Morning’s Delight

Central Ohio’s Walnut Woods Metro Park is located a short drive from my home.  I frequently walk the park, and a recent one inspires this poem.  Enjoy these photos taken back in April, 2019.

Sunrise greets another morning walk.

Alarm clock spurring

Nature park invites

Sweet song birds stirring

This morning’s delight

 

Sunrise opens sky

Clouds sliding away

Welcomes this Buckeye

Creation’s ballet

 

Quiet moments smile

Spirit walks each trail

Partner with each mile

Fresh air to inhale

 

Life’s cherished highlights

Blessed start to day

Nature’s revered sights

Moments filled with play

 

Joyful heart, rejoice

Walk comes to its end

Creation’s brisk voice

Morning’s steady friend

Tranquil spring morning along Walnut Creek.

Nature’s Trifecta (Haiku Series #172)

Each Morning

Blessed sunrise wakes

World stops its endless spinning—

Tranquility calls

Photo by Jonathan Petersson on Pexels.com

Take a Moment

Nature’s sights and sounds

Creation’s rhythm singing—

Pause and soak it in

Photo by Yaroslav Shuraev on Pexels.com

Life Awakens

Newness of each spring

Opening fresh avenues—

Sacred life takes root

Photo by PhotoMIX Company on Pexels.com

Looming Transition

Photo by Raine Nectar on Pexels.com

Transition covers landscape

For both nature and man

Blusterous day taking shape

Coming change to life’s plan

 

Barren trees swinging with joy

Wind’s steady, rhythmic beat

Nature’s energy deploys

Tearing up day’s game sheet

 

Remnants of tall grass bending

Nature’s tempo shifting

Clouds reveal storm descending

Sending man’s plans drifting

 

Birds scattering far away

Man ignores storm’s warning

Day’s contest declines to play

Clouding nature’s morning

 

Storms can never be delayed

Nature stays in control

Man’s delight begins to fade

Gazing through life’s porthole

 

Photo by Igor Dudkovskiy on Pexels.com

Winter’s Innocence (Haiku Series #168)

Dazzling

Fresh, fallen snowflakes

Morning’s glistening landscape—

Sparkling winter day

Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

Reverent

From winter’s postcard

Covered with fresh, powder snow—

Majestic pines rise

Photo by Stefan Straka on Pexels.com

Untouched

Calm valley meadow

Undisturbed snowy blanket—

Cautious buck deer waits

Photo by David Selbert on Pexels.com

Nature’s Rhythm (Haiku Series #166)

Raven

Flying high above

Gray sky’s lonely sentinel—

Solitary spy

Photo by Tim Mossholder on Pexels.com

Spirited

Unchecked challenges

Emotional behavior—

Nature spills over

Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

Simplicity

Season to season

Creation’s precious treasures—

Never growing old

Photo by Harrison Haines on Pexels.com

Winds of Change

Photo by u0411u0435u043au043au0435u0440 on Pexels.com

Winds of peace

Whispering at night

Singing with calmest voice

With lasting newness

 

Winds of storm

Blowing from dark skies

Bearing down once again

With coldness of heart

 

Winds of heart

Crossing west to east

Warming thoughts open doors

With attitude’s change

 

Winds of will

Bringing challenges

Stumbling from daily mistakes

With lessons to learn

 

Winds of change

Bringing smile to heart

Dancing with endless joy

With fresh perspective

 

Photo by Andrea Piacquadio on Pexels.com

John Lubbock Quotes

Photo by Dmitriy Ganin on Pexels.com

Earth and sky, woods and fields, lakes and rivers, the mountain and the sea, are excellent schoolmasters, and teach some of us more than we can ever learn from books.

A day of worry is more exhausting than a week of work.

Englishman John Lubbock (1834-1913) spent much of his life in the family banking enterprises.  However, he is well-known for his contributions to politics, science and philanthropic efforts.

Nature’s Crossroads (Haiku Series #162)

Dusk Evaporates

Horizon merges

Pulled along by setting sun—

Stirs nocturnal bliss

Photo by Lachlan Ross on Pexels.com

Savoring Again

Autumn’s entree fades

Winter’s taste arrives on cue–

Sweet frosting and all

Photo by Curioso Photography on Pexels.com

Life’s Adaptation

Facing challenges

Nature transforms to survive—

Will mankind follow?

Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

Beware of November

Photo by Deb Morse on Pexels.com

Calendar page turns to November

Autumn season filling with its peace

Colorful leaves have fallen away

Winds of winter begin to release

 

Temperatures cascading downward

Barren trees swaying and shivering

Farm fields ready for hibernation

Autumn’s harmony now quivering

 

Many say, beware of November

Her fading hues begin looking north

Arctic’s snowy cold now encroaching

Winter’s early surprise coming forth

 

Ranchers scurry to shelter cattle

Yards cheerfully display fall’s decor

Boldly hanging on to each strawman

Nothing postpones winter’s early chore

 

Harsh winds of November come and go

Sometimes with cold feints, or so much more

Chilling rain turns to ice, never nice

Winter’s snow, knocking at autumn’s door

 

Photo by Eva Elijas on Pexels.com

During my first year of teaching at Plevna Schools, found in southeastern Montana, I was greeted with a winter that I will always remember.  The first snowflakes and cold began arriving in early November, and they didn’t stop until late February.  Finally the chinook winds began to warm up the countryside, and ranchers and farmers were rejoicing.  After all, the winter one year earlier had included the famous blizzard of 1978.