Thought extinct, it survives
grazing hooves and drought
to stop development.
Thought extinct, it survives
grazing hooves and drought
to stop development.
Posted in Photographs, Poems 2014
Tagged Dry Creek, haiku, Kaweah Brodiaea, photographs, poetry, weekly-photo-challenge, wildflowers
Of this earth and all its erosion,
its granite and baked clay slopes
alive with cycles of seed and grass,
we revel in its wet bounty
and die a little in dry hard times.
We have become the cows we raise
in time, generations of calves that stayed
to nurse another—this earth their home.
We are the strong and lucky ones
to be living in the middle of a miracle.
Posted in Photographs, Poems 2014
Tagged Drought, Dry Creek, flower-friday, photographs, poetry, wildflowers
Black and brazen, the crows light close
to harvest nests in this speck of green
upon miles of dry and dusty brown as if
they own it—as if they labored here.
After last year’s cherry crop, Golden
Orioles homestead the Palo Verde tree.
In a patch of yellow monkeyflowers,
cottontails and quail cue up at the leaky
water trough, not a drop goes to waste.
Posted in Photographs, Poems 2014
Tagged Drought, photographs, poetry, water, wet seep monkeyflower, wildflowers
Posted in Photographs, Poems 2014
Tagged garden, haiku, Palo Verde, photographs, poetry, wildflowers
Not many left who care
to see the dance, a flash
of flesh beneath her leaves,
she teases him when he’s not
watching hawks and deer—
well before you ever get there.
Posted in Photographs, Poems 2014
Tagged Blue Oak, Bush Monkeyflowers, Greasy Creek, Manzanita, photographs, poetry, wildflowers
Posted in Photographs, Poems 2014
Tagged California Buckeye, Drought, haiku, photographs, poetry, weather, weekly-photo-challenge, wildflowers
Gates left open
to trails we explore,
sometimes I forget where I am.
Also known as Mountain Garland, Clarkia unguiculata is endemic to California, and in tribute to William Clark of the Lewis & Clark Expedition, one of many species that bears his name. Judging by its widespread distribution on the ranch this spring where I’ve never seen it before, I am assuming that it enjoys these dry times. Usually found on partially shaded road cuts, in soil that was disturbed years ago, it blooms on long stems 3-4′ feet high, generally in groups or colonies of a dozen plants or more. On a year where the diversity of wildflowers and the size of their blooms has been severely impacted, it’s good to see them flourishing. A wildflower that is easily overlooked until closer inspection.
Posted in Photographs
Tagged Clarkia unguiculata, Drought, Elegant Clarkia, flower-friday, Mountain Garland, Paregien Ranch, photographs, wildflowers
Posted in Photographs, Poems 2014
Tagged Drought, Greasy Creek, haiku, photographs, poetry, Pretty Face, Sierra Tidy Tips, Sulphur Peak, weather, wildflowers