Monthly Archives: November 2013

HOPE

Three months straight, hay
every third day to first-calf heifers
listening, leaning at the barbed wire

hoof to ear, for combustion—dawn’s
diesel fire and rumble starts
cold night dreams come true—

their chorus builds into new crescendos
as they fidget on the edge of stampede
to surround the house on the Sabbath.

We are not the center of their dusty world.
The truck, like clouds bring rain, brings
sweet alfalfa hay. We taste the air,

see under the oak trees across the canyon,
search for the first sign of dark passing ships
and remember how it was to watch it rain.

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Layers

Layers

The fluffy female Manx delivered by Kenny & Virginia McKee a few months ago, descended from our original Manx herd, has had over a dozen names since, from “Happy” to “Hefty”, “Cotton” to “Velcro”, but right now she’s “Fluff”. Photo by Robbin.

IN THE LAND OF OAKS

You won’t believe
how we got here
after the animals and bird people
met for the last time
to turn us loose on this ground.

You won’t believe
we did without electric
light at the end of the tunnel—
our cache of acorns
to get us through the winter.

You won’t believe
that we survived.
You won’t believe
we are the dust you breathe
in these dry times.

MANWOOD 2013

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Chimney swept,
woodstove cleaned,
we head uphill for Manzanita
just in case it rains, take hay
for girls we’ll meet along the way.

The old timers said
it took one year for the snowmelt
to get here underground
filling fissures and granite cracks
to springs and water troughs.

Fears now dispelled
with a bumper crop of squirrels
in spring, feed so short by fall
they become easy-pickings
to a bumper crop of hawks.

Dry ground as hard
as billy-hell, granite flakes
and clay, no matter how
much it rains
it won’t wash away.

 

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FOR THE BIRDS

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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.

 

Barn Owl

Barn Owl

DAY JOB

This is the life
we’ve chosen—free
to work what we want
or go bellyup beside the asphalt.

We believe in clouds,
the darker the better—
pray to the sky
and acknowledge every sign

that might mean something.
We grin like fools that know
it’s going to rain, someday
in Two-thirteen, or the next,

while we feed hay, our day job
where names don’t matter.
Each moment hangs on
the breath of cattle, steaming.

                                                  for Robbin

ROCKS AND TREES

When the lights dim
a man holds to solid things.
Even Sisyphus wants his rock
and well-worn hill, the lumps
and bumps to lean against—
pockets of rest rather than
succumb to the quick and easy
new monotony where nothing
ever stays the same.

At the hardware store, I wait
for bent old men to finish
passing medical procedures
over the counter like medals
won in war, lean on canes.
This is where the retired come,
or to the doughnut shop
for gossip, coffee and calories.
I want my rocks and trees.

November Weather 2013

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Warmer than normal, the moon is ripe for a rain. Despite light clouds, no moisture in the forecast.

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Habit

Habit

7:00 a.m.

 

 

SLIM ODDS

Sometimes instinct is not enough
to find the weak and wobbly way
along her belly—her first calf

born too small licks her brisket
as she gently lifts each leg
around it with toe dancing grace.

A dramatic ballet at dusk, then
into the headlights as you coach
and urge them both under your breath

beside me. Silently I cheer
life’s perseverance, her murmuring,
her nosing and licking—these best

chance moments for slim odds,
a catharsis to a tragic dance
that will have to wait ‘til morning.

LIKE COWS

We know something’s coming,
the forecast changes every morning—
self-assured weathermen unabashed.

Cows don’t care for holidays,
have no plans—listen for the diesel
mantra to fill their bellies.

Half the hay barn is unemployed
and shed no rain. We meet at the gate
at dawn, glad to see one another

doing well in our small world
of dust trails. We know something’s
coming because it always does.