Thursday, January 28, 2016

Adequate - Lucille Hamilton


Adequate is an angular word,
full of sharp elbows,
acting out its role
in the scheme of vocabulary.

Come upon it and
expectations deflate
to a level just above mediocre.

It does its job so well,
there is no other word
that comes to mind
that can stand in its place:
It is superb
just being adequate.


               ***

Sunday, January 24, 2016

So Far From Montana - Beverly Koepplin

How did I get this far from Montana?

In my heart, I drive straight roads
that go on forever through sweet spring air
and under wide open skies with no frames.
In my life, I drive broken-up streets
that go one block at a time through bloated gray air
and under skies with man-made horizons.

In my life, I work hard through days
defined by paper and metal mechanical noise
and metered out by hours I count till end.
In my heart, I sit on a porch and watch
the leaves glow then burst and fall,
and I have no need to count at all.

In my heart, I spend this time of summer
by a cool river that flows under cottonwood trees
and wonder only how a fishing line can arc just so.
In my life, I know that it is summer time.
but that means only that through the long evenings
I will walk this earth here and pretend it is Montana.


How did I get so far from Montana?

June 1999
                                    ***

Wednesday, January 20, 2016

Time Machine - Meta Strauss

Rufford Grabowski removed the thick eyeglasses from his balding head and placed them on the top of the antique roll-topped desk. He wiped his face with his bandana; doing his best to remove the sweat and dust from the creases in his face. He swiveled his chair around and stretched his long arms above his head and equally long legs out from his body in a near-horizontal position. He yawned.  It was almost time. He did everything he could to prevent the incident, but he knew it would happen and folks would lose their lives. The rest was up to fate and he hoped it worked in his favor.

He tried to remember how long he’d been working. Could it be possible it was over 48 hours or was it a week, or longer? Once he got into a project he lost track of time. Funny thing about that since time was what he worked with. Manipulating it. Too bad he couldn’t do the same for his body. He was feeling aches on top of aches. He’d heat up some water and take a good hot soak. He would feel better then and he wanted to be alert when the action started. He didn’t want to miss the action.

As Rufford reclined in the old porcelain tub he thought back to when he was ten and he first began fiddling with his granddad’s ancient pocket watch. It was the man’s most prized possession; that, a gigantic history book and an old trunk. He idolized his grandpa, the only parent figure he ever knew. He had a photograph of the people Papajohn said were his parents, but as many times as he stared at it, he couldn’t garner any affection for them.

Papajohn was the one who provided for him. Papajohn was the person who showed him how to hammer a nail so it went in straight; was the one who took him rabbit hunting when he wasn’t even five; the one who taught him to read, to do math and showed him first hand about history and the world. He was the person who told him secrets and trusted that he had enough sense to keep them to himself. His granddad was the one who introduced him to traveling backwards in time.

 “You see, Ruff, I’ve lived a lot longer that anyone you’ve met so far. No one but you really knows how long I’ve been around. My earliest memory was on Mr. Tom Jefferson’s inauguration day.”

Rufford listened as Papajohn told of that day. Twelve-year-old John Williams was there with his parents, standing with the dignitaries beside the flag draped stage as one of the country’s founders, the very author of the Declaration of Independence, accepted the office of the Presidency.  “I remember the crowd and the cheering, then everything went blank and I woke up in a feather bed in a strange house with the watch in my hand. It was hot, but a moist breeze blew in the window cooling me off. I mostly remember the smell. It was of the ocean.”

“You had to be scared to death. What happened next?” Rufford questioned his grandfather. “Tell me everything.”

“I got up and put on the clothes laid out on my bed. I didn’t recognize them but they fit so I put the watch in a pocket and explored the house. No one was there, no sign of my parents or anyone else, but there was plenty of food. I wandered around the farm. The house was on a cotton farm with rows and rows of dried out cotton plants. I walked into the town. There was a beach and an ocean, nothing like I’d ever seen before but I recognized what it was from pictures. I asked every adult I saw where my parents were. They looked at me like I was crazy. The days went on like that. I cried, I threw things, and finally gave up, realizing I was alone in a strange world. The time was 1866 and I was in Galveston, Texas. I don’t know what happened to the missing years. I just know my life started over again. It was twenty years later when I found you. That changed my life forever and I’m grateful.”

