Fighting the Covid-19 war from the other side of the globe

It was 1pm California time and 1:30am India time. I was on a phone call with a doctor thousands of miles away while my father was struggling for his life on that same continent. Covid-19 took his life soon after that phone call. I couldn’t do enough to prevent this tragedy. And I am not alone.

India is suffering. Ask any Indian and they would know at least 8-10 people who have died of Covid-19 in the last few weeks. I lost my high school classmate, friend’s father, my aunt and her oldest son, and my father in chronological order in just few weeks’ time. I know many more deaths of people we have known for years. It’s a shared grief, a suffering that we will stay with us for years to come. People are struggling for basic needs, the healthcare system has collapsed, and it feels like a war.

Sitting thousands of miles away from ground zero, I was, and I still am feeling helpless. My mother is in the hospital fighting Covid-19. The only tool I have is social media and my friends from college. It took us hundreds of phone calls and seven hours to get a six-liter oxygen cylinder to keep Papa alive for one night. He woke up with his blood oxygen levels dropped to 54% the next morning and he fell unconscious. I was frantically trying to find an ambulance from California. I Google searched for “ambulance in Faridabad” and got 4 pages of results. I started calling the first few numbers but none of them worked. One ambulance service said the waitlist is till tomorrow. Time was passing and Papa’s oxygen levels were declining. With some divine intervention, I got an idea to go to the last page of search results and found a phone number from the image of an ambulance. The ambulance was available. Papa was rushed to the hospital and was admitted into the ICU with BiPAP support. It was a miracle that how everything just worked out in that few hours. I was happy that Papa was able to get to the hospital, get an ICU bed with oxygen support, and thought he would be fine. We received a call from my mom that night that Papa had a cardiac arrest. I was still hopeful that the doctor would save him. He passed away in a few minutes after that at 2am India time. It’s an unimaginable loss that I knew was inevitable but didn’t know it will happen like this and it will hurt so much. We couldn’t be there in his last moments and we are still not there to grieve with my mom. I was not prepared for this.

My dad was the most positive person I know. He was generous, funny, personable, and loved by everyone who came in contact with him. I was the youngest in the family, the most pampered one by all means. I called him “yaar” that means friend in Hindi. Papa always supported me in everything, he encouraged me, stood up for me, and he cheered for me in all my successes. The day before hospitalization from Covid-19 related symptoms, I called him, and he asked me, “how I was doing?”. I was annoyed because it was not about me in that moment. He was the one with fever and low oxygen. But for him, he was not sick. He was fine. He made me laugh till the last time we spoke to each other. I have his photo with his typical smile on my bedside table and I can feel his presence. I do not know how or when would I ever be able to overcome this grief. This heartache, a physical pain, I have never experienced before, and I will never wish this on anyone.

But I can’t also stop thinking about millions of people feeling what I am feeling right now. It’s a shared suffering. I remember feeling helpless weeks before the tragedy. I’m feeling helpless now. It’s a horrible feeling to know that millions of people like me were not able to be with their loved ones in their last moments. Open any social media and search “Covid India”, you will see a plethora of pleading requests for Oxygen cylinders, hospital beds, ICU units, ventilators, etc. And in a few hours, you will see “post locked because the person has passed away”. It’s heartbreaking and infuriating. The Indian government has failed us. It’s a tragedy that should haunt all the politicians for the rest of their lives. I wish we had a time machine, and we could go back to the peaceful 2019.

We find solace in the fact that we tried our best to save Papa from across the globe and that he didn’t suffer in his last moments. He always wanted a peaceful death and received one in the end. For me, his legacy of helping others, being jolly, and making other laugh would stay with me forever. And one more time I want to make him proud by taking his legacy forward.

Nidhi (Papa’s Janu).

Papa and Me, Stanford University, 2018.

Crater Lake National Park

I first googled Crater lake national park to browse some pictures before deciding our Fall long weekend get away. The images were stunning and I was excited to drive 7 hours with a three-year-old toddler and a 35-year old boy 🙂 We drove from San Fransisco area to Oregon and stopped by at multiple places on the way. The pictures that I am sharing do not do justice to the actual beauty. Crater lake is breathtaking!

