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The Morning Porch

Daily short takes from an Appalachian hollow

The Morning Porch
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Dave Bonta

March 16, 2008 by Dave Bonta

Yellow sun in an overcast sky: how is this possible? It lasts for a couple minutes before fading into a bright smudge in a net of branches.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow
March 15, 2008 by Dave Bonta

Bare ground now predominates in the woods, and the ditches are loud with snowmelt. Two gangs of crows meet in the air, yelling, circling.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow
March 14, 2008 by Dave Bonta

A heavy inversion layer—I have quarry trucks for company this morning. Over the roar, from the corner of the field, the first singing robin.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags American robin, trucks
March 13, 2008 by Dave Bonta

Sunrise. I’m in a staring contest with a groundhog who just emerged from under the house. I blink, and he disappears. A piercing whistle.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags groundhog, sunrise
March 12, 2008 by Dave Bonta

Last night, I almost stepped on the porcupine—it could barely walk. This morning, on the cherry tree beside the porch, bright yellow wounds.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags cherry tree, porcupine
March 11, 2008 by Dave Bonta

Weak sun. A “v” of northbound swans. Bass notes of a distant thumper car sound almost like a drumming grouse, except they do not stop.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags I-99, tundra swans
March 10, 2008 by Dave Bonta

Gray sky, and the air is lousy with snowflakes. The usual birds are making the usual chirps. A train whistle, horrendously out of tune.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags train
March 9, 2008 by Dave Bonta

Winter’s back! My white plastic stack chair lies upside-down at the end of the porch. The snowpack has gone from quicksand back to granite.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow
March 8, 2008 by Dave Bonta

A chipmunk emerges from the base of the stone wall and races over the soft snow. All this rain has brought out the blush in the red maples.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags chipmunks
March 7, 2008 by Dave Bonta

A red sunrise. Loud rending sounds as a gray squirrel peels bark from the dead elm tree in the yard, hanging upside-down like a nuthatch.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags gray squirrel, sunrise, white-breasted nuthatch
March 6, 2008 by Dave Bonta

Back below freezing. Some four to five inches of snowpack remain, but every tree stands at the center of a dark wheel of melted earth.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow
March 5, 2008 by Dave Bonta

A sky of shifting gray. This is basement-flooding weather. I crack out the harmonica, hoping that no one will hear it above the creek.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags stream
March 4, 2008 by Dave Bonta

Rain and fog. A robin drops into the barberry bush, tut-tutting. Up in the woods, two deer stand with their heads buried in the soft snow.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags American robin, deer, fog
March 3, 2008 by Dave Bonta

When angels announce the coming of spring, they use flutes: faint calls of tundra swans filter down from above the rose-tinged clouds.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags tundra swans
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On This Day

  • December 1, 2024
    Cold and mostly clear at mid-morning. The small hole down to the stream that flows under my yard is rimmed with hoarfrost, and emits a…
  • December 1, 2023
    It’s just two degrees above freezing, but after days of cold, I feel overdressed. Juncos twitter softly by the springhouse. Raindrops begin tapping on the…
  • December 1, 2022
    Treetops rock and sway in the wind—a restive mountainside. A few snowflakes fly this way and that.
  • December 1, 2021
    The first day of meteorological winter. It’s warm. I-99 is barely audible. The sound of teeth on walnut shell alternates with scold-calls.
  • December 1, 2020
    Gray snow clouds with a brief peephole for the sun. As flakes swirl down, snowbirds swirl up into the trees, egged on by a Carolina…

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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