Summer Glow

Outdoors, Poetry

God made sunsets for the desert.

Yesterday and a picnic, I thanked Him for trees, for shade.

But we made our home on the open grass with a porch for sunsets.

And the shade comes in the evening anyway In a dazzling, sumptuous display.

Recipe for Garden Lemonade:

  1. Place a few frozen strawberries in a glass.
  2. Cover with water. (let sit for 15-20 minutes)
  3. Brew a Lavender Tea concentrate: Steep 1 tsp. lavender (food grade) in ¼ cup boiling water for 5 minutes.
  4. Squeeze ¼ Meyer Lemon into the glass. (enough to make the water cloudy with lemon juice) (if using a more tart variety of lemon, may need to sweeten the drink)
  5. Fill glass with water/more ice or strawberries.
  6. Add about ¼ tsp. lavender water, or to taste.

Sunset Fruit Punch:

Strawberry Kiwi Fruit Tea + Orange Juice, mix to desired taste.

The Cottage, two sketches

Outdoors, Ponderings, Uncategorized

(written 6.26.19 while gazing at a watercolor on my desk)

Thatch flecked by ocean spray, dappled with sunlight through the cotton-bottomed clouds holds a shield over our heads. We cut it from the marshy edge–wiry grass on permanent tilt from the ocean’s wind. Plucking up reeds with knife and scythe we paused to ponder. Watching the shorebirds, we marveled at life beside our bundles of living things now marked for death. We’ll loft them high above our heads; they’ll keep us warm, their wet will be our dry.

There’s a life in their dying, a purpose, a plan. Held between the dew and the smoke of the hearth, held between the sun and the cool of the stone. A haven, a border, for a span. And then return to the marsh from whence they came. To serve another purpose.

And the grass springs up green again.

Stones stacked tight against Atlantic gusts. Holding up strong on the outside so all is soft and close within. We splashed them white in late spring, laughing as we worked, brightening the landscape with our steady cottage home.

A Forgetful One

Outdoors, Stories

“Bouldering tonight?” She flicked a twig into the fire’s orange belly. “I thought we could tackle the shelf below Ramshead.”

He pulled a thoughtful stick from the flames. “Okay. Visibility’s pretty good tonight.” His words made curls of vapor against the darkening sky. “You think you’ll be warm enough?”

“I’ll be fine once we get moving.”

He nodded and tossed his torch back into the fire.

“I did mean to bring a hat, though.”

“I know,” he said, pouring her some coffee. “It’s in the truck.”

A smile. “Thanks.” She caught the laughter in his eyes. “I know. I’m really bad about that, aren’t I?”

He gazed at her across the firelight, answered with a wink, and took a sip from his mug.

Dahlias

Outdoors, Stories

Meredith picked her way through the terracotta shards—the bright hope of a little garden shattered in the wind. She approached Thelma on the bench and shifted her feet a little, settling into the weight of silence.

“There’s coffee inside, if you want some.”

Thelma kept gazing off into the distance like a bronze statue.

“I could bring a mug out for you.”

Thelma didn’t blink. Meredith studied her for a minute, hoping, and then started to turn away.

“Them was dahlias,” said Thelma.

“I’m sorry?”

“Them was dahlias you walked through.”

“The flowers?”

“My Davy planted those. Fourteen years ago.” Thelma watched Meredith turn over a bit of gravel with her shoe. “Go on, sit down,” she said, patting the seat beside her. “I don’t bite.”

“It’ll probably take about eight to ten weeks.”

Thelma nodded. “That’s what the man said.”

“Somebody donated brand new cabinets, new carpet for the bedroom, tile for the bathroom. It’ll take a little while, but I think you’ll love it.”

Thelma reached for a terracotta shard at her feet and fingered it slowly.

“I’m grateful, Miss Meredith.”

“We’re very sorry about…” Meredith pulled up short as Thelma turned away to hide the glisten in her eyes. “We’re very sorry. As I said, eight to ten weeks. In the meantime…”

“I’ll sit out here when the weather’s nice. Most days it is.”

“It’ll be awfully noisy, lots of people in and out.”

“Never bothered me. People in and out. Kids hollerin’.”

“Still, I’m not sure it’s the best place for you to be.”

“Miss Meredith, you see them dahlias? Fragile, aren’t they? But they sit out here in the sun, in the rain. It don’t do them no harm.”

“That’s true. Flowers are meant to be outside.”

“Honey, I been outside most my life and it hadn’t done me any harm neither.”

“You’ll need a place to stay at night.”

“See that house up there?” Thelma pointed to a cottage painted in peeling pink, just beyond the borders of devastation. “Lizzie has a room fixed up for me.”

“Okay.” Meredith nodded. “I’m sorry about your dahlias. I’ll get someone to clean up these broken pots.”

“I’ll get ‘em. They make a good walkway. Turn ‘em over, press the points into the mud real good.” She demonstrated, sinking the shard she held into the soft black earth. Thelma glanced at the muddy boot prints leading up to the front porch. “Keeps the mud out the house.”

Meredith made a mental note to pick up a few pavers to help finish out the walkway. Thelma brushed the dirt off her hands and surveyed the work to be done.

“Can I get you some new flowers?”

Thelma grinned, wrinkling up wisdom around her quiet eyes.

“Don’t need much, Miss Meredith. Don’t need much at all.”

“These were special, I know. Couldn’t really replace what they mean to you, but…”

“They got lemonade inside?”

“Just coffee right now, but around lunchtime there will be.”

“All right. You bring me some lemonade with those flowers, and we’ll plant ‘em.”

“Yes, Miss Thelma. We’ll do that.”

Sparks from a Big Red Sun

Love Like Steel, Outdoors, Poetry

An ember-glow sun sinks through the trees,
Dips down, disappears,
And up comes a shower of sparks
Dancing over the spirited water
Where the roots run deep,
Blinking, saying it’s time to go home.
Pack up the teacup and a banquet of words.
Wrap up a few more stories for the road,
And watch the creatures of the evening, not shy.
Heron passes by, fishing,
And the lantern heralds of the night
Rise up like stars from the ground
To spatter the night sky.
We’ll follow the bright one home.
Steady north.
Eyes lifted up.
Time to go.

Speaking of “time to go,” they can sing this when they lay my body in the dust.

Headstrong is a little white calf

Outdoors, Poetry

Headstrong is a little white calf,
If I gave her a name, it would end in “-ita”
And it would mean something like “too big for her britches.”
The vet is here, and she doesn’t know what’s good for her.
The others, docile. She’s a fighter
On a concrete stage.
“Take me on, boys,”
She seems to say.
Three of them, pulling on her rope.
She whips her strong head this way and that,
Popping sweat from their arms.
But they hold on.
Headstrong is a little white calf,
Giving their money a run;
Stubborn is a Caribbean cowboy,
Born under a mountain sun.