A Sonoran Morning — Image by kenne
Bright sunlight, black tower, white sky. The blades carve the morning into pieces.
Somewhere a tank fills, somewhere a man believes he has mastered this land.
But the wind owns the rhythm, and the desert keeps the final say.
— kenne
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Soaptree Yacca — Image by kenne
Wind scrapes the flats raw.
The yucca holds its green knives
close to the bone of earth.
Bloom is rare.
That’s the point.
In this place
beauty is earned slowly.
— kenne
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Bee On Goldeneye Wildflower — Image by kenne
Spring in the Sonoran— a bee dives into Goldeneye, pollen dusting its legs like barrio chalk on Sunday shoes.
Work is prayer here. Work is survival.
— kenne
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Storm Clouds Over The Mountains — Image by kenne
Thunder far away
like a drum
warming up.
The desert waits—
patient as stone—
for the first drop
to strike the dust
and turn it
into hope.
— kenne
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Acorn Radicle — Image by kenne
Still clinging to its mother branch, the acorn refuses good manners. It should wait. The branch says, stay. The wind says, soon. The acorn says, now.
So it splits its dark shell sending a pale root nosing into open air— a small act of rebellion against gravity, a white question mark lowered into nothing.
In harsh country you don’t wait for perfect ground. You start the root before the fall. You trust the dirt you haven’t met yet.
That’s how deserts are made— not from patience, but from something stubborn refusing to postpone its life.
— kenne
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Tanuri Ridge Sunset — Image by kenne
A sunset with thin,
trembling clouds—
the universe painting
without hurry.
Stand still long enough,
and you will feel chosen.
— kenne
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Kenne and Joy on the Road — Image by kenne
O let the world its trials send,
Its grinding wheels, its piercing darts;
We shall not yield, we shall not bend—
There’s still fierce grit within our hearts.
— kenne
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Originally named “The Chaps,” however, in 1934, during a scientific expedition through what is now Arches National Park, the research party referred to it as “Delicate Arch.” — Image by kenne (June 12, 2014)
Delicate Arch stands alone,
wearing its red sandstone chaps,
bow-legged against the wind.
No saddle, no rider—
just sky for company
and a long trail of light
riding out west.
— kenne
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Birdbill Dayflower — Image by kenne
In the high canyons of the Santa Catalinas, the Birdbill Dayflower blooms testing the theory: that beauty need not last to matter.
By dusk, it has folded its argument into seed.
— kenne
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Golden Columbine — Image by kenne
On black
the gold grows louder.
Each curve deliberate,
each throat of light
a doorway inward.
Look long enough
and the flower
becomes landscape.
— kenne
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Great Blue Heron — Image by kenne
Golden eye
tracking light on scales.
No hurry in him—
only weather,
only patience
older than bridges upstream.
The river keeps moving.
He does not.
— kenne
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Reaven In The Desert — Image by kenne
I have distrusted symbols
most of my life,
yet there it is—
black wings over sand
that has forgotten rain.
The bird does not promise rescue.
It promises presence.
In the desert,
that distinction matters.
— kenne
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Most of my friends are no longer here.
I keep their numbers
in a phone that will never ring.
It is a holy thing,
this absence—
like a door left open
to a room I cannot enter
but refuse to close.
— kenne
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Male Phainopepla High in a Mesquite Tree — Image by kenne
The phainopepla sits in the mesquite
like a drop of ink that refused to dry.
My naturalist mentor would say
some creatures are born already knowing
how to keep their shine.
When it lifts,
white flashes beneath its wings—
a secret lining
only shown in motion.
— kenne
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Wildflowers In The Catalina Foothills — Image by kenne
Catalina foothills—
poppies flare in the gravel wash,
lupine stitching nitrogen
back into the lean soil.
Rock, root, bee—
no wasted motion.
Wind off the Santa Catalinas
combs the grass
and the flowers bow
without complaint.
— kenne
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