Haiku-a-day

Tender to tender—
we walked today in the cold,
now dreaming of it.

Haiku-a-day

The day we searched for
Lady’s slippers in the woods,
warmth rose with their heads.

Haiku-a-day

The river cuts through
the land, me — what’s forgotten
in that cold current.

Haiku-a-day

Robert Motherwell
loved the thick black line: thrown, drawn—
coaxed out from hiding.

Haiku-a-day

The path takes us to
the shoulders of the forest
where gentle vines grow.

Haiku-a-day

What seems bleak to us,
the February forest,
of course, it is not.

Haiku-a-day

I’m awake, awake,
the doors and windows are open,
my hands out, palms up.

Haiku-a-day
Canadaian geese resting in a river on a sunny day that has crept on to the banks after snowmelt.

Geese take their places,
the river, over its banks—
the feel of Sunday.

Haiku-a-day
Melting ice and snow forming pools on the forest floor with a moss covered log in it.

Sun wakes winter moss,
ice that will become spring pools
melts and reflects sky.

Haiku-a-day
A sunburst lichen blooming on a fallen tree branch.

A sunburst lichen
blooming in January
we walk and we breathe.