Posted on Leave a comment

Memorial

Rainy morning following a rainy night

and the little creek where my young sons

played recklessly rubber rafting after

a storm, shooting under the street

to come out on the other side

now rushes by without them.

In the woods lately my dogs

have been troubling the rotting

carcass of a snapping turtle caught

in the roots of a creek-bound tree.

I hope this steady rain has

whooshed it on downstream

making one less spot for me to avoid

out there where creatures lay just

as they’ve fallen

without ceremony

or marker.

For three weeks now in those woods

a cross, flowers and candles

have stood guard over the memory

of a young girl younger by far

than all my sons who seems

to have flung her life away

from atop the bluff

all her hope somehow

fallen to none.

And just that morning I

anticipating the return home

of my two far-flung sons

had wandered with my dogs

in our carefree way

those very woods

where that girl sought

solace by choosing

an end to the only thing

we ever truly own.

Posted on Leave a comment

Turtles

Windows open this first day of spring

the cool air whispering truths in

a language I cannot puzzle out.

Vernal sky layered with soggy clouds

considers yet another downpour.

On the path I saw one and then another

box turtle coated with mud from a deep sleep.

I long to see the place that kept them safe

all winter, to see their eggs and the

babies hatching out into a place both

strange and somehow familiar before

plodding off into the mystery and

delight of the world already knowing

what to do and how to do it while

I, after sixty years wandering,

continue to stumble bumping

into boulders tripping

over roots and stumps.

Posted on 3 Comments

Barred Owl

I had not seen one in a long time though

I always check that particular bend

in the creek up in that big tree knowing

very well no one likes to be caught offguard.

Today my dog saw it first on the ground

and raced forward.  Only then did I notice

a large barred owl rising into the air

and landing in a tree not so very far off.

We had a staring contest, I through my

binoculars, he with his superior vision

and when I took a step forward he

took off again, clutching a prize in his claws.

We had interrupted the morning hunt.

I always marvel that I am so enchanted

by these sightings while they must wish

never to see me again.