
wind stills, an unusual calm settles
geese fly so low, the whir of wings floats earthward
two hoot owls call, haunting echoes in the canyon
cerise, vermillion, amber encompass the land
a chill creeps slowly through ancient junipers

wind stills, an unusual calm settles
geese fly so low, the whir of wings floats earthward
two hoot owls call, haunting echoes in the canyon
cerise, vermillion, amber encompass the land
a chill creeps slowly through ancient junipers
An inspiration to write a poem every day for seven days, release negativity, be yourself no matter what others say or do.
owl hoots, perches atop a dead juniper
fire and cerise sunsets
autumn chill floats through the air

I look .
The fly floats in my glass of Seven Deadly Zins,
full to two golden flowers half way up the rim.
What kind of flowers?
I look.
Unsure, I watch the fly struggle, floundering around
in the deep red, the color that turns tongues
purple drunk.
I look.
Dead. It floats.
Not poor, frugal. I debate.
Should I throw the wine out? Drink it?
I take the silver teaspoon–from the six piece
set Father gave Mother in 1946 on their
first anniversary–dip it in the dark, remove
fly, throw it down the antique copper sink drain.
I pick up the glass.
I look,
swirl the wine around in the bowl, take a sip.
Surely 15 percent alcohol kills germs.

It was past seven, time to fix dinner. Since I live a lone, I often fix dinner for two, save half, and have dinner ready for a hectic evening after work. Just warm in the microwave.
Cod with Fennel, Mint, and Lemon
Two cod loins–one if extra large
1 heaping tablespoon chopped garlic
Olive oil
1/2 to 1 cup finely sliced small carrots
1/2 large poblano pepper, seeded and coarsely chopped
several cauliflower florets thinly sliced
crushed dried mint
essential oil of lemon and fennel (if you do not use essential oils,
you can use 1 tsp. ground fennel and lemon juice to taste)
Pour enough olive oil in a ten inch skillet to totally cover the bottom. Saute garlic and carrots in the olive oil until carrots are almost tender. Sprinkle a small handful of mint over the garlic and carrot mixture. Add cauliflower and poblano pepper. When poblano peppers are about to change color, add the cod. Sprinkle drops of lemon and fennel essential oil over the cod–or the ground fennel and lemon juice. Cook until the cod flakes. Serve over rice. I use basmati.

Doors open, wind whispers
Cottonball clouds drift in pale blue
Reflections on early autumn afternoons

Remnants of summer remaining
Sunrise over canyon walls, hoot owl calling
Hints of autumn lurking



The crematorium handed me the 6″ by 4 ” dark brown wooden box. I knew it would be heavy; Isabella was an eighty pound wolf dog. I thought I was prepared.
Driving home, memories:
March 2006, daughter calls; two year old grandson wants a beta. I drive to PetSmart. Daughter tells me I must see these unusual, incredible seven-week-old puppies. Alert brown eyes look at me. Too big, black ears wiggle. The label says wolf, German Shepard, Blue Heeler. The two remaining puppies look like light colored German Shepherds or Belgium Malinois. I had not planned to get a dog, not yet.
Two years later I move into my new house: canyon edge, horses, bobcats, coyotes, foxes, road runners, mockingbirds, rattlesnakes. Isabella guards her property, sits on the patio where she can check for invaders. She rarely barks, growls. When she does, high alert–I check. Neighbor dogs, coyotes, foxes, chased off–not bobcats. She watches them.
I remember the day she dismembered a skunk, drug the carcass everywhere. After eleven baths at PetSmart, the skunk smell remained. The one day she growled, I shocked, investigated–a man walking down the arroyo toward the house. Growls became increasingly loud. Out on the patio, she stands, the man sees her, turns and runs. I feel safe, Isabella guarding, telling me if something unusual occurs. She’s mixed breed; I think she’ll live long.
Every morning, evening, she completes horse chores with me, chases bunnies, roadrunners. Two months ago, I, mesmerized, watch her catch, gobble two half-grown bunnies in less than one minute–nothing left. Mixed breed; I think she’ll live long.
Friday morning she helps me with chores, chases bunnies. Friday afternoon she can hardly move. At the vet, blood work like a four year old; x-ray shows a little something wrong. They give her two shots, schedule an ultra-sound for Saturday morning at another vet’s. Meds working, Saturday morning she’s her usual lively self, eager to travel in the truck, nose wet and cold.
Ultrasound vet tells me there’s little hope. Shocked, I stand there. “If she were your dog, what would you do?”
“Put her to sleep. She’s not in pain. She has a tumor the size of your small fist on her intestines–might be cancer, hard to operate.”
I look at the vet, frozen.
At 8:00 Wednesday evening, I open the box, take out the bag of Isabella’s steel grey ashes, walk out to her patio spot, the place where she guarded her kingdom, toss a handful of ashes into the wind, watch them float and scatter down into the canyon, tears tracking down my face. I close the bag, walk to the place where our long yearling colt, Star, is buried, dig an eight inch hole, bury another handful of ashes. I take the one tablespoon of ashes left back to the house, put them back in the black velvet bag and into the box with the card with her paw print, the crematorium certificate, the sympathy card signed by all the employees where they euthanized her, place it on top of a stack of old magazines in the Chinese cabinet.
At bedtime, I forget, go to call her in. This morning I find her hairs–she shed so much, wolf undercoat. Evidence of her presence permeates.
It will never end.

This evening I am the artist at a local Meet the Artist event in Amarillo, Texas. This event occurs bimonthly and past presenters have included musicians, photographers, and painters. While I sing and take photos, my presentation will include reading poems from my book, “On the Rim of Wonder” and new, unpublished poems and talking about the writing process. While I honestly thought few would be interested in the latter, several people have asked me specifically to discuss this.
Although I consider myself a writer, I do not sit down on schedule and write every day like many writers. Inspiration, thoughts, come to me sporadically. I write creatively exactly like I used to write college papers, magazine articles, etc.; I look like I am doing nothing, but in reality, all these ideas run through my head and finally gel. Then I sit down and write it all at once.
The following is one of the poems from my book which I plan to read this evening:
Aging
“Rage, rage against the dying of the light.” Dylan Thomas
Custom says, “Age gracefully.”
Are they crazy, dumb.
Who wants to look
old
wrinkled
grey?
They lie.
All of them.
Who wants a broken mind
confused
unfocused
lost?
Shoot me!
Burn my bones.
Scatter them
in the desert sands
to feed
desert willow where
rattlesnakes lie
searching for shade.

horses, running, bucking
storms coming
later, calmly graze together
a lesson


w

Years of bones piled up. Cattle–calves, yearlings, the old–heaped 100 yards
northeast of the ranch house, upwind from the summer, southwest prevailing
winds. Mostly black baldies, a few Charolais. Old bones bleached white,
disintegrated. Some new bloated bodies rotting, nauseating. Others just sundried
hide stretched over skeletons. Drug here by tractor, the dead. Shipping fever, parasites,
drought, extreme weather.
A ranch’s history written in bones.
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