Sacramento River at Turtle Bay

On our way to Crater lake, we stopped by Sacramento River at Turtle Bay. There is a beautiful glass bridge which houses many insects including spiders. If you like spiders, you must stop by to see all kinds! The spiders are there to eat mosquitos that live at the banks of the river. It is a great ecosystem if you think about it 🙂

Medford, OR

img_4745We continued our drive to our hotel in Medford, OR which was about an hour drive from Crater lake. I am sure you can find something closer to the lake if you plan ahead, but we usually decide to travel 2-3 days in advance (sometimes the same morning!). Medford is a small town and we didn’t find many interesting things to do. The downtown was also quite empty (it could be due to the long weekend?). But we found an excellent pizza place where we ate both the nights 🙂

Crater Lake National Park

I will let you soak the beauty through these pictures first!

You can breathe now 🙂 Crater lake is amazingly gorgeous and the best part is that it looks different from each angle, every hour of the day, and every other day! The clouds bring a different tinge to the blue. Anyways, Crater lake offers some excellent hikes and we picked three hikes-two easy (day 1) and a moderate hike (day 2).

Discovery Point Trailhead

This was our easy hike. This trail goes around the lake and is very flat. It is good for younger kids. Our daughter has been hiking since she was two, so she could easily do this hike and had a good time waving at people and playing in the dirt. The dirt was very loose for some reason and she totally ruined all her clothes 🙂

Vidae Falls Hike

Again, our easy hike! The Vidae fall didn’t have enough water but we saw some cool plants on the way!

Garfield Peak Trail

On the second day of our stay at Crater Lake, we hiked the Garfield Peak trail. It was a moderate hike. The hike is uphill for the most part but it provides stunning views of the lake on the way. We usually start our hikes early in the morning, to beat the hiker traffic and be back before the lunch time. Our 3-year old loved to hike this one. She would stop at every turn, enjoy the views, and say “it’s so beautiful”!

It gets little narrow at times, but that’s the fun! It reminded me of a childhood story where two goats were supposed to cross the river on a narrow log and how they managed to do it. Same way, we had to give way to others and sometimes others waited for us the go past them. So I highly recommend this hike!

Last, but not the least, couple of suggestions:

  1. Pack your lunch before you go hiking. All the cafes were out of food by the time we came back from our hike on day 1. We just ate cookies for lunch (I’m not complaining, but still..). So we picked up some wraps before starting our hike, put our food in the car trunk, finished our hike, and had lunch by the lake on the second day. We also saw a family of deer. Also, there is a fancy restaurant by the lake that needed reservations. We didn’t bother to check it out, but it can be an option for you.
  2. Parking problems: I think it is obvious for all of us. Parking is very restricted at the main quad, but since our daughter is an early riser, we didn’t have the issue.

Oregon

Ok, now Oregon deserves a special mention in this blog. I fell in love with the place because it cares for its people. For example:

  1. The speed limit on Highway 5 is 65mph in CA and reduces to 55mph as soon as you enter the state line!
  2. It is illegal to pump your own gas. There are people at the gas stations who would do that for you!
  3. The pharmacy hung small magnifying glasses by the medicine aisle for people to read the labels!
  4. It is greener than California!
  5. Marrionberry jams/pies- Do not forget to grab couple of these when you heading out!!

     

    Please leave a comment if you are motivated to visit Crater Lake after reading this blog! I love to hear from you. Cheers!!

    Also, please visit and like my facebook page where I share #mysky @ https://www.facebook.com/lookmysky/

Image

A Saturday Morning at Half Moon Bay

Saturday morning routine: Wake up little late (7:30am if you must know, and it is considered late if you have a toddler 🙂 ), eat pancakes, toddler asks where are we going today, and we explore our options like a beach (but we were there last weekend), hiking (but toddler is not interested), zoo (but it is the last weekend before school starts and it might be really crowded), or farm (but which one?). So we ended up picking Lemos Farm because toddler S wanted to do a pony ride. We have been to Lemos Farm before when our toddler was just an infant. I don’t think she has any memories of that trip.

Lemos Farm is located in the beautiful hills of Half Moon Bay , California. If you are driving on highway 280 and take 92 to go to Half Moon Bay, you will find Lemos Farm on the right side (see video).

The weather was quite beautiful which is contrary to Half Moon Bay’s usual cold/chilly/windy behaviour. We reached the farm around 11am and people were still trickling in. I like to go to public places when there are fewer people because it reduces the time spent on queues for tickets/rides/food. The main quad at Lemos Farm has a place to buy tickets/food, pony ride, a little pond with ducks, train/hayride station, and jumper houses.

