Tuesday, July 24, 2007
Changes
Something was been eating Girlface's garden. Or somethings. Or maybe just a very hungry and tenuous solo beastie but it has been causing a great deal of heartache to the girl, who has spent many many hours preparing, germinating, planting and all the etc.s that go along with a garden. I was called upon for a solution. I chose a final solution. The old picket fence, with its accompanying screens along the bottom had to go. In its place a new, steel, 2"x2" squares, not ascetically pleasing but ultimately practical.
If I can figure out this stupid picture thing, then this is a picture several weeks ago of the garden as it was being prepared. Otherwise the picture is above somewhere.
Same thing of picture of me showing how dirty I got from the oil on the steel fencing. It was nasty stuff. Picture is either her or above. (Stupid Blogger, looks like it's above...)
So, after putting the new fence up and burying the fence edges, it looks as if the plants are finally safe. Girlface had such an outpouring of generous contributions of new broccoli, brussel sprouts, cauliflower and other plants to replace the ones that were eaten she's had to take out two oregano beds to make room for it all.
The new fence should be better protection but the old picket fence was pleasing in its way. Just a little change.
Wednesday, July 11, 2007
Heard You had Snow
The photo: the backyard, April 2007
The poem: 80's vintage. Girlface saw it and said she liked it. It fits today.
Heard You Had Snow
Heard you had snow.
Oh.
Should I sing you a song?
Serenade.
Hi,
how ya’ doing.
Long pause.
Such a long pause
and with life so
simply
complicated
and
far away.
We’re in different worlds
it seems.
I heard you had snow.
Monday, July 9, 2007
Hot Flashes on the Fourth of July
And a poem from the past.
Hot Flashes on the
Fourth of July
Whirly gigs of sparks and colors swirl
on the surface of the zodiac in Gasworks
Park, staining the dark bronze; remnants
of children’s delights. The hillside
overlooking the bay is surveyed and stalked
to the inch, a patchwork of flesh, picnic
blankets, spent beer cans and burnt paper
from an arsenal of popping toys. The crowds
strain upward, crane, count the minutes,
elbow into position, re-evaluate the area.
It starts. Fire in the sky. The dark
screen of night brightly colored
with searing light, shades of victorious
war.
in the figure of a fire-haired woman. She
leaves on a motorbike, unnoticed.
SP
First published in Maxtix 1980
Monday, July 2, 2007
Negotiations
Inasmuch as you are not a monk,
your vow of silence
seems to be less effective
in terms of resolving our problems
than it might.
While I weigh your 15 years
of rich experience
against my 48 years
of meager existence,
I still believe
that talking
could be of some help.
SP 2005