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Phil Douglis | all galleries >> Galleries >> Gallery Twenty Eight: Using symbols and metaphors to express meaning > The cycle of life, Yosemite National Park, California, 2008
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14-MAY-2008

The cycle of life, Yosemite National Park, California, 2008

This Sequoia may live for thousands of years. But to do so, it must first die many times over. We can see that happening here – dead branches are hanging from its trunk like dead skin. They will eventually fall off and become food for worms. Ranked behind it are other Sequoias – their branches laden with green growth. Like all living things, the Sequoia begins to die as soon as it is born. Only for the Sequoia, the process of dying takes longer than most other species on earth.

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Phil Douglis28-May-2008 20:54
Thanks, Jenene, for seeing the symbolism in my dead skin analogy. These great trees may seem to be stationary, yet they are also always moving -- upwards!
JSWaters28-May-2008 04:40
It's difficult to capture the impressive stature of these majestic trees. Your likening dead branches to dead skin places these stationary beauties alongside nature's more mobile ones.
Jenene
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