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The Morning Porch

Daily short takes from an Appalachian hollow

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Year: 2016

October 20, 2016 by Dave Bonta

The tulip poplar sapling in the yard glows in the sunlight, a golden column. A honeybee buzzes around the empty light socket above my head.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags honeybees, tulip tree
October 19, 2016 by Dave Bonta

The barberry beside the stream is turning from the inside out: under a green cloak, salmon pink, blood-red beads, the hurdy-gurdy of a wren.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags barberry, fall foliage, house wren, stream 1 Comment
October 18, 2016 by Dave Bonta

White-throated sparrows move through the dead meadow, roaming musicians with one tune between them, the air above suddenly full of leaves.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags white-throated sparrow 1 Comment
October 17, 2016 by Dave Bonta

So that mackerel sky at midnight meant rain by dawn. But already the clouds are breaking up and slicks of sun are pooling between the trees.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags clouds, rain
October 16, 2016 by Dave Bonta

Scattered crow caws coalesce into a flash mob filled with rage, but dissipate in less than a minute. High up in the clouds, a raven croaks.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags American crow, raven
October 15, 2016 by Dave Bonta

Recovering from a fever, I sit in strong sunlight with nature’s grand spectacle of slow death and decay spread out before me.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags fall foliage 1 Comment
October 13, 2016 by Dave Bonta

Rainy and dark, with a steady, fluttering fall of leaves. A freight train rumbling up the valley is the only thing audible over the rain.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags fall foliage, rain, train 1 Comment
October 12, 2016 by Dave Bonta

Clear and still. The witch hazel in the garden has just opened its first blooms, spidery petals a far purer yellow than the curling leaves.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags fall foliage, witch hazel
October 11, 2016 by Dave Bonta

Sunrise turns the western ridge red. A squirrel falls out of a walnut tree and lands with a thump in weeds white with the first frost.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags black walnut, frost, gray squirrel, sunrise
October 10, 2016 by Dave Bonta

A few degrees above freezing. Three titmice drop out of the sunlit oaks to investigate the dead elm, en route to a quick bath in the stream.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags tufted titmouse
October 9, 2016 by Dave Bonta

Gusty winds. The sun appears several times a minute to light up the forest, which today is noticeably more open, yellower, more ablaze.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags fall foliage, wind
October 8, 2016 by Dave Bonta

It’s pouring. Lichens glow on rain-dark trees, pale blue and green rashes. Through a thickening carpet of fallen leaves, the bright moss.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags lichen, moss, rain
October 7, 2016 by Dave Bonta

A jay walks the metal ridge of the springhouse roof, where a tangled mass of Virginia creeper has stretched red tentacles over the shingles.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags blue jays, springhouse, Virginia creeper
October 6, 2016 by Dave Bonta

The flashing light on the meter-reader’s truck emerges from the fog. The meadow is dotted with the white, inverted tents of funnel spiders.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags fog, funnel spider, spiderwebs, trucks
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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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