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The Morning Porch

Daily short takes from an Appalachian hollow

The Morning Porch
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June 28, 2025 by Dave Bonta

Overcast and buggy, with the noise of a long-delayed tractor repair underway at the neighbor’s, and a blue jay transitioning from anxiety to alarm.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags blue jays
June 27, 2025 by Dave Bonta

Rain tapering off by eight. Even the fog looks green. Wild garlic plants in the yard are beginning to straighten, heads going up like herons trying to swallow large fish.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags fog, rain, wild garlic
June 26, 2025 by Dave Bonta

Thin fog, or just very thick humidity? But it’s still cool enough to enjoy the slanting sunbeams, the tired-sounding cicadas, the catbird’s jazz.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags catbird, cicadas, fog, periodical cicadas
June 25, 2025 by Dave Bonta

Out before sunrise to catch the coolness, I rub a jewelweed poulice against a small poison ivy rash on my middle finger, feeling the itch subside and contemplating the yard, where poison ivy and jewelweed freely intermingle.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags jewelweed, poison ivy, sunrise
June 24, 2025 by Dave Bonta

Day three of the heat wave. The cicadas have been calling since before dawn. Two goldfinches yellower than the sun come chittering out of the treetops and swoop past the porch.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags American goldfinch, cicadas, periodical cicadas
June 23, 2025 by Dave Bonta

Clear at sunrise with an eyelash moon and a deer grazing just inside the woods’ edge. A Cooper’s hawk calls from atop the tallest black locust and flies off to the east.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags black locust, Cooper's hawk, deer, sunrise
June 22, 2025 by Dave Bonta

Breezy and clear. A cicada lands on the chair beside me and emits a brief, mechanical purr, red eyes glowing like the lights on an ambulance, before flying directly into a railing, dropping to the floor and relaunching into the yard.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags cicadas, periodical cicadas 2 Comments
June 21, 2025 by Dave Bonta

Overcast and cool. Buzzing and squeaking, a ruby-throated hummingbird circles a red bandanna hung out to dry.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags clouds, ruby-throated hummingbird 2 Comments
June 20, 2025 by Dave Bonta

Breezy and cool—a front at last. A train keens in the distance. The whispery discourse of trees in which cicadas have lapsed for a few long moments into silence.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags cicadas, periodical cicadas, train, wind
June 19, 2025 by Dave Bonta

Sun and a breeze have come to dry us out; everything shines and drips. A cerulean warbler and a field sparrow sing back and forth across the woods’ edge.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags cerulean warbler, field sparrow, wind
June 18, 2025 by Dave Bonta

Rain and fog. I’m beginning to feel sorry for the 17-year cicadas whose one summer in the sun has so far been so sodden. I watch one go motoring past, wings mirroring the white sky.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags cicadas, fog, periodical cicadas, rain
June 17, 2025 by Dave Bonta

The white noise of cicadas gives voice to the fog. I spot a second-year common mullein just beginning to raise her flagpole, velvety leaves wearing coats of cloud.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags cicadas, common mullein, fog, periodical cicadas
June 16, 2025 by Dave Bonta

An intensely green lushness makes an orphan out of the brown pile of juniper cuttings at the woods’ edge—last winter’s one spot of green. At 7:10, in the pouring rain, the first cicada starts up.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags cicadas, periodical cicadas, rain
June 14, 2025 by Dave Bonta

Rain at dawn tapering off into another patter alongside the red-eyed vireo’s. Wood thrushes sing back and forth. From deep in the lilac, a house finch lets loose.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags dawn, house finch, rain, red-eyed vireo, wood thrush
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On This Day

  • April 6, 2025
    Damp gloom suffused with white-throated sparrow song, high and thin and tremulous, amid bright splashes of yellow: daffodils, forsythia, spicebush.
  • April 6, 2024
    A spit of rain in my face at sunrise, despite the lack of clouds—classic April. It’s cold. The miniature daffodils have been blooming for a…
  • April 6, 2023
    First morning back after vacation, the setting moon is somehow already full. A fox sparrow sings beside the old springhouse. Up in the woods, the…
  • April 6, 2022
    The rain that woke me in the night with its drumming dwindles to mizzle. Swelling buds and arboreal lichens glow in the gray-brown woods.
  • April 6, 2021
    Overcast and still. A field sparrow’s accelerating note. A turkey hunter and his wife, led by their dog, carry a tree stand into the woods.

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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