Information center for tickets and food

Within the farm, there are little areas where you can hold your private parties. If you walk inside the farm, there is a petting area which has goats. You can buy goat food for a dollar. Kids have so much fun feeding the animals and it is quite difficult to take them out from the petting area!

Petting area

Almost 30min later, we convinced toddler S to go see other attractions. We boarded the train from the main quad (we didn’t have to wait too long for our turn in the queue) that took us through the interiors of the farm. By interiors I mean a fake village which has a post-0ffice, a jail (!), a school, etc. Kids looked fascinated and I am not sure if it was for the train ride or the fake village 🙂

 

Choo-choo train

 

Anyways, we all got hungry and had a quick snack before going on the hay ride. The hay ride was a short but bumpy ride in the neighbouring area with Christmas trees. Toddler S had a great time on the hay ride and was giggling at every bump 🙂

 

Waiting for the hay ride

 

 

Here it is!

 

Milk the cow

Toy pony ride!

 

 

By the way, I forgot to mention that our toddler S didn’t do the pony ride because “ponies were running too fast” (of course not!!). We are hoping she will be ready for a pony ride when we come back next year!

For more information on Lemos Farm, please visit their website:

http://www.lemosfarm.com/

Muir Woods National Monument

July 4th is special. People seem so happy and not afraid to show their patriotic blue+red+white colors, and more importantly it is a long weekend that falls in summer. Bay area, California  is hike friendly all year round, but summer makes it much easier to hike along the ocean and also in the woods. I have a bucket list of the places I want to visit. Muir Woods National Monument (just Muir Woods for this blog) has been on the list the longest. Even after living 50 miles away from Muir Woods, I have not been there. The main reason being fear: fear that was instilled by friends, colleagues, and people on the internet. I heard horror stories of limited parking, how visitors are not friendly at all, and how noisy it is, that ruins the whole experience. So I feared going to Muir Woods. We were throwing ideas for places to visit during July 4th weekend and Muir Woods came up.  We couldn’t decide until Saturday night 8pm that we wanted to go or not. We read every bit of information on the internet and made the commitment to go Sunday morning. I must say I am so glad we went. It was a great experience. Tips from my own experience today might give you some confidence to take the plunge to go to Muir Woods before the County makes reservations mandatory.

  1. Go early. I can’t stress this enough! We woke up at 5:30am and left at 6:30 (can’t believe it myself since our toddler S was in the equation too!!). We reached Muir Woods parking lot just before 8am. The first parking lot was already full! And the second parking lot was 98% full. Parking is so limited in Muir Woods that people reach there around 7am. And then there are people who are so inconsiderate that they take up part of second spot making it useless to park. Anyways, my point is, go early. It’s always a good idea to get there early. There are multiple benefits to reach early: a) you get a parking spot and don’t have to park few miles down the road. even if you decide to take the shuttle, arriving early is better. See next.. b) It is so much quieter in the morning, before the big rush around noon. We hiked the Ocean View Trail and met few hikers. It was so quiet that we could hear the birds chirping, wind blowing, and water running though the little creeks. When we were coming back to the visitor center around 11am, we could hear people chatter. Chatter is so loud that I couldn’t hear any of the natural sounds!! c) Since we have a toddler who walks slow, it took us longer to do the hike. With fewer people around, we didn’t have much problem since we could go on our own pace. d) We started hiking at 8:30am and went up the Ocean View Trail. We hiked back to the base around 11am which was perfect for our meal times. Picnicking is not allowed on the trail. There are few benches by the gift shop where you can eat. If we started later, then we couldn’t have hiked as much as we did, since toddler S becomes a hungry monster around noon.
  2. Wear jacket. I was not expecting cold weather on July 3rd when it is officially summer time. But it was pretty chilly, also because we were very early (started hiking at 8:15am). The sun came out around 1pm and it got little warmer. So it is better to dress in layers.
  3. Take food. I always try to take home-made lunch for hikes, otherwise it is such a hassle to find something to eat at the parks which is always over-priced! The food at Muir Woods cafe inside the park was okay, little overpriced, and not many vegetarian options. Since picnicking is not allowed at the Muir Woods National Monument, we drove a little to the Muir Wood Overlook which has picnic benches. It was little windy but manageable. The view was gorgeous. So we had lunch overlooking the pacific ocean and drove back home afterwards.

