Posts Tagged ‘nature photography’
Rushing
Posted in family, Photography, poetry, tagged Bill Griffin, imagery, Kelsay Books, nature, nature photography, nature poetry, poetry, Rae Spencer, Southern writing, Watershed on February 2, 2024| 10 Comments »
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[ with 3 poems by Rae Spencer]
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Adaptation
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Some days I hardly remember
what it is to fly
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what loss is
When morning feels like betrayal
and shoulders ache
with the sudden load of gravity
pressed into cruel bones
too human for wings
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As if I never once awoke
hair smelling of clouds
wound in wild knots
and damp with tears
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or slept
curled in a crevice of wind
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Other days I recall myself
grace confined to memory
in which I have never flown
and it was only ever a tale
from childhood
I was never meant to believe
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Rae Spencer
from Watershed, Kelsay Books, American Fork, Utah; © 2023
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A shift in warmth of Pacific seas, a wet winter in the South: throughout January a storm a week, sometimes two, but this afternoon we are braving mud to hike our favorite trail from Carter Falls to Grassy Creek. The little farm pond is full and we see the channel where it overflows to carve a deeper path through last summer’s grasses and sedges. Both white pine groves have evidence of freshets, scoured hardpan courses with needles layered thick along each side. We cross Martin Byrd Road to enter the woods that curve alongside the big cornfield and wonder what we’ll find. Even though the acres are planted in winter rye, how much soil has rushed off those slopes and furrows into Grassy Creek?
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The trail quickly turns downhill and we see the storms’ impact. Red field clay has silted full the first drainage swale and overtopped it to rush down the trail bed in a boiling soupy froth. Exposed roots and deep mud. Our trail crews clean out these erosion control features twice a year but one wet January has damaged the trail more than ten years of hikers’ boots. Too much water, too much incline, too much gravity.
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Neither will nor wisdom inform its seep, writes Rae Spencer of water. It must seek its level, it must flow, it must rush. Water and time alike, each of them relentless and not to be held back. Have I spent too much of my life rushing? Have I abandoned will and wisdom to be always doing, doing? Even now my dreams are filled with urgency, long hallways, behind each door a patient fretting to be seen, and I with no hope of catching up. Waking from such, who would want to get out of bed and get started?
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Better trail design can’t completely compensate for poor tillage and agricultural neglect, but the rest of today’s trail is actually in quite good shape. The outer berm has been mostly raked clear and there are several grade dips and rises that keep water from following the treadway. When we reach the more rustic forest bathing trail, it’s even better – consistent outsloping camber, plenty of runoff. Water’s gonna rush. Life too, I guess. How to prepare? How to respond? How to slow things down for a bit? A walk through quiet woods, a quiet hour with a book of poetry – maybe tonight my dreams will proceed more leisurely.
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Of Warbler and Quail
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Drab little she in the brush
Muttering her song to lure
Someone else
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But only I respond
Drawn across the dune
To listen closer
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As a child I spoke to quail
I whistled out their bobwhite name
To hear them shriek it back
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But this little warbler
outside my beachfront door
Her accent slips my ear
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Measures of water wisdom
Refrains of woven nest
Codas that fall silent
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Because I have come too near
To understanding
What is lovely on this shore
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Of daily tide
Of sandy soil and storms
Of quickening flocks
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That speak their sea-swept names
In secret tangled tongues
Of salty sail and oar
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And then they fly away
While I struggle, yearn to say
What I remember of briars
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Of dry summer streams
And winter dreams
Of silent quail
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Hungry among the thistle
Of home, my distant valley home
So many years from here
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Rae Spencer
from Watershed, Kelsay Books, American Fork, Utah; © 2023
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Memory – home – loss – the path forward: Rae Spencer’s poetry has a distinctly formal feel as she settles deeply into these themes. Formal in the sense of meticulous language, lush natural imagery and description, architectural lines, internal rhyme. These poems need to be read slowly as they linger in the moment before releasing one to ponder and discover the writer’s metaphors, and discovering one’s own.
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Watershed from Kelsay Books is an antidote to compulsion, to insistence, to the headlong rush into the next thing and the next. I am perfectly happy to pause and listen with warbler and bobwhite as the poet weaves from their stories one of longing for home (Of Warbler and Quail). I think I’m ready now for racoon to teach me how to live (Adaptable). At the close of Doppler Effect, I sit and listen long to the change in pitch of life I know I must expect, and prepare for, as my own parents age and travel their final days.
