MAY FLOWERS

The grass is turning slowly with temperatures in the mid-80s, the ground still moist in most places from the last rains. It’s been a month since I’ve been to the Top and Sulphur, so I took salt, mineral and my camera up into Greasy, most all day. Cattle and feed look great, a few strays. We’ll be gathering to wean in the coming weeks, we’ll get them then.

I decided today that this is the most diverse wildflower year since I been trying to learn their names. But you’d never know it looking from the road because the green feed has been so tall these last few weeks, it’s outgrown the flowers. Two new ones today, plus some more Kaweah Brodiaea that has just begun to bloom. Though the Monkeyflower looks a little like the ‘Kaweah’, another ‘Rare and Endangered’ wildflower on CNPS’ list, it probably is the more common Manyflowered Monkeyflower.

Kaweah Brodiaea – May 3, 2012

Kaweah Brodiaea – May 3, 2012

Pearly Everlasting – May 3, 2012

Elegant Clarkia – May 3, 2012

Pink Spineflower (Chorizanthe membranacea) – May 3, 2012

Windmill Pink – May 3, 2012

Pretty Face, Golden Brodiaea – May 3, 2012

Ithuriel’s Spear, Grass Nut – May 3, 2012

Common Brodiaea, Wild Hyacinth, Blue Dicks – May 3, 2012

Manyflowered or Kaweah Monkeyflower? – May 3, 2012

Silver Bird's-foot Trefoil - May 3, 2012

Silver Bird’s-foot Trefoil – May 3, 2012

American Booklime (Veronica americana) – May 3, 2012

MAY EVENING

Limp head and tail draped on the top rail,
a raven skins a young ground squirrel
that looks like a snake from a distance

I try to improve by posing nonchalantly
as an unfocused old man with a camera
puttering without direction. On the cusp

of summer, of green bleached brown,
and busy exposing bare ground, the local
crows and ravens keep track of me.

He drops low to coast hidden behind
the trailer, then just over my head,
black chisel beak dripping with entrails

towards where a nest ought to be—
just to show me he’s watching, and like
a mouse on the doorstep, earning his keep.

FIRE BREAK

Every once in a while I get my wish
of sixty years to drive tractor, little boots
breaking clods behind a disk–the loud,

unmuffled power lurching in the hands
of one man turning the ground up
with bugs and worms, clouds of backbirds

drawn like seagulls trailing fishing boats
on the ocean. The diesel purrs metallically,
the local crows and ravens glide low

over tractor and disk breaking into the earth.
Even the old red horse recognizes me
perched on this new contraption, sweet

smell of damp dirt and wants to play
along the fence, paw and roll–just
something attractive about a tractor.

April Bouquet

Tomcat Clover - April 30, 2012

White Mariposa - April 30, 2012

RACING PIGEONS 2

Perhaps a hundred since the first two
stopped for shade and water, forgot
home and stayed to raise families

in every barn and shed for five miles
in as many years, trying the high eaves
of human domesticity. Their nesting coos

in the rafters turn to a singing flap of wings
when swashbuckling raven lights, like
Zorro, upon the horse pens. Gentle feathers

rain from the roof. A black cape walks
the top plate collecting eggs, taking naked
squab to a disheveled nest of kindling.

ON OLD KNEES

We pray in strange ways and
genuflect before the gods at hand—
thin skinned, mending fence,
drops of blood from rusty barbs
on blond stems, sweat spots
in the dust when it will not rain.

And when it does, we spray
and hoe weeds at the gates
for rattlesnakes, make fire breaks
to hold the leap of flames at bay
and thank God every summer
evening for another day of feed.

Between weathermen, we hear
news of another world churning
with drama and disaster, and turn
instead to native totems that grace
the land, then nod to our gods—
believing in more than we understand.

Sunset After Rain

With nearly an inch of rain, skies cleared before sunset.

Wagyu: Before and After

Wagyu X, April 25, 2012

Born around the 1st of October, I photographed this pair while pumping water for the 1st-calf heifers we moved yesterday, waiting for the tank to fill. Below is the only red calf in the bunch and his mother, plus a link to our post seven months ago.

DCJ October 1, 2011

Wagyu X, September 30, 2011

More typical Wagyu X calves below.

Wagyu X calves, April 25, 2012

Wagyu X steer, April 25, 2012

Under gray skies…

(click to enlarge)

…and welcome threat of rain, our first calf heifers with their Wagyu X calves got a little bogged down in our neighbor’s grass as we drove them to a pasture near our shipping corrals and scales. The calves will be processed for their 2nd round of vaccinations next week, then weaned and shipped about the third week in May. A beautiful day so far, waiting on some rain this evening to freshen everything up before the grass turns. Turned out to be a pretty fair feed year after all! Hope the latest ‘Mad Cow’ flack doesn’t impact the price too much—always something.

FOR ALBERT AND AMY

                         Until he extends his circle of compassion to include
                         all living things, man will not himself find peace.

                                                       – Albert Schweitzer

We shoulder ourselves up amid the purple, red,
blue and golden wildflowers amid cascades of grass
seed arched, hanging heavily, picking our way

around moments, trying to leave no track—
speckled Killdeer eggs in gravel driveways,
we choose who to include within our circles

when they amuse us, when we grow up. And so
it goes ‘til we get old, if we’re lucky, making-up
for youth. But there are certain irritations that enflame

outrage and engulf us, the wars beyond our barb wire
we cannot win with battles, that will not let go.
Like the Yokuts leaving game on the doorsteps

of early settlers, what have we to offer our demons?
For better or worse, the end is the same—but perhaps
more a matter of how we choose to get there.