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The Morning Porch

Daily short takes from an Appalachian hollow

The Morning Porch
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Year: 2014

September 13, 2014 by Dave Bonta

The lilac trembles from without and within: rain hammers the leaves while birds jockey for shelter under them—towhee, cardinal, wren.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags cardinal, Carolina wren, lilac, rain, towhee 1 Comment
September 12, 2014 by Dave Bonta

Just as the early goldenrod fades, the late begins to bloom. At the wood’s edge, the tulip poplar is having a conversation with itself.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags goldenrod, tulip tree
September 11, 2014 by Dave Bonta

I shift my boots on the railing, and the spider that had been keeping watch from its web retreats to the eaves and curls up like a fist.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags spiders
September 10, 2014 by Dave Bonta

It looks like rain, it smells like rain, but the morning passes without a drop. The goldfinches carry on being garrulous. A tree frog calls.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags American goldfinch, rain, tree frog 3 Comments
September 9, 2014 by Dave Bonta

A pileated woodpecker comes yammering into the treetops and proceeds to groom, his clown-red crest flashing as he scratches under his wing.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags pileated woodpecker
September 8, 2014 by Dave Bonta

A green darner zips back and forth, reversing direction so abruptly it looks like a jump cut. From behind the house, the burbling of a wren.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags Carolina wren, dragonflies, green darner
September 7, 2014 by Dave Bonta

Hoarse cries of a lone Canada goose—I scan the sky and see nothing but blue. A monarch butterfly arcs through the shadows in the yard.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags Canada geese, monarch butterfly
September 6, 2014 by Dave Bonta

I sit scribbling in a notebook, a pearl crescent butterfly weaving between the legs of my chair. It comes to rest with one wing in the sun.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags pearl crescent
September 5, 2014 by Dave Bonta

It’s hot. At last the annual cicadas sound fully charged. The air is alive with tiny insects in non-intersecting orbits back-lit by the sun.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags cicadas, gnats
September 4, 2014 by Dave Bonta

The cloying smell of goldenrod from below the porch. A flower fly comes up to inspect my tan khaki trousers, hovering an inch from my knee.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags goldenrod, syrphid fly 1 Comment
September 3, 2014 by Dave Bonta

At just half-light, the young rooster in the neighbors’ coop begins to crow. But the distant train whistle still has more depth, more soul.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags chickens, train
September 2, 2014 by Dave Bonta

Dawn is the original thief in the night. Sleepless from a fever, I stare disbelieving at the sky’s stain of light as a screech owl trills.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags dawn, screech owl 1 Comment
September 1, 2014 by Dave Bonta

Passenger pigeons went extinct 100 years ago today. What teems like that now? Only humans, other invasives, the increasingly odd rain.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags passenger pigeon
August 31, 2014 by Dave Bonta

In the steady rain, the cheerful bickering of goldfinches. A mosquito brushes against the hair on my arm, looking for a clear way in.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags American goldfinch, mosquito, rain
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On This Day

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    A fresh half-inch of snow turns the woods’ edge into calligraphy. Then an inversion layer brings traffic noise, a shimmer of freezing drizzle, the tut-tutting…
  • December 24, 2023
    A few degrees above freezing, heavily overcast, and dead quiet apart from the spring’s low gurgle. A bluebird sings two notes and lapses back into…
  • December 24, 2022
    -2F/-20C. Even under two hats and a beard, the windward side of my face turns numb. It’s beginning to look a lot like Christmas: bleak…
  • December 24, 2021
    Moonlight fades but the driveway glows even whiter: a new quarter-inch of snow. The sky is clear. Treetop goldfinches start to chatter.
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    White sky and white ground meet in a blur of fog. Above the drumming of rain on the roof, a white-throated sparrow’s minor-key song.

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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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