Haiku Journey

by Kimberly Blaeser

 

 

i. Spring

 

the tips of each pine

the spikes of telephone poles

hold gathering crows

 

may’s errant mustard

spreads wild across paved road

look both ways

 

roadside treble cleft

feeding gopher, paws to mouth

cheeks puffed with music

 

yesterday’s spring wind

ruffling the grey tips of fur

rabbit dandelion

 

ii. Summer

 

turkey vulture feeds

mechanical as a red oil rig

head rocks down up down

 

stiff-legged dog rises

goes grumbling after squirrel

old ears still flap

 

snowy egret—curves,

lines, sculpted against pond blue;

white clouds against sky

 

banded headed bird

this ballerina killdeer

dance on point my heart

 

iii. Fall

 

leaf wind cold through coat

wails over hills, through barren trees

empty garbage cans dance

 

damp September night

lone farmer, lighted tractor

drive memory’s worn path

 

sky black with migration

flocks settle on barren trees

leaf birds, travel songs

 

october moon cast

over corn, lighted fields

crinkled sheaves of white

 

iv. Winter

 

ground painted in frost

thirsty morning sun drinks white

leaves rust golds return

 

winter bare branches

hold tattered cups of summer

empty nests trail twigs

 

lace edges of ice

manna against darkened sky

words turn with weather

 

now one to seven

deer or haiku syllables

weave through winter trees

 

Northern follows jig

body flashes with strike, dive:

broken line floats up.

 

From Apprenticed to Justice by Kimberly Blaeser (Cromer, England: Salt Publishing, 2007). The first four stanzas of this poem appeared on an outdoor placard in the Poetry Walk program sponsored by the North Olympic Library System, with support from the Port Angeles Friends of the Library. I photographed this excerpt in May of 2024 on the Spruce Railroad Trail by Lake Crescent, near Port Angeles, Washington.       +