PHOTOS AND DESCRIPTION

Muir Woods is gorgeous. Period. You turn few degrees and you will see a new image. It is very green, and there are few creeks on the hikes too. You can hear the birds chirping, water flowing, and wind blowing. The smell of Eucalyptus trees on the way to Muir Woods is mesmerizing 🙂

FullSizeRender_2

Trail Map

FullSizeRender_1

Finally Sun is here!

FullSizeRender

Yes you can find out the age of a tree by counting its annual rings (one for each year)!

FullSizeRender_1

Beginning of Ocean View trail

FullSizeRender_4

Every angle is a sight!

IMG_3454

Redwood Creek

FullSizeRender

FullSizeRender_3

The first and only bench we found on our 2 mile trail!

FullSizeRender_2

I love the description: Ocean View trail to ‘lost’ trail

A hike at Point Reyes National Seashore

We visited Point Reyes National Seashore past weekend and experienced contrasting weather. Saturday was sunny, little wind, and gorgeous blue sky. Sunday turned out to be cold, super windy, overcast, and not fun.

Tomales Point Trail

We were wise to go for a hike called Tomales Point Trail (TPT) on Saturday and spent about 3 hours along the ocean hiking and covered 4.2 miles total. There was a ranch village at the beginning of TPT which didn’t look inhabited for most part. However, we saw one car parked outside one of the houses. The rest of the houses looked empty and not in use. The ranch village had a blacksmith shop, a barber shop, a barn, etc. It was pretty fun to imagine the life at the ranch years ago. There were lot of active ranches/dairies on the way to TPT and we saw at least a hundred cows resting in the sun.

img_2895

Beautiful hike along the pacific ocean

img_2897img_2891

img_2892

Barn at the ranch

img_2889

Village at the ranch

img_2887

Wildflowers and Vistas

Being a plant biologist, I am always fascinated by flora of the region. I observe tree architecture, leaf shapes/colors, and most of all- flowers! I love flowers, not just the ornamental ones you will find at stores, also the wild flowers. They come in all shapes and sizes and it is always fun to find such a variety within 2 miles of a hike.

Vistas are just amazing at TPT. You are hiking among wildflowers around the hill and suddenly the pacific ocean peek-a-boos to give a surreal feeling. No matter which direction you look, you will feel awe and gratitude to be part of such beautiful surroundings. 

 

img_2886

Trees had striking architecture

img_2906

Moo!

 

img_2880

Wildflowers on our trail

 

 

 

img_2878

A beach peeking through cliffs

img_2874

Wildflowers on our trail

img_2873img_2860

img_2862

Trail

img_2865

Wildflowers on our trail

img_2857img_2848

img_2845

Wildflowers on our trail

img_2846

Wildflowers on our trail

img_2840

img_2844

img_2796

Wildflowers on our trail

IMG_2801IMG_2802IMG_2803IMG_2808IMG_2809IMG_2810IMG_2815IMG_2816IMG_2817IMG_2820IMG_2821

IMG_2824

Trail had some narrow passages as well

IMG_2836

Toddler friendliness

The TPT hike was a lot of fun and my toddler S walked most of the trail. S waved to people along the trail, said Hi to almost everyone, stretched her arms to block the trail (although her arms are not long enough to close the way :)), and chanted “I think I can” while going uphill. We met a very friendly dog named Ali who was panting profusely and looked pretty tired after a long hike! And if you are lucky, you might see some Elks on the hills 🙂 

IMG_2879

Elks resting in the sun

IMG_2924

Finished our hike!

We had a great time and also got some beautiful pictures of the trail. 

Time when you keep something in a safe place that you can’t find!

FullSizeRender (8)

There have been few times in my life when something very important was put in a safe place by me. However, I had to ransack the whole house to find it later. It was like looking through sky to find a critical star amidst millions of them. The search was both nerve-wracking and freaking since it involved my academic survival. Now I find them hilarious and they make great suspense stories.

