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The Morning Porch

Daily short takes from an Appalachian hollow

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Year: 2016

May 27, 2016 by Dave Bonta

A large leaf-footed bug stalks up and down a porch column, its shadow at its side. Two carpenter bees clash like airborne sumo wrestlers.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags carpenter bees, leaf-footed bugs
May 26, 2016 by Dave Bonta

The delicate sneezes of a deer grazing on the thorny canes of multiflora rose bushes. She stretches a hind leg up to rub her nose.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags deer, multiflora rose
May 25, 2016 by Dave Bonta

Warm and hazy. The yard buzzes with native bees pollinating the alien, invasive myrtle. Off in the woods, the glint of old glass.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags bumblebees, myrtle 1 Comment
May 24, 2016 by Dave Bonta

The crackle of a grackle. The boosterism of a rooster. The incessant cheer of a vireo. My ears take refuge in the creek, that labile Babel.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags chickens, common grackle, red-eyed vireo, stream 1 Comment
May 23, 2016 by Dave Bonta

Sun! A gray squirrel noshes on black walnut catkins, then drops deliberately to a thin locust branch five feet below and clings, see-sawing.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags black walnut, gray squirrel
May 22, 2016 by Dave Bonta

Two great-crested flycatchers foraging in the rain target insects sheltering under leaves. The only dry thing is a cerulean warbler’s song.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags cerulean warbler, great-crested flycatcher, rain
May 21, 2016 by Dave Bonta

Few bird calls are audible above the hush of rain falling on new leaves. White lilac and bridal wreath flower heads droop, turning brown.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags bridal wreath, lilac, rain
May 20, 2016 by Dave Bonta

The warmest morning in weeks. The bracken in my yard that the deer mowed down has raised defiant fists. A red-eyed vireo drones on and on.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags bracken, deer, red-eyed vireo 1 Comment
May 19, 2016 by Dave Bonta

On a crystal-clear morning, the whinnying cry of a red-bellied woodpecker seems full of angst, and a jay’s rasping call—pure frustration.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags blue jays, red-bellied woodpecker
May 18, 2016 by Dave Bonta

A rabbit in the rain eats grass the way I eat ramen, one long strip disappearing into its mouth, drops flying. A hummingbird buzzes my face.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags cottontail, rain, ruby-throated hummingbird
May 17, 2016 by Dave Bonta

A phoebe catches insects right in front of the porch with a sound like the snapping of fingers as each exoskeleton is crushed in its bill.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags phoebe
May 16, 2016 by Dave Bonta

In the tall locusts still bare of leaves, the flaming orange of a Baltimore oriole—no, two orioles in a mad chase. The victor’s brassy song.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags Baltimore oriole
May 15, 2016 by Dave Bonta

The leaves on the sapling tulip tree are already big enough to blow backwards. A tanager’s plucked-string call. It begins to sleet.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags scarlet tanager, sleet, tulip tree, wind
September 12, 2025May 14, 2016 by Dave Bonta

International Migratory Bird Day. From a tall locust, the lazy call of an eastern wood pewee—last migrant back. A mosquito pierces my cheek.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags eastern wood pewee, International Migratory Bird Day, mosquito 1 Comment
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On This Day

  • December 2, 2024
    Overcast and cold. Ten minutes before sunrise, a yellow rent appears in the clouds. In the distance, the neighbor’s chickens start up a racket.
  • December 2, 2023
    Fog hides the sunrise, apart from a small opening on the ridgetop that fills with golden light. Then the gray curtain comes down again.
  • December 2, 2022
    The frosted meadow glitters in the sun. A scrabbling of squirrel claws on bark. Off to the south, a raven croaks; to the north, crows.
  • December 2, 2021
    It’s damp and warmish. A red-bellied woodpecker comes silently rocketing out of the woods. The creek remains mum about last night’s rain.
  • December 2, 2020
    Raw and wintry, with snow on the ground and an iron wind. I muse on the convergent evolution of “December” and “dismember”.

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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