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Poetry, in its phrasing, its junctures, its juxtaposition, often moves at the pace of breath. Speak it aloud, pause when it needs you to. Stop and linger in the midst of these lines so that they may breathe into you.
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[hint: I re-type the poems for these posts (thank you to my freshman touch typing teacher), fingers slower than scanning eyes, speaking the words individually in my head, each syllable and carriage return (aka line break) – so often in the adagio the lines reveal secrets of how they mean.]
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Rae Spencer lives in Virginia, USA. As well as writing, she is a practicing veterinarian. Of Warbler and Quail first appeared in Bolts of Silk. Gravity first appeared in vox poetica.
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Gravity
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Water doesn’t want
It only weighs
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Neither will nor wisdom inform its seep
Downhill, settling to the lowest pool
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Rivers cascade and marshes ooze
Toward inlet and gulf
Where tides surge
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With the arid moon
Sere face lowered
In serene reflection
Over oblivious blue
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Depths that teem with tin and polyp
Oyster clades awash in brine
That neither murmurs nor sighs
Through a shell
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Held to the ear we hear
Blood’s heave
An eternal chorus
Singing sailors to sea
Dreamers to sleep
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Daughters to voice
Their bare feet anchored
In restless churn
On heavy, ancient shores
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Rae Spencer
from Watershed, Kelsay Books, American Fork, Utah; © 2023
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Ephemeral
Posted in family, Imagery, Photography, poetry, tagged Ana Pugatch, Bill Griffin, Engrams, family, Lena Shull Book Contest, nature photography, NC Poetry Society, NC Poets, NCPS, poetry, Redhawk Publications, Seven Years in Asia, Southern writing on January 12, 2024| 6 Comments »
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[with 3 poems by Ana Pugatch]
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My Mother’s Visit
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The woman sensed that I now
looked down on her. That the earth
had turned slowly
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into night. That her kin would only be
a distant moon. She watched
shards of light slice through the bamboo
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thicket, the stars’ edges harden
and cool. In daytime she marveled
at the strength of a water buffalo, how
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it shoulders could shift continents.
But I knew it would never be
enough.
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We looked down
from the bamboo raft, and below
the glass surface saw
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what flickered in turbid
darkness. Like my mother I thought
of the day when the river
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would freeze over –
and how I’d give up everything
to feel its final stillness.
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Ana Pugatch
from Engrams, Seven Years in Asia, winner of the 2022 Lena Shull Book Award of the North Carolina Poetry Society; Redhawk Publications, Hickory, NC; © 2023
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Above the river a west-facing ridge, protected, always cool and moist, and a narrow rustic trail that veers from the main — this is the path I take the day after Christmas. Winter brown, mossy stones and lichen, these are all I expect today, but here and there are premonitions. Ruddy toothed leaves, foamflower will bloom in March; bright green variegated heartleaf hides beneath pine needles today but soon will hide its own little brown jugs. So much muted beauty to share, but what is this! Hepatica is blooming!
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Right here along this little path is the first place I ever discovered native hepatica in Elkin. (I still clearly remember where I was standing when I added my first bird to my life list decades ago, a chestnut-sided warbler — do normal people hold onto these sorts of memories?) But this is December — the earliest we ever see hepatica in bloom is late February, preceding even the rush of trout lilies. Nevertheless here is one plant with a flower and two swelling buds. Too, too early. Winter too warm. I can’t say I’m filled with happy thoughts for our planet.
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A few days later I’m back with a camera. I can’t say I’m filled with happy thoughts of botany and phenology. Last night my brother and sister and I had a lengthy conference about our Mom’s decline. Tomorrow I’ll be sitting down with her and Dad to discuss a palliative care consultation and possibly moving to a higher level of care. I have to watch my footing carefully on parts of this trail – exposed stones, roots, erosion. Going downhill is when you’re most likely to fall. Mom’s descent has been steady for years, gradual, but the path ahead appears much steeper.
