Thursday, July 25, 2024

Summer scenes seens

I’m happy to announce that the fields behind the house are home to a handful of black-eyed Susans, plus an abundance of spotted horsemint and what I’m guessing is round-headed bush clover. As the soil slowly dries out, I’m again taking a crack at doing some yard work, without overdoing it. So I was driving the tractor this morning to dump a garden cart full of leaf rakings and grass clippings that had been unattended to because it has been either too hot, too wet, or I wasn’t in the mood. There’s most likely other plants that have grown and developed since I last was in the fields, but I was just noticing the obvious changes.

photo of spotted horsemint (Monarda punctata)
spotted horsemint (Monarda punctata)
Photo by J. Harrington

Yesterday afternoon, three wild turkey hens again escorted a mob of poults through the yard, this time they came right up to the house to check the droppings from the bird feeder that hangs on the deck railing. The feeder is constantly being visited by chick-a-dees, rose-breasted grosbeaks, goldfinches, hairy, downy, and red-bellied woodpeckers, white- and red-breasted nuthatches, occasional red-winged blackbirds, bluejays, and sometimes “others.” We even get ruby-throated hummingbirds at the sugar water feeders once or twice a day.

After today we’re looking at a ten-day forecast full of temperatures in the upper 80’s+. That’s going to limit my yard work ambitions but we’ll see if we can just pick away at it before it gets too warm each day. Then we’ll sit in the air-conditioned house and read more of Sarah Kendzior’s They Knew. I’m checking to see if my cynicism is well-founded or misplaced. We are in election season you know.


July prayer to survive the summer

Today was the first day I saw
the father of the chicks
come to the antlers—First,

he landed on the doorframe—looked at me
hard—before making the short flight
to nest—

The mother came busily on his tail-feathers—
a small grey worm in her beak—
ushered him out of her way—

                                    *

I wonder about the day
these birds will first
take flight—

which instincts they’ll suspend
& which they’ll trust—which of the tiny birds
will last the Fall—

                                   *

I am ahead of myself again—wanted
to tell you about instincts—how sometimes
they betray the body—no, sometimes
I betray the body—
 

                                  *

The father is back again—nothing in his beak.
Their chirps are so much louder today—almost like tiny bells,
or water spilling—

 

                                  *

Here, there is a father.
There are not always
fathers—

but always, birds,
& sometimes, yes,

a window.

                                  *

My mind flips to a line
I love: You can fall a long way in sunlight.
You can fall a long way in rain.



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