Tuesday, November 24, 2009
Freeze-up
So there we were out in the bush. As usual. I was taking photographs of everything. Trying to fit everything in. The wasp nests. The frost. H was watching mayfly nymphs being swept from under the ice and into the culvert. It's a long way to May, I heard him say. At least I think that's what he said. Just at that moment the creek moaned. The lake moaned. It went on and on and on. Everything stood still. Black spruce. Willow. Alder. Heads bowed. Everything flushed.
Wednesday, November 18, 2009
He sees his breath, says his breath
I reached (for) McNiven. I found frost and a streetscape of leaves and parked cars, including my own, which I had parked first in front of the piano teacher's house, then further along, on the north side, in the sun. None of that needed finding, nor did the geese, the university students walking through, the blue sky pale. But I looked anyway, past the care home where McNiven school used to be; past the empty field to the northeast end of it, looking for signs of goalposts; past the fronts of houses to the rears.
The hydrant at Darke and McNiven
says 1958.
The hydrant at Darke and McNiven
says 1958.
Thursday, November 12, 2009
Itching to get on with things
It's hard to trust a morning this bright. Even the birds are glancing around, no doubt wondering what's up. And something is up. You can tell by the way the semis on the main drag are gearing down. As if the brightness is slippery.
I've seen such days come and go over the years. If you stare into the brightness long enough, you'll see someone coming down the street. Hood up. Small white dog on the end of a leash. It sniffs a rock, raises a leg. Everything golden. And it's then you realize it's time. Time to bury your head in your work.
I've seen such days come and go over the years. If you stare into the brightness long enough, you'll see someone coming down the street. Hood up. Small white dog on the end of a leash. It sniffs a rock, raises a leg. Everything golden. And it's then you realize it's time. Time to bury your head in your work.
Thursday, November 5, 2009
Should we
There was much debate before the City closed 25th avenue at Bell street. "All the traffic will come screaming down Bell," said people to the south. "Much safer for our children," said people to the north. "As far as we're concerned," said the City after a while, "25th street at Bell is now closed. It no longer exists."
Now people cut through--students heading to/from U of R, dog-walkers, shoppers heading to/from the Safeway a block west, kids with spray paint cans alive in the easements that lead to this space. I've harvested rhubarb that grows outside the fences in three or four locations here. All kinds of plants grow beyond all kinds of fences.
Every decade or so, I'm guessing, someone builds a new stretch of fence along the former-25th. "I suppose it's time," they say. "Should we keep the sign?"
Now people cut through--students heading to/from U of R, dog-walkers, shoppers heading to/from the Safeway a block west, kids with spray paint cans alive in the easements that lead to this space. I've harvested rhubarb that grows outside the fences in three or four locations here. All kinds of plants grow beyond all kinds of fences.
Every decade or so, I'm guessing, someone builds a new stretch of fence along the former-25th. "I suppose it's time," they say. "Should we keep the sign?"
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