
Daily cat 208, $35USD, brush and ink, 4×6″, 2020
copyrighted with all rights reserved by Jean Krueger
https://www.dailypaintworks.com/buy/auction/1169173
Kitty slo-mo. Meow.

Kitty slo-mo. Meow.

Caught in Arizona, this bass bass looks a lot different in color than those we’ve taken in New York. Other features such as the dorsal fins are atypical of what is found in Largemouth Bass. Perhaps this is a hybrid. At any rate, it was caught in Lake Pleasant, AZ. We’ll have to see if we can catch anymore like these.

Keep your eye on the fly. Meow.

Another fishing trip, another inspiration for a painting. The Arizona mid-afternoon sun saturates all colors. They sparkle and glow. I do love Arizona.

Clean kitty, lick,lick, lick. Meow.

The white bass are still biting at Lake Pleasant in Maricopa County, AZ. This is a view of the embankment at the lake shore. Ted’s doing the fishing, I take pictures, pic up fistfuls of discarded fishing line and look for lost Rolex’s on the beach.

Rounding the corner on one foot, Buck’s hot in pursuit. Meow.
x


Buck has a kitty condo (a carpeted climbing perch) and he spends much of his idle time (of which he has an abundance) napping thereon. Meow.

Meow.

Getta bug. Meow.

Plein aire while Ted, Kirk and Tyler fished.

Daily Cat 201, meow.

Daily Cat 200….a dubious milestone for a series begun in December of 2018. Take a look at my Dailypaintworks gallery, these have their own CATagory.
Meow.

Ted caught this fish in Lake Pleasant, a lake in northern Maricopa County in Arizona. It’s about 14.5″ long and is painted close to full scale.

Buck the Cat. Meow.

Nap. Meow

A hot day, a steep climb, another place in the world I’d never seen before. Wonderful.

This scene is from the end of a fishing trip. No fish but nice winter sunset.

Cat to go. Bag it.

Chollas are botanically in the subfamily of Opuntioideae, the same family which includes cactus’s with broad, flat leaves. The leaves of the Cholla are round-ish and really spiny. They quickly become stuck to any object that comes close to it. Their spines hurt and aren’t easy to remove once impaled in either fabric, fur or flesh. When backlit by the setting sun, their branches look like bright torches of white gold.