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The Morning Porch

Daily short takes from an Appalachian hollow

The Morning Porch
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April 17, 2012April 17, 2012 by Dave Bonta

Cool and overcast. The soft thump of a bird side-swiping a window. An ant walks with exquisite slowness up the side of the house.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags ants 2 Comments
April 16, 2012 by Dave Bonta

Dawn, and the peepers are still calling. The bridal-wreath bush glows brighter than the thin grin of a moon rising through the trees.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags bridal wreath, dawn, moon, spring peeper 2 Comments
April 15, 2012April 15, 2012 by Dave Bonta

Breezy and cool. Small white moths—or are they flower petals?—flutter against the grey sky. A field sparrow’s ascending notes.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags field sparrow, moths 2 Comments
April 14, 2012April 14, 2012 by Dave Bonta

Half molted now, a patchwork of yellow and green, the goldfinch goes twittering past the crabapple’s half-open blooms.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags American goldfinch, crabapple
April 13, 2012 by Dave Bonta

Up in the woods, one witch hazel has already leafed out—a green flame. The rumble of a pickup approaching then failing to appear.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags trucks, witch hazel
April 12, 2012April 12, 2012 by Dave Bonta

A bright blue morning. It takes the drone of a plane to draw my attention to a new bird call: the first blue-headed vireo of the year.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags blue-headed vireo, plane 3 Comments
April 11, 2012April 11, 2012 by Dave Bonta

The Carolina wren goes from querulous chirps to full-throated denunciations from the top of the dead cherry tree. But the snow continues.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags Carolina wren, cherry tree, snow 4 Comments
May 25, 2024April 10, 2012 by Dave Bonta

Cold, gray and windy. The peony sprouts, up early this year, are still at the point of just untwisting their skinny red fists.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags cold, peonies, wind 1 Comment
April 9, 2012 by Dave Bonta

The top half of a dead elm behind the house crashes down in the wind. I remember the porcupine in its topmost branch like a crown of thorns.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags elm, porcupine, wind 3 Comments
April 8, 2012 by Dave Bonta

Red maple limbs laden with keys tremble from a pell-mell squirrel. I hear tapping on the storm door, open it and a bee flies out.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags bumblebees, gray squirrel, red maple 2 Comments
April 7, 2012April 7, 2012 by Dave Bonta

A downy woodpecker has found a loud limb to hammer. When the din stops, he’s with a female. That brief cloacal kiss that passes for sex.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags black locust, downy woodpecker
April 6, 2012 by Dave Bonta

Clear and cold at sunrise. A nuthatch on the dark side of the tall tulip poplar reverses course and ascends into the sunlit crown.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags sunrise, tulip tree, white-breasted nuthatch
April 5, 2012 by Dave Bonta

I can’t stop looking at the vivid green lilac, translucent in the mid-morning sun. In the woods beyond, the laurel is a blaze of gloss.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags lilac, mountain laurel 2 Comments
April 4, 2012 by Dave Bonta

A rabbit dashes around the yard, chased by another. It feints a departure and sneaks back, ears orange in the sun and veined like leaves.

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Categories Plummer's Hollow Tags cottontail
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On This Day

  • June 29, 2025
    Partly cloudy, humid and still. A hen turkey clucks once from the woods’ edge. I slap myself awake, killing mosquitoes.
  • June 29, 2024
    Heavily overcast; 88% humidity. I’m clapping out the lives of mosquitoes, one after another—too big and slow for their own good. A breeze springs up.
  • June 29, 2022
    Cold and clear. Three waxwings join the sun high in the dead crown of a black locust, yellow bellies aglow.
  • June 29, 2021
    Sunny and hot. The meadows hum with insects. In the marsh, a male and female goldfinch are gathering cattail down for their nest.
  • June 29, 2016
    On the underside of a porch railing, a hornet gathers a mouthful of wood. A small yellow leaf caught in a spiderweb twirls in the wind.

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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