Neighbors visiting
behind young girls and babies
headed to the gate.
Weekly Photo Challenge: “Gathering”
Neighbors visiting
behind young girls and babies
headed to the gate.
Weekly Photo Challenge: “Gathering”
Posted in Haiku 2015, Photographs, Ranch Journal
Tagged branding, gathering, neighbors, weekly-photo-challenge

Dear Paul, the sycamores are undressing
long white limbs, a slow strip tease of fiery leaves
along the creek, my chorus line of dancing nymphs
all these years awaiting storms—but hills are green,
cordwood stacked and banked in thick dry rounds
beside the splitter, hay in the barn, meat in the freezer.
We will be warm with family this Christmas,
come hell or high water—grandpa free
to be a gap-toothed troll if need be.
We come of age all-of-a-sudden, spur
or spurn propriety in slow-motion rides,
get our kicks and licks in where and while we can.
The grizzled old natives never left this ground,
never quite made it past the ridgelines
we rode together busting wild cattle
off rock-piled chemise into the open places
we’ll always gather, build a fire and camp
for eternity—for as long as I remember,
become this ground that claims my flesh.
Slow-sipped days, a joyous plodding now
from moment to moment navigating rains
and grass, old neighbors branding calves
one at a time to stay to see a perfect season—
or as close as we can get, it’s how we make it.
Merry Christmas. John
P.S. Thanks for Montana Quarterly—a luxury
to fish during California’s Dust Bowl—a godsend.

On the weather map,
a week of storms
four days out
turned down
to a heavy mist
to quell the flames
before the downpour,
wind and rain—
a tame disrobing
before a shower
of leaves that leave
the road between
barbed wire fences
full to the hubcaps
with bedclothes.
Posted in Photographs, Poems 2015, Ranch Journal
Tagged dancing nymphs, fall, sycamores, winter

Show starts at two
across the road
with wind and rain—
girls shedding
enflamed leaves
in a slow strip tease
of fire exposing
long white limbs
in a chorus line
of dancing nymphs
along the creek
all ready to go
skinny-dipping
come hell
or high water.
Now that I can see beyond the dust
and dead oaks crumbling, begging
for some purpose yet as cordwood—
now that I can breathe, inhale wet,
clear channels to broaden my senses,
taste and smell the green air stick
to my thirty flesh with these rains,
I can think about this distant planet
and its people we are lost among,
the overlap of corporate nations
profiting from wars—projects to busy
and worry a populace to pharmacies—
I feel no less helpless, no less
inconsequential than a fly
trapped in a barn of spider webs.
And they establish foundations and give
some of the money back.
– William Stafford (“Men”)
No pauses, anymore,
between wars.
No parades for heroes
stopping traffic
on Main Street—
no laurels for generals
to rest upon
when there are no ends—
just justified beginnings.
War is commonplace
like mountains in the distance
no one looks up to see,
too far from more
pressing matters
to consider unusual.

Vanity is absence.
– Wendell Berry (“Praise”)
Within the unfolding
Be here!
among waves of leaves
shed like rain
for a moment
of poetry—
somewhere other than
distant histories
and posed reflections.
Be here!
to witness miracles
while the mundane dance
within the grace
of animated metaphors
in the half-light
of dusk and dawn.
Be here!
on our knees
bringing life
with gentle breath
to dry twigs
upon dying coals—
to shadows melting
around our fire.

A series of seasons unfolding,
we chase the sun, pray for rain,
year after year—no two the same
in this canyon that sustains us,
trains habits and hones senses
into instincts like horses have,
like the wild wears with first breath
until the last for generations
in the same place—we know
this hard, yet resilient, ground:
clay and decomposing granite
dust mixed like concrete
with green seeds, given rain.
Waiting we become the place
and praise its perseverance.
Posted in Photographs, Poems 2015
Tagged generations, instincts, perseverance, place