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.












