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The Morning Porch

Daily short takes from an Appalachian hollow

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Year: 2011

February 3, 2011 by Dave Bonta

A thin snowdrift has taken refuge on the porch, covering all but the outermost foot. My old broom sheds pieces of straw with every pass.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags broom, snow 6 Comments
February 2, 2011 by Dave Bonta

The rain has stopped; the forest cracks and crashes. Fallen branches ring the dead cherry, each bearing a row of broken teeth.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags cherry tree, freezing rain, icestorm 8 Comments
February 1, 2011 by Dave Bonta

The sleet whose ticking woke me at 6:00 has stopped. Five degrees below freezing. I stick out my arm and hear raindrops hitting my sleeve.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags freezing rain, icestorm, sleet 2 Comments
January 31, 2011 by Dave Bonta

Thickening contrails stripe the sky. Two ravens fly side-by-side over the house, trading hoarse commentary. The blur of hoarfrost.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags contrails, hoarfrost, jet, raven 6 Comments
January 30, 2011 by Dave Bonta

A titmouse lands in the dead cherry tree, reaches into the cracked bark, pulls out a sunflower seed and taps it open, pausing twice to sing.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags cherry tree, tufted titmouse 63 Comments
January 29, 2011 by Dave Bonta

It’s snowing again. A blue jay keeps returning to the same high limb to eat snow, as if it can’t find that exact flavor anywhere else.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags blue jays, snow 7 Comments
January 28, 2011 by Dave Bonta

The silence of falling snow. When my furnace kicks on, the three deer digging under the wild apple tree startle and run down the slope.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags apple tree, deer, snow 6 Comments
January 27, 2013January 27, 2011 by Dave Bonta

A large white bird—albino crow? Lost seagull?—glimpsed through the snow, agglomerated flakes as big as small leaves, rocking and spinning.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags snow 4 Comments
January 26, 2011 by Dave Bonta

A distant quarry truck’s reverse beeper has gone bad, and trills just like a digital alarm clock. Dueling chickadees tumble through the air.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags chickadee, quarry, trucks 6 Comments
January 25, 2011 by Dave Bonta

Low clouds, and the highway—almost inaudible for weeks—sounds close. The air shimmers. I stick an arm out, and white motes dot my sleeve.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags I-99, snow 3 Comments
January 24, 2011 by Dave Bonta

The ugly squat burdock has a thin and graceful shadow. It inches over the snow without getting snagged by the sharp sparkles of sun.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags burdock, snow 4 Comments
January 23, 2011 by Dave Bonta

In the bitter night, a white-footed mouse bounded unerringly from the corner of the wall to a hole 20 feet away. The snow is my newspaper.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags snow, white-footed mouse 19 Comments
January 22, 2011 by Dave Bonta

Intense cold, and a stillness so deep the trains can barely be heard. A cardinal flickers like a pilot light under the bridal wreath bush.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags bridal wreath, cardinal, cold, train 11 Comments
May 29, 2012January 21, 2011 by Dave Bonta

Juncos fill the lilac, nearest cover to an unfrozen section of stream. Five or six at a time they flutter down to drink from the dark water.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags juncos, lilac, stream 11 Comments
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On This Day

  • January 21, 2025
    Zero at dawn, and very quiet. Finally a nuthatch pipes up, followed by a junco. From inside the tall locust tree behind the springhouse, the…
  • January 21, 2024
    I’m grateful to the snowflakes for mostly not landing on the pages of my book and sailing on by. Am I fully acclimated to the…
  • January 21, 2023
    Gray sky, and the ground scrofulous with snow—an eighth of an inch. A sudden cacophony of mourning dove wings.
  • January 21, 2022
    Clear and cold: -16C/3F. Two white-breasted nuthatches exchange notes. The smoke from my chimney slinks along the ground toward the south.
  • January 21, 2021
    The first stripe of sunlight to make it through the woods follows the 200-year-old colliers’ trail. In thin snow, the cuneiform of sparrows.

See all...

Related book

Cover of Ice Mountain with a linocut of a big ridgetop tree.

What I do after I sit on the porch. One winter and spring's daily walks distilled into short poems with linocut illustrations by Beth Adams.

Header image: detail from Paper Garden by Clive Hicks-Jenkins (used by permission)

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