
Lichen
Lichen on the fence, /
growing on the shaped timbers. /
Nature on man-made.
.
.
#lichen #fence #timbers #nature #man-made #photo #poem #poetry #haiku #oldnorthknoxville #davidebooker #october #saturday #101423 #2023

Lichen
Lichen on the fence, /
growing on the shaped timbers. /
Nature on man-made.
.
.
#lichen #fence #timbers #nature #man-made #photo #poem #poetry #haiku #oldnorthknoxville #davidebooker #october #saturday #101423 #2023

Fence and flesh
Rough wood, cold fingers,
morning sunlight, winter’s day.
Some moments focused.
.
.
#wood #fingers #sunlight #winter #day #moments #haiku #poem #poetry #photo #davidebooker #oldnorthknoxville #january #saturday #010822 #2022

Balance
Life is a balance /
along a picket fence — /
one step at a time.
.
.
#life #balance #fence #step #time #photo #poem #poetry #haiku #oldnorthknoxville #davidebooker #december #wednesday #120722 #2022

One day
One day there will be no cat.
One day there will be no fence.
What then of the scratching?
.
.
#scratching #cat #fence #day #photo #poem #poetry #haiku #oldnorthknoxville #davidebooker #november #thursday #112422 #2022

Cat
Stolid fence felt
young cat with a conundrum,
offered no clues down.
.
.
#cat #fence #clues #conundrum #poem #poetry #haiku #photo #oldnorthknoxville #davidebooker #november #sunday #110622 #2022

Fence and flesh
Rough wood, cold fingers,
morning sunlight, winter’s day.
Some moments focused.
.
.
#wood #fingers #sunlight #winter #day #moments #haiku #poem #poetry #photo #davidebooker #oldnorthknoxville #january #saturday #010822 #2022

Pepper post
Ripened in the sun /
Hot pepper resting and red /
Summer spiciness.
070918
Filed under 2016, photo by David E. Booker, Photo Finish Friday
In winter, Illinois is an ugly place. The dead flatness of the land does nothing to defy the oppression of the clouds as they thunder over farms. The trees that in summer sheltered houses and creeks and fence rows with their leaves now try to hold back the swollen winds, their empty limbs shifting and clacking like old bones in a weather-beaten box.
My wife keeps a postcard. It shows a sky of bruised purple-gray, an earth that is almost not there, and in the foreground leans a weathered fence with the abbreviation “ILL” painted in black. She’s from Illinois. Why she keeps it, I don’t know. Maybe the foreboding in the picture and the twisted humor of the abbreviation for the Land of Lincoln speak to something in her soul. It only makes me want to shake my head. I don’t understand the picture. Then again, I don’t understand my wife.
Rain drops splattered against the windshield. I turned on the wipers and rolled up my side window. Traveling seventy miles-an-hour on Interstate 74 did nothing to improve the look of rainy rural Illinois. Traveling to a funeral was doing even less.
–Opening paragraphs from the story “A Sip of the Moon” by David E. Booker
Filed under 2016, photo by David E. Booker, Photo Finish Friday