Thursday, April 7, 2016

Walls

Softened by lichen and moss

moistened by morning dew

deep into the dark earth

the stones creep.



Snaking along the margins

of skeleton grey farms

the stones rise again

resurrected by heaving frosts.










Wednesday, April 6, 2016

Cardinals


How can you leave


yet?


You must hunger


still!


The slightest shadow


fear


instills in you.


Both


fly to brush,


blink.


One more bite?


No;


flown to pines.




Tuesday, April 5, 2016

transient footsteps


the waves wash


                    over
and under


          the waves wash


                                                                       
red stone worn


smooth and wet


                   thin
layers ancient


lifting away floating




                         away dinosaur track


now bottom once top


till ages filled


                   steps
with silt


will my print


                          fill
erode reveal


                     smooth
and red


            wet
sandstone worn


                                                                          
the waves washing


                      under
and over


                                                                                
the waves wash


              over
and under


the waves wash



Monday, April 4, 2016

The Wild, Wild East


Black crow’s
harassing white-tailed hawk again,




arctic cold
dangling icicles from their wings when


they fail to
flap, gliding in the spinning wind.


It’s ripped
their wings and rattled their brains.


I’m not
going out, not me.





Round brown
sparrow’s flown right down junco’s hungry throat,


the arctic
cold drifting snow over spring’s lean offerings, and when


they plunge
off the feeder and lose their seat at the table,


nuthatch and
chickadee snatch their seeds and spittoon the hulls.


I’m not
going out, not me.





Red-capped woodpecker
and cardinal watching, wind-whipped,


perch on
arctic-iced twigs and dream that when


their
feathered ‘friends’ smash each other to the ground,


they can snatch
a bite and reel back to the safe, soft pines.

I’m not
going out, not me.



Sunday, April 3, 2016

At the Feeder


While the snow whirls




the junco,
gray and white,


shares the
sunflower


seeds at the
feeder


with the
sparrow, brown and rust,


but not


his own kin


a second
junco, gray and white,


at whom he
rages


casts back


into
the storm




while at
school


the twins and


triplets fight




fur and
feather


tooth and
nail


and worldwide


fellow
artists


scientists


poets


inventors


politicos


philosophize


extemporize


minimize


undermine


each others’


designs


and


dreams


too


close


to


their


own


.




Saturday, April 2, 2016

Spring Suspension

Sharp and icy

winter's knife

slices through spring's soft

shimmering rain

scattering snowflakes

on red-breasted robins

sunny goldfinches

foraging mice,

and silencing

the daffodils'

trumpet song.


Friday, April 1, 2016

Tentative Territories

Bald Eagle, National Bird, please

                  do not eat

those terrified waterfowl migrants fleeing.

Tuesday, March 22, 2016

NaPoWriMo 2016

April is so close! Even though it's spring officially, winter is malingering with a last flurry of snow. It's a great time to ignore the naysayers and celebrate spring with poetry. You can visit many others who choose to take on the NaPoWriMo challenge by following this link and exploring the Contributors link.



National Poetry Writing Month 2016

Spring Bulbs

young green spikes

arrogantly flair their display

despite the lingering, aged snow

Friday, March 18, 2016

Going Home Late

dark

and not much to see . . .

rain draining and

scattering the headlights

useless against this wet road . . .

just the eerie appearance

of a tiny white hand . . .

the end of a broken branch

sleeved in bark . . .

pointing the way home

Friday, February 12, 2016

Hibernation


curled up,
sleeping soundly


inside of me,
snoozing


during the
noisy holiday season,


stretching
ever so slightly


during the
January thaw,


poking its
ears up at the sound


of rustling
seed catalogs


then
drifting back to sleep


until
jostled awake by the


curious
inquiring if any new words


were sunning
out on the bright


white
surfaces of sheets


of paper, or
if


there would be


6 more weeks

of silence



July

heat lightning flies, with fireflies vies - flashing bright in the thick, dark air.