poetry

tradeoffs

Still from a KDVR Fox31 report on the smoky taste to Superior's water from January 20, 2022.

tradeoffs

to drink from the reservoir
means to taste ash
from the two foot drifts
that ring its shore

to drink from the pipe
means to taste pure nothing
but to drink nothing
when there’s maintenance on the line

to scrub the reservoir water
means to taste pure nothing
but to suffer rashes from the chemicals
when you or your children bathe

to dredge the reservoir
means to mostly drain it
spreading the ashy water
to the other ponds in town

to drink from Louisville’s water
means to taste pure nothing
and keep healthy skin
but beg from a neighbor
whose patience may strain

to not drink
means to die

poetry

Escape

Escape

I’m dreaming of a little place
in tall trees
lit by sunshine and snow
and golden aspen light

a place so flush with water
it bubbles out of the ground
and you can float on a pond
when you need to let go

I’m dreaming of a small space
with not too much to burn
that heats up quick
with the strike of a match

I’m dreaming of a break
from ash and scrap
where I can settle my head
deep into down

and dream blue white green dreams
where all breezes are innocent
all sparks kept to the stove

poetry

what it takes to save a town

Louisville’s Public Works and Utilities team: Chris DePalma, Cory Peterson, Ben Francisco, Greg Venette, Shane Mahan, Tom Czajka, Matt Fromandi, Kurt Kowar, & Jeff Owens. (credit: Louisville’s Public Works and Utilities)

what it takes to save a town

we’re just starting to learn
what extreme acts it took
to keep some homes standing

luckily we missed the terror
of knowing all that night –
especially, how the water nearly ran dry

the public works crew drives back to the plant,
the Superior plant is offline
their generator burned
pumps now not running
which means one town’s water
is fighting for two

telephone poles burning beside them
they need to get more gas to the generators
drive fuel through the flame
miraculously, nothing explodes

so many systems down now
the Louisville crew knows
the only way to learn what water’s left
is to actually climb the tank
and peer down inside the hatch
in hurricane winds
in a firestorm

Jeff goes 20 feet up in the air
crawls on his belly
looks down into the gloom
and it’s worse than he thought
only two feet left

Shane and his crew
accompany the firefighters
house by burning house
shutting each charred ruin’s water off
so precious gallons can’t spew from severed pipes

and in an audacious act
Greg and Kurt decide
they’ll do whatever it takes
to feed those firefighter hoses
even throwing open
the precious pipes they’ve always guarded
to raw untreated water
something they’ve never contemplated
something one would never train for

they work 35 hours straight
putting their courage and ingenuity
on the line for our two towns

and, it works
and,
we’re forever thankful

poetry

restoration of water

restoration of water

The same clear stream flows from the tap today
but now it’s changed:
they say it’s safe,
which changes everything.

Charlie told us how it was to wait for water
at the mall in Zimbabwe, after things fell apart.
He’d grown up with safe water,
and when things first went wrong
he thought the water trucks would be temporary.
Someday he’d simply turn the tap again.
But, years later, he still waits in line.

When they said our water wasn’t safe
it was the latest in a string of improbable truths –
like December wildfire
like blocks of charred houses
like insurrection.

So, today, when they invite us
to turn the tap and drink,
I let go a caught breath
that’s been squeezing my throat
ever since we stopped
to fill the first jug.

poetry

after the evacuation order’s lifted

after the evacuation order’s lifted

when you first arrive home
after the town caught fire
things will look the same:

soft slabs of snow will mushroom
atop parked car roofs
and Christmas lights will still wrap trees

it’s not until you reach your kitchen
that the full import meets you –
your home still stands, thank God

and the firefighters and Aeolus –
and it stands at 45 degrees and falling.
one of you starts the pellet stove

while the other takes the truck to find more pellets
and free space heaters
and you quietly begin living a new way.

next you look at the gas stove (impotent)
and realize you haven’t means to boil water
and can’t drink what’s in the tap

so you forage for water, too, life stripped to its elements,
five-gallon jugs filled by a friend
in the next town west, where taps magically still flow clean

and now you learn to pour liter carafes
and even dainty cups after a day’s practice
from what’s usually your campsite stash.

when the large men clomp inside
in their Carhartts and work boots
big beards and cold toes

and give you back warm nights
and hot water, you push gifts into
their wide palms: candy canes and

chocolate bars, gushing thanks, and beer,
and it turns out one lives two blocks away
and his toddler and your little neighbor are friends.

and in the midst of all this confusion
so many new ways of doing/being
there’s also the dark knowledge

that your son’s kindergarten teacher’s home
is now just another smoldering pit
and your dog’s brother now has no yard to call his own,

and 500 neighbors don’t have these inconveniences
of gas and water to deal with now
because everything is gone

poetry

at the lake

at the lake

people bake
in this scene out of Kansas
or Nebraska

ski counterclockwise
the sign reminds
so the boats corkscrew around
this finite refreshment

it’s Saturday
and one after another
the pickups back to ramp
deposit the underclad bodies
perched on beached boats
set them floating toward Sunday
loud music and beer buoying them along
while an uncertain dog
paces the deck
and a gaping fish head
rots on the shore

poetry

font

font

the water came straight out of the ground
a spring, not a stream
and some soul who saw it
ringed it with rock
put in a pipe
to elevate the flow
made a simple thing sacred –
as Western water must be

poetry

The Good News (inspired by Thich Nhat Hanh)

The Good News (inspired by Thich Nhat Hanh)

Moon Creek will sing
whether we’re on the earth
or under it

the blue sky
will get bluer
without contrails

the twisted path that brought us here
today lets me make friendship offerings
to birds and foxes
whose bright beating hearts remind me
we’re not alone

my mother, planning for her death
in a place where I can’t hold her hand
smiles bravely, assures my sister and me
she’s lived her life of service
without regret

now there is so little left
in the way of importance
I sit on the side of the creek
while the snowy banks run to water
doing nothing
only being
only listening
when a mountain chickadee
who has heard nothing of the end of days
flits to a flat rock in the channel
then wades in
delightedly splashing clean cold water
all over her plump fluffed self

it takes a long time
for her to stop savoring the sensation
she jumps from one branch to the next
shaking all her feathers loose
bustling with the busy joy
of water sun and wind

and I am still here to see her
and you are still here to tell

poetry

drinking the Kool Aid

drinking the Kool Aid

after months of being careful
the boys froze
as I took water from the priest’s bowl
and brought it to my lips
I nodded to them
it’s okay
they hesitated
then did the same

why? they asked later
it’s Besakih, the Mother Temple
the blessing’s worth the risk

today floating in the bottle green depths
of the pelucid Pelorus
that once held dwarves afloat
they asked me
can we drink it?

here we were
in a space sacred to them
I hesitated then nodded
just a little I said
and we all took a bit of magical river
into our very selves

poetry

Piopiotahi Wind

Piopiotahi Wind

waterfalls ascend into sky
white veils flow straight up
in this wind so strong
trees fall and water rises
another true miracle
I only believed on sight