Rufford climbed out of the tub refreshed. He always liked thinking about Papajohn. He dressed in fresh jeans and an oversized white cotton shirt and sandals. He rummaged through his cupboard gathering a stash of food. He ate standing up, drinking water from the hand pump. He gazed out the window at the gulf in the distance. He still lived on Papajohn’s farm, the only home he’d ever known. He knew he could update the place but he preferred living simply. He knew everyone thought he was weird, probably was a fact that he was, but this way no one bothered him. He made a living doing odd jobs all paid in cash. He didn’t have a social security number or a bank account, didn’t own a computer but did use the ones at the library.

Rufford’s first trip backwards happened by accident. Being a curious kid, he hid in the trunk in Papajohn’s workshop hoping to eavesdrop on his grandpa. When he peeked out he was no longer in the workshop but was in the corner of an ornate office. His grandfather was talking to a tall redheaded man, dressed in a long coat and short pants, who was pacing the floor. The boy listened quietly, unseen by the two men.

“Yes, sir, I understand it’s difficult to realize your own Vice President, Aaron Burr himself, is organizing a military expedition against Spanish possessions, but it is true.  I have this from very accurate sources and can prove all that I have told you. Burr plans to separate the western territories from the main states taking the side of Spain and Great Britain. I beg you Mr. President, please do all you can to stop Burr or we will certainly end in a war and will loose the union. You are the one person who might be able to turn the tide.”

Rufford watched as the man shook Papajohn’s hand, patted him on the back and left the room swearing to issue a proclamation that day to prevent the conspiring traitor from succeeding in his treasonous activities.

When his grandfather discovered the stowaway boy he was shocked, but not angry. He stuffed him back in the trunk and before Rufford could ask a single question the two were back, safe in the workshop. 

That was the night Papajohn explained about the watch and his strange ability to travel in time, about how he tried to make a difference by using the knowledge in the history book. In this case, if Papajohn hadn’t warned President Jefferson, Burr’s plan would have succeeded.

Grandfather and grandson read the history book together. The book was revised and explained how Aaron Burr was arrested near New Orleans shortly after his visit with Thomas Jefferson but escaped to England. The war of 1812 resulted but the United States was victorious.

“Rufford, it could have been so much worse if Jefferson had not been ahead of the game. The western states were safe from Spain. Spain had to give up Florida which joined the union. I always did like Thomas Jefferson in spite of his apparent double standards. I am most pleased that his last written piece acknowledged that his greatest desire was that the blessings and security of self-government would finally, someday, be given to all of mankind.”

Through the years Rufford made many trips with his Grandpa. They met with several Native American groups and with various members of congress trying to negotiate a peace and fair distribution of land. They tried to prevent the passing of a Georgia law that prohibited the education of slaves but had no success. Some of their proudest moments were in the 1820’s when they helped establish the Underground Railroad. In 1832 they helped establish Oberlin College in Ohio that admitted Negros. They helped build a dam around a lake before a big flood happened in Alabama. If they hadn’t done that, hundreds of people would have died. 

 “No Papajohn, you can’t leave. We have lots more to accomplish together.”

“Rufford, I’m past tired and it’s time for you to take over. Maybe you can do something useful with all this firsthand experience. Maybe you’ll even learn to move forward in time.”

“Papa, I can’t do this alone. You have to stay and help me.”

On his twenty-fifth birthday Rufford’s grandfather left him. His grandpa died of what he told Rufford was old age. “Son, it’s your time to make a difference. The watch allowed me to be a part of history and live longer than most. Now it’s yours. I’ve had a great run. Change bad events when you can and don’t be disappointed when you can’t stop the inevitable."

That was years ago and now Rufford was tired. It was time for him to find a grandson, someone who could take over the family business. He knew he would find that person soon. He was traveling to Selma, Alabama tonight and there was a boy who would lose his parents. That boy was going to find a gold watch in his hand when he woke up tomorrow morning on the farm near the beach in Galveston.
                                                            ***

Saturday, January 16, 2016

Regal Crow - Lucille Hamilton

Sassy Black Bird
marching down the street
a one-bird parade of crow
out for his morning's surveillance
of his bird-dom,
being certain that every bird and being
knows that This is My Territory
and You
are here at my sufferance, my noblesse-obliging.
Crows don't need crown or scepter;
their attitude does the work for them.
There's a lot we could learn from crow.

