Click on Photos to Enlarge.
These are the views from my sister’s backyard and front yard in Peoria, Arizona on July 25, 2025
For Cellpic Sunday
Click on Photos to Enlarge.
These are the views from my sister’s backyard and front yard in Peoria, Arizona on July 25, 2025
For Cellpic Sunday
Bobcat
You stroll across the road in front of us
as though you do not notice us.
Astonished, we capitulate our right of way
and sit in the car, digesting our wonder
at your incursion into this tame neighborhood
spread like a blanket
over the wildness of the desert.
It is no wonder
that life in this place
seems to be laden
with occasional visits
of rattlesnakes and bobcats
such as yourself,
but it is by chance that,
like a brief vacation from our own banality,
we bear witness to your incursion.
Even given your languid stroll,
I cannot move quickly enough to record it,
but providence provides,
and minutes after we pull into the garage and come inside,
an email arrives from the neighbor
that records your incursion
into his backyard.
He stalked you with his camera,
and we with our eyes
as you strolled serenely
in between your own stalkings.
Oh, bobcat,
beautiful element
of that wild nature that surrounds
and enriches us
and which, in spite of
evidence to the contrary,
we are a part of—
If I were religious,
these words
of your sighting
would be my prayer.
Prompts today are chance, capitulate, digest, lade and astonished. Photo by Paul Brown. Thanks, Paul, for capturing what I could only try to capture in words. Photo taken on Friday afternoon, April 16, 2021. Location: Trilogy at Vistancia, Peoria, Arizona.
(Click on photos to enlarge and see details.)
Now that the sun has vanished and the desert air turned cold,
some of the insects vanish, but others have turned bold.
Small winged gnats bask under the lamplight’s surrogate sun.
Motionless, they seem to sleep, their daylight flitters done.
They colonize the body of the terrace table lamp,
sunning in the bulb’s bright glow, absorbing every amp.
A single different visitor ascends my sister’s back,
as though he seeks the warmth and light the night air seems to lack.
She does not feel his presence. So far, he’s brought no harm.
He spreads out on the blanket of her light-warmed arm.
More stick-with-arms than insect, he seems inclined to stay.
Secure in his establishment, it seems as though he may
settle there for good, but then he chooses to decamp
by making an impromptu leap onto the terrace lamp.
Motionless, as though caught up in silent meditation,
nothing seems to interrupt his profound cogitation.
But then he leaps up higher, closer to the light,
the globe’s gleam growing warmer at this greater height.
The smaller denizens of light seem calm and unperturbed.
They continue slumbers largely undisturbed,
but suddenly I notice their numbers have diminished,
the mantis washing off his arms as though he has just finished.
He draws one and then another arm through his lethal jaws,
as though they’re violin bows moving without pause.
His music has no volume. The sawing of his bows
creates no funeral music. No sins do they expose.
For awhile he stands unmoving, the heat and light ideal
for aiding his digestion of his midnight meal.
The moon cuts through the darkness, dividing it in layers
as the unmoving mantis seems to say his prayers.
Then, when he leaps into the dark, I turn out the light
and trundle off to bed as well, bidding you good night.
Prompts today are insect, impromptu, establishment, trundle and cold.
Bird Talk
Spent an hour out on my sister’s patio that is a few yards from the draw. This is the bird conversation that I overheard:
Beaver, beaver, beaver, beaver
chip chip chip chip
Whee whee whee whee
daring do, daring do, daring do, daring do
cherry cherry cherry cherry
who’re you? who’re you? who’re you? who’re you?
chip chip chip chip chip chip chip chip
Pretty bird. Pretty pretty pretty
choo choo choo choo choo choo choo choo
wheet wheet
cheerio cheerio cheerio cheerio
beaver, beaver, beaver, beaver, beaver, beaver.
pretty pretty pretty pretty
trrrrrrrr trrrrrrrr trrrrrrr trrrrr
oooeeeooooeee ooeee oooeee
pooooreeee poooreeee pooorrrreee
cheater cheater
pretty bird pretty bird
chee chee chee chee chee chee chee
cheater cheater cheater cheater
t t t t t t t t t
Peter, Peter, Peter, Peter, Peter, Peter
whilygig? whirlygig? whirlygig? whirlygig?
Does anyone know any of these bird languages?
(Click on the photos below to enlarge and read the captions.)
Just before I saw the rattlesnake today, I snapped a photo of this gorgeous flower in my sister’s yard–or perhaps it was her neighbor’s. They join together along the arroyo that runs behind them both.
Does anyone else see the face in this photo?
For Cee’s FOTD
For Cee’s FOTD prompt.