Riding an Auto rickshaw to my future collegetvs-king-auto-rickshaw-250x250

This was after high school and I was excited to go to college. I wanted to study plants and got accepted in B.Sc. Botany Honors. Even after 17 years the day is still vivid in my mind since I had got 94/100 score in Biology and students like me were felicitated by our school for good performance. Everyone congratulated me and I was looking forward to go to my future college to drop off my transcript and supporting documents. It was the last day to submit them. We finished the program at school around 11am and we took an auto rickshaw (in Delhi we just call it Auto) from school to college. If you have not traveled in an Auto, it is a three-wheeled very small car without windows. So it is windy and loud. We got to my college and I admired the magnificent campus. I stood in the queue at the admissions office. My turn came and was asked to turn in transcripts. I smiled (you can imagine how happy I was!) and opened my folder. I clearly remembered putting transcript in the front of the pile. But it wasn’t there. I looked through the entire pile of papers, still no transcript. The time was 2pm and it was tea break for the office staff. They asked me to come back in 30 minutes. How could I come back? I didn’t have my transcripts. I was literally crying my heart out. My dad consoled me and said maybe we forgot it at home. Let’s go home and come back (our home was just 15 min away). We took another Auto back and I was crying profusely. I traced back my footsteps back for that day. Did I drop my transcript in the Auto and the wind swept it away? That thought almost killed me since there was no way I could get my transcript back. Or did I drop it at school during the program. That thought was little comforting since the staff knew me at school and they would return it to me. Or did I just leave my transcript at home which was my favorite thought. We got home and I couldn’t find the transcript. We called the school office and nobody saw any stray transcript. My heart sank since the last possibility of losing it in the Auto was still alive. I saw my career crumbling down because duplicate transcripts would take few weeks to arrive and the college admissions would have ended much before that. I was about to lose an academic year and I was still crying. My mom arrived from work at 3:30pm and she was shaken to hear how my day went. She was calm after a little while and asked where else did I look for the transcript. I told her every place in the house. All the shelves, under the bed, on the table, everywhere and we had a small 1 bedroom house, so there was not much space to search anyways. Then my mom sat down and started checking every book I had, my siblings had, and even the old newspapers. She looked between every single page. Books after books, pages after pages. And then she got to my biology book. She flipped the pages and there I saw the shiny orange sheet. My transcript, I exclaimed! Oh My, I was so happy to see it again. My mom was my lucky charm. She found it :). I must have thanked her a million times. It was 4:30pm and the college admissions office closed at 5pm. We still had some time to make it to the office. This time my mom, me and my dad took the first Auto and rushed to the admissions window and submitted all the documents at 4:55pm. 5min before the window closed. My happiness knew no bounds and I started my journey with an exciting/frightening incident.

Ready to fly to pursue my passion

So I finished BSc and MSc in Botany and was ready to launch the next step of my career: PhD in the US. I took a break to prepare for GRE and applying for the PhD programs.  My brother and sister who were already doing PhD in US helped me very much in this process. Around February I already had 4 offers from top-notch universities with excellent plant biology programs. I accepted an offer from University of Texas at Austin. I liked the program, my future PI’s work, etc. I applied for the visa and without any glitch received it too. I was ready to fly to a new country, into a new culture, and totally new field of work. It was the most glorious time of my life. I booked my tickets for August 2 around midnight. My brother suggested getting photocopies of my documents in case the immigration officer asks. It was August 1 around 6pm. It was raining pretty hard since monsoons had arrived in Delhi. I was still busy packing my two large suitcases, trying to fit it my mom’s ghee, pickle, and more random stuff. My dad said he could run to the photocopy booth and I could finish my packing in the meantime. It was all going fine. I finished packing suitcases around 8:30pm and wanted to look over my documents maybe the 15th time 🙂 I remembered giving my passport for photocopying. I asked my dad where the entire folder was. He said on the dining table. I found the folder. Great! I started putting all the originals and photocopies in my folder. The last piece was my passport. I asked dad, “Did you keep my passport somewhere?” He said it is in the folder. But there was no passport in the folder. I must have checked all the documents at least 50 times but couldn’t find it. So I officially lost my passport a day before my flight. My mom again came in action and looked in the folder, around the house, and asked me to go back to the photocopy booth in case my dad forgot it there. We walked back and the photocopy place was closed (it was already 9pm). My mom suggested maybe the passport fell on the road and we must look around. As we started walking back searching for my passport on the road, the electricity went off. It was pitch dark and raining. I used my phone’s flashlight to look in the bushes, on the road, and in the puddles too. We still couldn’t find the passport. It was happening all over again that the most critical piece was missing! Finally the electricity came back on after we reached home.  I asked my dad what he did when he came back. He said the phone was ringing (the old style, one with cord), so he rushed to pick up the phone and left the folder on the table. I went back and traced his steps inside the house. Still no passport! I sat near the phone which was kept on a small side table. I involuntarily opened the drawer of that side table and there it was- my passport! My dad must have kept it without thinking while he was rushing to pick up the phone and while talking forgot he actually kept it safe! Phew. I got my passport, hugged it tight, kept in the sacred folder, and slept peacefully. I flew to US without any more hitches the next night!!

