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Daily short takes from an Appalachian hollow

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Plummer’s Hollow

June 9, 2025 by Dave Bonta

Occasional glimpses of sun. The first periodical cicadas began singing at sunrise, and by midmorning it’s a kind of high, ceaseless static—as if they’re relaying transmissions from the cosmos.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags periodical cicadas
June 9, 2025 by Dave Bonta

Occasional glimpses of sun. The first periodical cicadas began singing at sunrise, and by midmorning it’s a kind of high, ceaseless static—as if they’re relaying transmissions from the cosmos.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags periodical cicadas
June 8, 2025 by Dave Bonta

Faint sun through an ash-white sky. I picture a history of human civilization from the point-of-view of periodical cicadas, emerging from the ground every 17 years to scream.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags air pollution, periodical cicadas 3 Comments
June 7, 2025 by Dave Bonta

Rain at sunrise. A flower longhorn beetle takes refuge under the porch, landing beside my mug. The crash of a falling limb.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags longhorn beetles, rain
June 6, 2025 by Dave Bonta

Sunrise hidden by fog, but already there’s a background buzz of periodical cicadas. A cerulean warbler sings at the woods’ edge, as usual, long after the wood thrush has lapsed into silence.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags cerulean warbler, fog, periodical cicadas, sunrise, wood thrush
June 5, 2025 by Dave Bonta

Cool and humid. A phoebe dives for an insect and gives it to a fledgling sitting on a walnut branch. In the shadows of the trees, white masses of mountain laurel blossoms.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags mountain laurel, phoebe
June 4, 2025 by Dave Bonta

Another cool, cloudless morning. The springhouse tulip tree is in bloom, looking more like a lotus tree: fat yellow flowers seemingly taken from a lake and lifted high into the blue.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags springhouse, tulip tree
June 3, 2025 by Dave Bonta

A lurid sun glimmers through high-altitude haze. Somewhere in the deep grass a hen turkey calls to her poults, as goldfinches party it up in the treetops.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags American goldfinch, clouds, sunrise, wild turkey
June 2, 2025 by Dave Bonta

Cold and crystal-clear, before the high-altitude smog from the burning forests of Canada shows up. On the end of a walnut limb, chipping sparrows are mating and foraging with their usual enthusiasm.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags chipping sparrow, clouds
June 1, 2025 by Dave Bonta

Clear, still, and unseasonably cold. A yellow-billed cuckoo calls, though not especially loudly, so perhaps the jury is still out on whether ‘sumer is icumen in’ or not.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags yellow-billed cuckoo
May 31, 2025 by Dave Bonta

Sun through thin clouds and a cold breeze. A hummingbird buzzes in and circles the spot where a hummingbird feeder last hung four years ago.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags clouds, ruby-throated hummingbird, wind
May 30, 2025 by Dave Bonta

A few clouds disappearing into deep blue on a morning so clear, I feel even I could do the gnatcatcher’s job and find each drifting speck of nutriment.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags blue-gray gnatcatcher, clouds
May 29, 2025 by Dave Bonta

The rain has stopped, but everything drips. In the splay of dying daffodil leaves below the porch, glowing white dewberry blossoms.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags daffodils, dewberries, rain
May 28, 2025 by Dave Bonta

Cold rain. The wind from a distant storm stirs the bright green, half-grown walnut leaves, moving on into the darker greens of the forest.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags black walnut, rain, wind
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On This Day

  • February 18, 2025
    Deep cold at dawn. Icicles hanging from the eaves bend this way and that. The trees creak and groan. The *chip, chip* of a cardinal waking up.
  • February 18, 2024
    Through two hats and a hood, the wind’s bitter whisper reaches my ear. Odd moans and creaking sounds issue from the trees, whose dark silhouettes…
  • February 18, 2023
    Sun blazing through the trees illuminates lost snowflakes, miles from the nearest cloud. A chipmunk with hibernation insomnia races up the driveway.
  • February 18, 2022
    Windy and cold after last night’s freakish warmth. Up in the woods, a large coyote trots across the threadbare snowpack. The wail of a train.
  • February 18, 2021
    Fine snow is falling, an hour before sunrise. Dogs start barking in the distance, and after a while a coyote answers—one long, wavering cry.

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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