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The Morning Porch

Daily short takes from an Appalachian hollow

The Morning Porch
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Dave Bonta

November 1, 2010 by Dave Bonta

The yard is alive with robins foraging, chasing, tut-tutting, rust-orange breasts the color of the oaks, all aglow in the mid-morning sun.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags American robin, oaks 2 Comments
August 26, 2012October 31, 2010 by Dave Bonta

Below the porch, a dot of pink: a very late dame’s-rocket blooming the day after a hard frost. A brown creeper inspects a small walnut tree.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags black walnut, brown creeper, dame's-rocket, frost
October 30, 2010 by Dave Bonta

Now that summer’s past, the cardinal has gone back to harassing her reflection. The frost-whitened myrtle bed. A barberry turned to flame.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags barberry, cardinal, frost, myrtle
October 29, 2010 by Dave Bonta

Halfway up the dead cherry beside the porch, a gray squirrel stops and stares, and I recall reading that squirrels are omnivorous as rats.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags cherry tree, gray squirrel
October 28, 2010 by Dave Bonta

Sun blazes through a newly open woods, glossy on the backs of wild turkeys: nine hens and two jakes, who keep pausing to fan their tails.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags wild turkey
October 27, 2010 by Dave Bonta

An hour before dawn, a high thin cloud drifts northeast to the rumble of a freight train. When the half-moon intersects, a rainbow disc.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags moon, rainbow, train
October 26, 2010 by Dave Bonta

When the fog lifts, a flock of chickadees moves in, foraging in the mid-canopy, precipitating a shower of birch and locust leaves.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags black birch, black locust, chickadee
October 25, 2010 by Dave Bonta

Just past daybreak, a pileated woodpecker whinnies, a nuthatch tuts, a crow croaks, and a gray squirrel clatters through gray branches.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags American crow, gray squirrel, pileated woodpecker, white-breasted nuthatch
October 24, 2010 by Dave Bonta

All along the ridgetop now the sky is visible, cathedral-sized windows between the trees. The throaty roar of the neighbor’s pickup truck.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags neighbors, trucks
October 23, 2010 by Dave Bonta

Mid-morning: the first patch of blue, little larger than a moon. In the old lilac below the other house, a Carolina wren bursts into song.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags Carolina wren, lilac
October 22, 2010 by Dave Bonta

Halfway to the ground, a locust leaf reverses course and heads for the sky. The cattails whisper, a restive crowd, but the sun never comes.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags black locust, cattails
October 21, 2010 by Dave Bonta

Windy and clearing. Amidst all the twirlers and spiralers, one tulip poplar leaf plummets straight to the ground, folded like an umbrella.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags tulip tree
October 20, 2010 by Dave Bonta

I pick the last few unsplit witch hazel nuts in my garden, hoping I can witness their famed explosions. I line them up on top of my monitor.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags garden, witch hazel
October 19, 2010 by Dave Bonta

When the fog lifts, the sun makes its nest in the treetops. I sit with a newspaper folded on my knee, listening to a chipmunk’s metronome.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags chipmunks, fog 2 Comments
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On This Day

  • February 10, 2025
    A dark sky at dawn with one bright gash. As it eases shut, an icy breeze springs up. The stream gurgles softly in its sleep.
  • February 10, 2024
    Unseasonably warm and very quiet. Sunrise appears through a rift in the clouds: gold in the east, black in the west. The last five piles…
  • February 10, 2023
    Two pileated woodpeckers forage for breakfast, resolutely hammering as all the trees around their dead snags rock in the wind.
  • February 10, 2022
    After yesterday’s melting and last night’s rain, it feels like March. A pileated woodpecker drums on a resonant specimen of the standing dead.
  • February 10, 2021
    Overcast. I contemplate the artificial mountain of snow in my yard, its boneless white. Imagine if it were blubber—how the birds would feast.

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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