So the point is, do not keep things too safe to be found 🙂 Always tell another person, someone you trust, where the safe place it. Or better take a picture and keep it with you.

 

Sense of time

 

clock2

Keeping up with time

Many of us struggle with keeping up with time. Scheduling events is not easy, but thanks to Google calendar which has made it a little easier.  Anyways, here I will report two independent events where we were totally out of sense of time.

When is the party exactly?!

When we arrived at a birthday party, the host/birthday boy was roaming in his pajama trying to figure out what to order for dinner. There were two possibilities, one that the time of the party was changed or we arrived on a wrong day. But no, we were right on time. 6 pm sharp as requested in the invite. The other guests arrived 1.5 hours late. It didn’t make any sense! My question to everyone was should I call the night before for the reporting time instead of the invitation time 🙂

Sorry we are late to the party..

We got up at an acceptable time (7am when you have a baby) on one fine Saturday. I checked my calendar and saw two appointments, first not-so-fun at Toyota service center for a regular check-up of my car and and second fun one for a birthday party at a park. Both the appointment were placed at a comfortable interval and we could make it to the 11:30am party after my trip to the car service center. Everything was going great. We finished at the service center at 11:10 am and decided to go to the party directly. But the baby had her own plans. She didn’t wanna sit in the car. There was a huge drama to put her in the car. When she did, we started driving. We had just pulled out of the service center when the meltdown began. We stopped the car in one of the side streets to pacify her. We paced around her till 1pm (yup 2 hours!) to convince her to go back to the car. Finally, we drive to the birthday party and it was 1:30pm when they had already started packing up. We tried explaining the whole incident to the hosts and they were so understanding 🙂 What is most important in a birthday party is cake which we luckily got to eat!

 

 

 

Things you can learn from a toddler to be a great scientist

FullSizeRender

I have a toddler (almost three years old) and she is one Curious George! I love her and I have realized that toddlers have three most critical qualities to be a successful  scientist:

  1. Be persistent: When a toddler wants to eat an ice-cream, there is no force in the world that can stop them! No matter how much you try to convince or trick them, their persistence will defeat you. So be persistent in your research, do not give up and keep testing your hypothesis. You will get that data (or ice-cream in toddler world) in the end.

  2. Be inquisitive: My toddler just started asking “why” for everything that happens in the world and it is sometimes challenging to answer some of those whys. For example, why do we have blood in our body? How do you explain this to a two and a half year old child?! As a researcher, you have to be inquisitive and ask why for every hypothesis you have or every result you get or every experiment that failed. The cascade of whys will lead you to your answer. 

  3. Be creative: My toddler is so creative that surprises me at many times. She uses her toys/stuff around the house in unique ways, for example this morning she used her spoon as a boat, filled it with milk, and put a piece of bread as a fish to eat it. We never taught her that. It was her creativity and awareness. As a researcher, you have to be creative as well. If an experiment doesn’t work in a certain way, try a new method. If your results are totally unexpected, try thinking creatively for alternative hypothesis. Creative scientists make the biggest discoveries and inventions.

Nature at its best

Being a plant biologist, I observe nature in a different manner than a non-plant biologist. I find patterns, colors, responses that you might miss. If you look closely, you will see patterns all around in you. Leaves, flowers, plant architecture, other things, all have a pattern. Flowers and leaves could be symmetric, branches on the plant could be arranged in a spiral. I get excited every time I see a beautiful flower with perfect symmetry or a leaf with beautiful coloring pattern. I will be sharing some of those with you in my blogs. For examples, here are two examples of beautiful architecture:

  1. Purple flower: Look at the petals arranged in perfect symmetry. You could draw a line across using a ruler and you will find a perfect half structure.

FullSizeRender 2. Building at Stanford University: Not just nature, humans also aim for symmetry since it has been shown that symmetry is pleasing to eyes. This building at Stanford University and the landscape around it is so symmetric. The similar looking palm trees in the front of the entrance, followed by a hedge on both sides, then two more tall same sized palm trees, and the finally the perfectly located building.IMG_1255Hope you will enjoy my pictures and pay little more attention to things around you!

Thank you for coming over.

PS: If you want to use images posted on my blog, please contact me at nishalonghorn[at]gmaildotcom.