We are temporary obstacles
for the birds, interrupting good times
and private conversations in the garden
wild, overgrown with weeds—
the only cover with water for miles,
coveys of quail titter and congregate,
preach the perils of Cooper’s Hawks
and housecats to flee on wheels
in a gray whir that startles the heart.
We serve feasts to Black Phoebes waiting,
low branch to porch chair. Roadrunners,
like government employees, come
and go as they please as if we weren’t here—
terrorize both Monarchs and snails
while we entertain woodpeckers
beneath the only oak with acorns
this dry year, a host of town pigeons
in the horse barn, we cheer the visiting
Peregrines in the dead snag. The Crow pair,
lovebird silhouettes nuzzling at the water trough
come evening, fly-by close to enough
to judge how much longer we will last.
Most birds don’t care much long. We
won’t be missed until we’re gone.








Great barn owl photo!
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Your cat, your cat. We’ve a white, fluffy, female Manx female just like it with gray overtones. I’ll get you a photo.
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He’s a character. I don’t know if it’s just him or all Manx. He definitely has a “ranch foreman” attitude.
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This photo/poem combination has topped my list of favorites! I would love to purchase the combo in a frame or “suitable for framing” condition.
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Thank you, Cathy. I don’t how to put the two together off the screen, but you’re welcome to try.
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Great perspective, John! Just finished reading Conrad Richter’s trilogy, The Woods, The Fields, and The Town (lent by Shirley), all the way through together for the first time. O Pioneers!
It’s raining somewhere right now. If only it c/b here.
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