POEM: Salkantay: or, Sea-level Gringo

The pass begins

The pass begins

Boulders lay strewn like the dice of God,
moss-covered, on a close-cropped blanket of green.

The Pass educated me,
I’d never known I could see snow and jungle in the same day.
I never knew how thin of air would sustain me.
I still don’t know how a fish out of water
has the death throe energy to spastically flop.

I was a tortoise: plod, stop, resume plodding, repeat.
If I’d been deprived of oxygen to the same degree as that fish,
I’d have just silently fallen off the switchback into the valley below.
Into boulder scree and the carcasses of sea-level dwelling gringos past.

DAILY PHOTO: Red Diamorpha

Taken March 16, 2013 near Arabia Mountain

Taken March 16, 2013 near Arabia Mountain

DAILY PHOTO: Stone Wall Breach in Black and White

Taken March 16, 2013 near Arabia Mountain Lake

Taken March 16, 2013 near Arabia Mountain Lake

DAILY PHOTO: Mossy Green Spring

Taken March 16, 2013 at Arabia Mtn, GA

Taken March 16, 2013 at Arabia Mountain, GA

POEM: The Street Sleeps

Litter skitters down the street,
stopping beseechingly at my feet.
No one likes the morning chill.
So this raucous street is now still.
Still but for the will to wake.
Shhh! Let it sleep for goodness sake.

POEM: Chirpy Bird in a Cedar Tree

Hey, little chirpy bird,
who rambles on without a word,
does your measure and your meter
tell of life in yonder cedar?

DAILY PHOTO: Niagara Falls

The Falls, taken in the early - mid 90's

Niagara Falls, taken in the early – mid 90’s

DAILY PHOTO: Mountains Near Tucson, Arizona

From a resort in Tucson, Arizona

From a resort in Tucson, Arizona

Taken in the mid-90’s.

DAILY PHOTO: Fungi at Yellow River State Park

Orange Mock Oyster Mushroom

Orange Mock Oyster Mushroom

I have it on good authority that these are a non-edible mushroom (i.e. keyword “mock.”) Taken yesterday (March 10, 2013) at Yellow River State Park near Stone Mountain, Georgia.

Two Tigers Circle In The Night

Taken at the Budapest Zoo

Taken at the Budapest Zoo

Two tigers circle in the night.
Neither eager to be first in fight.
Bellies low, they scrape the ground.
Each step pads without a sound.

One false step brings the pounce
of each fearsome muscled ounce.
They twist and writhe and snap,
each jaw a toothy, steely trap.

In the end one slinks away.
Both live on to later days.
A test upon the jungle floor
and each cat knows the final score.