Author Archives: John

Déjà Vu

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“I’ll take a rain or a calf anytime,” a saying I heard from Amy Hale Auker that I find especially applicable this year, one she heard from an old Texas cowman. And we’ll damn sure take twins as long as the cow can raise them.

While feeding yesterday, we found another set of twins, about a week old, on Top in the Greasy watershed. Looking much the same as 819’s pair HERE and HERE, it appears that 605 will raise them both. A little green showing at 2,400′.

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Dionysian Dance

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EARLY SPRING

They disrobe beneath a damp cloak of darkness
between us and the stars, between us and the gods
gone on to other tasks, other games to play
to leave us incubating, once again, with another test.

So it begins after years buffeted by weather, like
Jeffers’ stone outpost grinning through clenched teeth
as the sea roared, battering the cliffs at his feet,
the windblown beards of cypress twisted permanently.

They are finally naked now along the creek, limbs
undulating upon the tarnished gold of old clothes
strewn beneath them, reaching for heaven in unison—
the white tangle of sycamores in Dionysian dance

begins as their backdrop of brown slopes germinates
in grays at first, but as their feathered fingertips green
prematurely. No water in the creek, no prolonged
orgiastic celebration—they dress for an early spring.

Looking West

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Robbin’s family gathered here yesterday from Modesto, Merced, Fresno, Coarsegold and Bakersfield for a family get-together, in lieu of Christmas. It was drizzling when I started the barbecue fire, but by evening, a shepherd’s red sky delight.

DREAMING UPON TALL GREEN

                                        The wind keeps telling us something
                                        we want to pass on to the world:
                                        Even far things are real.

                                             – William Stafford (“Whispered Into The Ground”)

She lingers yet, tending every canyon, every wish
as if she’d never left—and we appeased like
suckled, scattered babies dreaming upon tall green.

This ground inhales her, swells with seed in the dark
overnight to root and reach for daylight at once—
out of the old dust, trillions of little heartbeats race

with wanting the same lush and steamy dreams
we all share, as the earth comes alive, like it has
every year. And for a moment, we are one

explosion free and full of hope for the world.
Her breath lingers in a mist within the limbs of oaks
gray upon the ridges, as if she’d never left.

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WPC: Selfie II

WPC: Selfie II

Our true selves, just shadows on the landscape.

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WPC: Selfie

WPC: Selfie

My wife and blog-partner Robbin caught me coming off the roof, weak-kneed, after sweeping the chimney. I played with the photo. For more about the Weekly Photo Challenge click HERE

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…under covers of clouds

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ALL-DAY

Redwood 2 x 6s drinking in the dark beyond the eave,
before steady sprinkling puddles to reflect gray dawn,
before the sorrel horses find new games to play

waiting at the manger for the slap of a screen door,
the deliberate movement of humans, hats tipped to the sky.
Thin rain, a second dose to a perfect prescription

to bind the deep and loose, grassless dehydration
of hills to hold their shape, promising color
we can only imagine after six-months of loading

and unloading hay to cows. Late to bed, the goddess
has returned—timid and quiet under covers of clouds.
With no excuses, no wild promises, she stays all-day.

THE MESSENGER

All grins, his hands wave clouds
over the desert of California,
palms flat over the bare Sierras,

smears them white, spreading green
into the Valley. His magic childlike
to promise and deliver weather,

godlike sure and we believe—
hoot and holler in the kitchen, tip
a glass and lift a log to the fire.

Relief in his face, I imagine
the poor bastard has friends again
speaking civilly at home

and through the TV screen—
but as messenger of the gods
it doesn’t pay to act like them.