                                   ***

Tuesday, January 12, 2016

Sailing on the Edge - Michael James

People whose recreational activities propel them to the upper edge of their skill, strength, and endurance frequently experience a euphoria denied the more pedestrian of our species. Rock climbers, skiers of steep slopes, hang gliders, parachutists, deep water scuba divers, motorcycle racers, and sailors of high performance dinghies and catamarans, wax eloquent when they describe their latest feats. To do so is to relive the moments when they were fully in the present, when their attention was so riveted on their activity as to exclude anything else happening around them or any other concerns regardless of how important they were before. Attention equals survival in those moments. 

Those people who like to sail high performance craft refer to what they do when driving their boats almost out of control, as “sailing on the edge.” One click further in on the main sheet, one degree further off the wind, one degree more of heel, and they’d be over, over the edge, over their limit, out of time, and out of luck. While they’re sailing on the edge, it’s ecstasy. When they go over, catastrophe. But before I attempt to describe that ecstasy, let’s go over the edge and see why it is avoided.

With a dinghy it would be a matter of simply tipping over, getting wet, standing on the centerboard to right the boat, falling into it, bailing it, and sailing on, water pouring out of the holes designed for it to leave. With a catamaran, it’s a little more complicated. It might not simply be capsizing, though that’a bad enough in a cat because not every sailor has either the strength or the skill to right a cat: one hull must be pressed slightly into the water, while the other lifted out of it using righting ropes. It may be that instead of merely capsizing, the boat pitch polls, that is it performs a sort of cartwheel in which the bows bury their noses in the drink, effectively stopping the front of the boat, while the stern keeps going. In this case the only place it can go is up which it does with consummate grace, often slinging the crew in a graceful arc at 45 degrees to the water over the now stationary bows. They would have been hooked by the belt to a wire coming from high up on the mast, using their weight to keep the boat level by standing on its windward edge, feet slipped into loops, hands clutching sail sheets. When they go over, feet come out of loops and hands release sheets as they fly up and away into the water.

As you can imagine, that’s not a lot of fun because righting a catamaran can be exhausting, especially if you are single-handing the boat as I was when I pitch- polled. I had been surfing on an outgoing tide at the entrance to the Petaluma slough, on San Pablo Bay, on a 16ft Hobie cat. The wind was strong and steady, probably blowing at 20-25 knots. The waves in that shallow part of the bay were a little unpredictable, anywhere from one to two feet high, but enough to allow the boat to get up and surf beautifully. The only problem with surfing a little cat like the Hobie with its short bows, is that when the sterns come out of the water as the bows plunge down the front of a wave, your rudders are hardly wet, so you have no steerage and the boat can easily round up into the wind which will heel you over and bury the lee bow in the next wave ahead. As I said earlier, the stern doesn’t want to stop just because the bow does, and it climbs up into the sky in the blink of an eye. But back to the joy of sailing on the edge.

First you have to be on or in a fast boat. Then you need a big wind; around 20 knots will do. And it helps to have very little chop, though the swells can be big. Chop slows you down, as each little wave smacks your bow and wants to stop it. Swells are fun because they’re like running downhill in sand dunes, though sometimes the wave ahead breaks clear over the deck. 

Fundamental to successful sailing is the distribution of the crew’s weight: members must be agile enough to move quickly in response to the needs of the boat to stay as flat on the water as possible. So the crew hikes out over the edge of the boat as it heels to leeward (away from the wind) in order to keep it from capsizing and to get max lift from the wind.

Usually the crew wants to get as much speed as it can from the boat, so it trims the boat for a broad reach, that’s a course midway between sailing across the wind and with it, or downwind. It is often the fastest point of sail for a boat. As the crew settles down on this tack, feeling in control of the boat, getting the most out of it in terms of speed is the order of the day. They trim the sails by tightening or slackening the sheets; the rudders begin to hum; even the centerboards tune in and whole boat kind of tightens up into a living thing that seems to want to skim across the top of the water rather than through it. 

