Blue On The Inside, Gray On The Outside   Leave a comment

Marine Blues On Moist Rocks Near a Mountain Stream — Image by kenne

Butterflies on moist rocks,
suddenly the world makes sense.

Color speaking to color,
wing touching wind.

Yes, I think—
this is how things work.

Then, the butterflies lift,
vanish off the rocks,

and the rocks stand alone
with their quiet question.

I get it.
Then I don’t.

— kenne

Orinary Miracle   Leave a comment

Broadbilled Hummingbird — Image by kenne

You say,
“It’s just another hummingbird day.”

But look—

a small green flame
hovering in the air
like a thought the world is having.

Every morning
the universe practices this trick:

wings faster than worry,
a heart beating like a tiny drum of praise.

Tell me again
what you mean
by ordinary.

— kenne

Birdbird Preening   Leave a comment

Bluebird Preening on a Limb — Image by kenne

A bluebird, occupied with itself—

feather drawn through beak,

a ritual of care.

The image slips out of focus.

What should be a failure

is kept—

because the blur records

a life unwilling to be stilled.

— kenne

Pay Attention   5 comments

Fiery Skipper Butterfly — Image by kenne

A butterfly no bigger
than a thumbprint

arrives in the yard
carrying sunlight
on its shoulders.

It rests on a flower
as the earth whispers:

Pay attention.

Even the smallest flame
was sent
to remind you
how to live.

— kenne

Houston Blues   Leave a comment

The Old Rhythm Room, Houston’s Washington Street (09/13/03) — Image by kenne


If you knew Houston blues, you knew that Washington Street had its share of stories. On that night twenty-two years ago, Mark May’s set was another chapter. In the dim light, you could see The Blues Hound and Jimmy “T-99” Nelson, figures who had witnessed the scene shift from the Chitlin’ Circuit days to modern club stages, still holding onto the music.


— kenne

For Function, Not For Applause   Leave a comment

Abstract Art by kenne

There is something endearingly human

about the need to measure, compare,

and quietly panic.

Nature, however,

is uninterested in your tape measure.

It built the mechanism

for function, not for applause—

though applause, historically,

has been enthusiastically sought.

— kenne

Two Green Helicopters   3 comments

Common Green Darner Dragonflies — Image by  kenne

two green helicopters
hooked together
like they don’t give a damn
who’s watching.

the pond water barely moves.
a red-wing blackbird mouths off.

life keeps doing
what life does—
no speeches,
no apologies.

— kenne

 

What Was Once Grasslands   Leave a comment

(In November of 2012, Tom Markey and I posted an article, Ecocide Arizona Style — The Cow That Ate The West.
The article was about the disappearing water in the San Simon Valley in southeast Arizona. This poem suggest the verdict is in.)

Ecocide Arizona Style

The west is dying of thirst.
You can hear it in the cracked riverbeds,
in cottonwoods gone skeletal,
in the silence where frogs used to sing.

The Colorado staggers,
a vein opened too long,
bled for lawns,
for swimming pools,
for another desert empire of cul-de-sacs.

This is not drought—
this is the verdict.
We were warned,
and we kept on building
as if the sky were infinite.

Mark it well:
when the last drop dries,
sand covers the southwest,
the desert will not mourn us.
It will simply
take itself back.

— kenne

 

Great Blue Heron Over The Sweetwater Wetlands   Leave a comment

Great Blue Heron Over the Sweetwater Wetlands — Image by kenne

A shadow slides across the marsh
before the bird arrives.

Long legs trailing,
neck folded like a question.

For a moment,
the wetlands remember
what this valley looked like
before water engineers showed up.

— kenne

Caterpiller — Zerene Cesonia   3 comments

Zerene Cesonia Caterpillar — Photo-artistry by kenne

Morning in the desert garden:
a caterpillar clings to its stem,
eating with the steady rhythm
of breath itself.
Even the sun pauses—
as if it knows a butterfly
is practicing.

— kenne

Yellow Disks Sketching Circles In The Air   2 comments

Sneezeweed in the Wind On Mt. Lemmon — Image by kenne

A gust arrives
and the sneezeweed bows
all at once.

Someone might call this
wildflower behavior.
But from where I’m standing
it looks suspiciously like art—

yellow disks
sketching circles in the air
while the wind
keeps erasing the drawing.

— kenne

Mushroon In Pine Needles   Leave a comment

Mushroom in Pine Needles — Image by kenne

Under ponderosa shade

one pale cap

holding up

a whole sky of trees.

— kenne

Sabino Sunrise   2 comments

Sabino Sunrise — Image by kenne

Dawn spills over the mountains

and the giants wake.

Their shadows stretch like old cowboys

after a long night.

No hurry.

No apology.

Just another day

outlasting us all.

— kenne

Hummingbird Morning   2 comments

Anas’s Hummingbird On Our Patio in the Morning Light — Image by kenne

In the early light, the hummingbird pauses in air the way a thought pauses before becoming memory. Its throat flashes pink, then disappears again, as if the bird were deciding which version of itself to show the morning. I stand with my coffee and realize the patio has become a small stage, and this bright creature knows exactly when to arrive.

— kenne

Moon Over The Double Bayou   Leave a comment

Moon Over The Double Bayou — Image by kenne

Moon over the bayou—
cypress knees listening
to slow water.

Somewhere, a night bird
knows the old stories
and keeps them.

Couples turning slowly
under crooked rafters.

Pete Mayes’ band doesn’t rush—
blues knows better.

Every chord says
the night’s still young
if your heart
can hold the rhythm.

— kenne

A Night At The Dance Hall — Photo-Artistry by kenne