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This is interesting – a single clump of pinstriped leaves, Adam-and-Eve Orchid. And Cranefly Orchid with its magenta underleaf is plentiful here. When the surrounding trees lose their leaves these orchids make sugar from winter sun. Their own leaves will fade and disappear before spikes of tiny flowers appear mid-summer. Similar for the hepatica: last year’s flecked and nibbled liver-lobed leaves are making way for new green even now. Diminished light, cold and frost, life makes what it can of every season. I bend lower for a better look at each delicate yet resolute little family of leaves. Not a single flower to be found today.
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The Nightjar
+++ for S.
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In the evenings you fold your wings
in a hammock on the porch.
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your jaw clicks in imitation
of car locks. Your hair grows dark
to form a nest, twilight clouds:
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a puff of throat. Mangrove roots
of a slow entanglement; filaments of stars
hang above us.
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Don’t forget you say with the fan-eyes
of your tail as you fly away
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each morning. You’re known
to frequent other lives, exhale their smoke,
catch tiny deaths on the temple’s
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low wall. You’re known
for your camouflage, the concealment
of thoughts in daylight.
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But I’ll still hold you, hoping
you’ll stay. Even if your ones are hollow,
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fragile – I know one day you’ll roost
on steady ground.
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Ana Pugatch
from Engrams, Seven Years in Asia, winner of the 2022 Lena Shull Book Award of the North Carolina Poetry Society; Redhawk Publications, Hickory, NC; © 2023
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Where does a memory live? Where does its root take hold, where is its safe repository? The sudden intake of breath at one sepia photo slipped from a pile of many others? A brief waft of scent upon opening a long-closed drawer? A word spoken in an unknown language ferrying meaning beyond its meaning? A phrase written in a notebook long misplaced? A dream?
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Perhaps our memories are truly embedded in biochemical engrams deep in our hippocampus, hard-wired each in its own bud of synapse, but where is the map to its local address? Ana Pugatch knows to follow the narrow alleys and unmarked streets. Her poems are visions, aromas, sensations that may chill or warm. That may be fearful and unsettling or openly inviting. Her memories weave a world for me. Her world opens me to my own alleys, dim at times but becoming brighter; she opens me to streets I had forgotten. Or have yet to travel.
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Is it because the world is so big and there are so many of us in it that we react by closing ourselves and retreating? Are we threatened by the rush and clamor of ideas, practices, cultures? Is that why we draw a line around our tribe and push all others away? We imagine that to survive we must deny, even destroy, everything outside our comfortable patch of expectations. To my mind, humankind’s survival depends on just the opposite. We can’t close the door but most open it. Perhaps we do feel frightened when confronted with anything that challenges our assumptions, whether a person, an artifact, an idea. Perhaps. And perhaps responding to novelty with imagination rather than rebuff is what allowed Homo sapiens to expand while Homo neanderthalensis dwindled and disappeared (except for the handful of Neanderthal genes we’ve acquired and still carry!).
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Within poetry is concealed the map to our local memories. And in poetry we encounter shared memory and experience, doorways that may lead us out of our cloister and into the embrace of the different, the foreign, the alien, the frightening. As I read Ana Pugatch’s sensitive and sometimes ephemeral visions of her years in China and Thailand, and now of her presence in North Carolina, I am not an impartial observer watching a travelogue. I connect with those struggles. We are human, she and I and all the people she encounters. From the strangeness I feel a common thread winding around my heart. May that thread continue to pull me forward, and outward.
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Engrams, Seven Years in Asia is available from Redhawk Publications.
The Lena Shull Book Award for a full length poetry manuscript is sponsored annually by the North Carolina Poetry Society. Submission period opens June 15, 2024.
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Unfurnished
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I would write down the date if I knew
which day it was.
It’s Tuesday, I think,
and the baby cries upstairs.
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I’ve never seen the family;
I only know them by
the red and gold characters posted
on their door.
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Their laundry hangs
on the lines above mine;
Cantonese echoes through
my empty rooms.
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We share the same view of Zhuhai.
We share that space of sky and trees
and we open our doors
when it rains.
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Ana Pugatch
from Engrams, Seven Years in Asia, winner of the 2022 Lena Shull Book Award of the North Carolina Poetry Society; Redhawk Publications, Hickory, NC; © 2023
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Glad to hear from you Jenny. May life continue to surprise . . . ---B