It’s at this point that the hydrofoils on the America’s cup boats would lift the hulls clear of the water, reducing the drag, and putting the boats on their way to 40 mph. The thrill is intense and the tension of sailing the boat as fast as you know it can go lifts crews on any cat close to ecstasy. People whoop and holler as loud as they can. If they weren’t nailed down into position, out on the trapezes or on the grinders, they’d jump up and down with glee. It’s those moments that make the eyes sparkle when a person is recounting the event at the bar after a race. The attention is tightened up like a violin string, the body compressed and taught, the breath labored yet regular.  Muscles tighten and loosen as reflexes dictate, as the boat moves towards or away from disaster at ever greater speed. Spray from the boat shredding the surface of the water blinds those not wearing goggles, smacks against the sails and mast and any bodies in its way.

When the skipper comes to the end of a tack on a broad reach, he usually steers dead down wind for the leeward mark or buoy, which slows the cat down to half speed, and the crew gets ready to come about, that is, to turn the boat into the wind to gain upwind distance, so they can do the whole thing over again. They relax for a few minutes, let the experience slide into memory, clear the decks, and get ready for the next tryst with the wind.
                        ***

Friday, January 8, 2016

Maybe Next Spring - Russ Bedord

Mark fell once on the icy slope leading from the North Wind Bar, which showed he was drunker than usual, though he wouldn't admit it.

“Snow on ice,” he mumbled—unusual, because he rarely talked to himself. He just sang—old songs like Sweet Adeline, O Tannhauser, My Darlin' Clementine, and America—all from his few years of schooling. He occasionally warbled snatches of juke box tunes absorbed during visits to the bar. He’d catch himself singing one, stop and try to remember where he'd heard it. Unable to finish even one, the old favorites sufficed.

The wind ferreted under his heavy coat and licked his back with an icy tongue. Mark pulled his collar tight, adjusted his scarf to cover his cheeks, and yanked his hat's ear flaps down to keep out the cold.

Snow blew in swirling clouds, drifting deep. In town it quickly wiped out the footprints of the motorists who had abandoned their cars. No sensible person would choose to be out on a night like this. In a neighborhood with no guiding street signs, Mark trusted his memory to find a way across the swampy, brush filled valley to his hillside home.

Most evenings Mark puttered around his three-room shack the way he had for twenty-three years. Often in the late afternoon he sipped a whiskey and pondered in a dull way. Problems were never quite resolved. They sat there like the stars and other deep mysteries—wells of wonder. When the bottle emptied, he'd stagger to bed. Or he'd fall asleep in a worn, stuffed chair, molded after years of use to his little body. When morning came, he'd nibble something, make his lunch, then hike to town for the ride to work.

Mark had dropped out of school at thirteen. He was small, but wiry and strong, which served him well in numerous schoolyard fights. His slow wit attracted teasing and crippled his replies, so he learned to answer with his fists.

But he hated to fight, so he gravitated to a solitary occupation. Shortly after leaving school, he began pulpwood logging, which seemed the right thing to do. Being alone in the forest by day and home at night was just fine. 

It was a happy day when he bought this shack, because it gave him the freedom he wanted. No longer need he be the butt of smart ass town folks. Their blandishments and arguments quickly passed beyond his understanding anyway. When he felt like washing, he did. When he felt like changing, he did. When he felt like eating, he did. Sausage, bread, turnip, a piece of fish—was enough. Drunken reveries replaced conversation.

But Mark found he couldn't always be alone. The need for companionship led him to spend Saturday nights at the North Wind bar. The antics of the crowd there provided a kind of entertainment. When the evening's stupor grew with the thickening atmosphere of tobacco smoke and stale beer, he became invisible. The occasional fights interested him, recalling the days when he was at the center of every brawl. When the bar closed, he went home. 

Not this night, but on other nights, Mark's rare urges were sometimes satisfied by Dirty Bessie. For a drink, she would sit on the next stool, open your fly and play with you until you came. She let you put it away yourself. “Cheaper than a whorehouse” was the nicest thing Mark had heard anyone say about her.

