You find cedar trees in the preserve.
There are different types of trees.
Another tree.
The preserve takes erosion control seriously.
The are large hills to climb with major elevation changes along the walking trail.
Here is a view of the observation tower.
Looking down the hill onto the Blackland Prairie.
Another view of the observation tower. This is taken from the west side of the tower facing east.
Looking to the northwest. I live about six miles away in that direction.
This is a large mesquite tree with a bench in its shade. You are still walking uphill at a gentle slope.
Up the hill we go.
Interesting vegetation abounds.
As we near the top of the hill we start into the Upland Forest.
It is very pretty terrain.
My photos are in sequence of my 2.6 plus mile walk around the preserve.
Another trail heading off the concrete trail.
If you look close you can see cars in a parking lot in the background. This is at Austin Ranch in The Colony, Texas. Austin Ranch borders the preserve. This is at the highest point of elevation.
The Outer Trail comes close to the concrete trail.
As you start back down hill you come to the observation tower.
There is a side trail right before the observation tower.
This is a view of the last side trail from the observation tower.
Another view from the tower.
Still another view from the tower.
A view from the observation tower back to the main concrete trail.
Descending from the observation tower.
Along the concrete trail from time to time I found chalk art.
Another dirt trail off the main trail.
Another bridge over a creek.
A view from a bridge.
A view from the next bridge.
Almost back to the pavilion and parking lot.
Cars and the parking lot at the top of the hill. 2.6 miles in 45 minutes. I enjoy a leisurely walk. Arbor Hills Nature Preserve in Plano, Texas is an urban gem.
Do you seethe rabbit? I saw this one when first leaving the parking lot.
I think we scared each other when I looked to my right and saw this deer not ten feet away.
If you got off the concrete trails you saw more critters like the turtles.
He had seen men enslaved, and seen death in battle on a terrible scale. So when a young, unknown poet named Emily Dickinson wrote to ask whether he thought her verse was “alive”, Thomas Wentworth Higginson – a critic for The Atlantic Monthly and a decorated Union veteran – knew he was seeing poetry that lived and breathed like nothing he had seen before.
Higginson was immediately awed by Emily Dickinson, and went on to become her editor, mentor, and one of the reclusive poet’s closest confidantes. The two met only twice, but exchanged hundreds of deeply personal letters over the next twenty-five years; they commented on each other’s work, mulled over writers they admired, and dazzled each other with nimble turns of phrase. After she died, he shepherded the first collected edition of her poetry into publication, and was a tireless champion of her work in his influential Recent Poems column for The Nation.
Later generations of literary scholars have dismissed Higginson as a dull, ordinary mind, blaming him for the decision to strip some of the distinctive, unusual structure from Dickinson’s poems for publication. However, Brenda Wineapple offers a portrait of Higginson that is far beyond ordinary. He was a widely respected writer, a fervent abolitionist, and a secret accomplice to John Brown’s raid on Harpers Ferry; wounded in the first year of the Civil War, he returned to service as colonel of the first federally-authorized regiment of former slaves. White Heat reveals a rich, remarkable friendship between the citizen soldier and the poet, a correspondence from which Dickinson drew tremendous passion and inspiration – and which she credited, more than once, with saving her life.
Brenda Wineapple is the author and editor of five books, including the award-winning Hawthorne: A Life and Sister Brother: Gertrude and Leo Stein. Her essays, articles, and reviews have appeared in The American Scholar, The New York Times Book Review, Parnassus, Poetry, and The Nation. She teaches in the MFA programs at Columbia University and The New School in New York.