On such a vicious night, the bar was empty. Missing the crowd, Mark drank too much. Only the cold penetrated his drunkenness, and it was hard to walk in the deepening snow.

The hooded view between his hat brim and scarf was a port for the wind-blown snow to hit his skin like icy needles. Beyond, the world was featureless, a blend of dull shades and blinding wind. At first, shallow areas between the drifts gave respite from the heavy going, and the road was partly visible. 

He held alive the image of his cozy pot-belly stove. He hoped the coals were still smoldering so they could be fired quickly. Thinking of how a house is cold until heated, he shivered. But the shiver was involuntary. Mark was too cold. He tried to walk faster but the drifts had become too deep. Only with great effort could he move.

A song rose to the back of his throat. He opened his mouth to sing, but his jaw didn't work well. The numbness of his face killed the song in birth. It would have been drowned out by the wind, anyway.

Shivering possessed his body, shaking off the drunkenness, yet his limbs seemed unresponsive. “God damn,” he said, putting more energy into walking, but it was too cold. The core of him was lonely in its warmth. He hummed to keep it company. The blizzard tore the sound away and replaced it with icy tendrils. He closed his mouth tight, but the cold had already established a firm base in his vitals. 

Pushing against the drifts sapped energy. The roadbed had disappeared under the undulating, snowy, gray landscape. Mark found himself in the dense, low brush somewhere off the road. He turned and moved a few steps, but in an unknown direction. Twigs pulled at his clothing. He placed his weight on an apparently solid spot but a buried stem gave way underneath, tumbling him into the snow. A flailing arm swept a twig into his eye. The ensuing tears threatened to freeze.

Too tired now to search for the road, he leaned back into the snow. As he lay there, the ache of the cold grew less and less. He became drowsy, almost comfortable—the situation, after all, did not seem to be of great concern.

He made a sound, a bearlike “hummmm” and “grrrrrrr” combined. From his seat in the snow, the blizzard seemed to be passing over head, albeit only inches overhead. He looked around. Naked sticks of brush poked out of the snow, creating a miniature black forest that faded into the grayness. Mark's gloved hand, seeming like someone ease’s, reached and grasped one. He bowed its black tip into the soft powder. His eyes, and a bicep rubbing against a sleeve verified the act, but there was no feedback from his numbed hand.

He laid back and shut his eyes, closing off the sight of the brush clacking soundlessly in the wind. I can last 'til morning, he thought, without conviction. I'll sleep 'til they find me.

Powerfully drowsy, he imagined his little home, and the snow soft as his old stuffed chair. Warm sunlight slants in though the window. The table is set. A hot roast surrounded by steaming potatoes, carrot , and gravy rests in a bowl. Someone is at the door, and he invites them in. It is a crowd, tumbling in like they never have. Mark is comfortable with the invasion—even Dirty Bess is welcome.

“It could be like this”, Mark thinks as he drifts away, “maybe this spring.”

Epilogue: 

They searched for a week, without success, then called it off. Sheriff Hokanson, when asked by a reporter, “When are you going to find him?”, said “Maybe this spring.”


Sure enough, the spring thaw uncovered Mark's body, a mere twenty feet from the road.

Saturday, January 2, 2016

Capricorn - Robyn Makaruk


I am the Sea Goat, Capricorn,
ruling in the Tenth house,
that defined by the Midheaven.
As high point of the horoscope,
I represent the highest of aspirations.
My symbol is ancient, 
And goes back to a time when there was no fear, 
no terror, and all lived in harmony. 
When mankind was thrust out of this paradise, 
I came out of the sea, 
and gave humanity the skills of civilization.
I was never a trickster god, 
but one of balance and responsibility.
My fused symbol of the fish and the goat 
represents the dual nature of Capricorn. 
You, Robyn, are born under my sign.
You are a spiritual being 
having an earthly experience.
Your challenge is to thrive 
by integrating your deepest essence and feeling soul  
with the hard, dry landscape of this earth.

You were born of stardust 
and will return to stardust.
When you are ready to leave
I will meet you there.

                         ***