Click on photos to enlarge.
I loved the bird photo by Johnbo, so had to send off three of my own favorite bird photos.
For Cellpic Sunday
Click on photos to enlarge.
I loved the bird photo by Johnbo, so had to send off three of my own favorite bird photos.
For Cellpic Sunday
Coots and grackles replace the white pelicans
who have circled over in their last goodbye
like other snowbirds heading north.
Sandpipers whistle their reedy pipes,
as if to rein in the small boy
who runs with a rag of kite
streaming out behind him,
creating his own wind.
This is just one stanza of a longer poem. just publishing it here again along with this photo I wanted to show Annie H. in response to her photos and narration about choughs sent in reply to a question I had about them. A chough is a type of crow we don’t have here in Mexico. I, however, love watching their cousin the Grackle. pictured here strutting along the beach in La Manzanilla.! We have lots of them around Lake Chapala as well.
(Click on images to enlarge.)
Ode to a Grackle
A variation of the crow,
you strut wherever you may go
unless you’re flying post to tree
to get a better look at me.
You stick your chest out, spread your tail
horizontal, you haughty male,
then fold it neatly, like a fan,
to vertical, because you can!
Three toes in front and one behind,
a songbird of the perching kind,
at a moment’s notice, you’re on the wing,
soaring above everything.
No cat that ever stalked a grackle
succeeded in his stealthy tackle.
No quagmire brings about your fall,
for you just glide above them all.
Every grackle that comes along
sings an ever-changing song.
He chirps, he purrs, he clucks, he whirrs,
whistles, squeegees, chatters, chirrs.
No bird save you, my coal-black grackle,
has such variety of cackle.
And when you deign to land en masse,
your music sounds like broken glass.
Though Mexico was your first home,
both south and north you chose to roam.
Like me, you dared to spread your wings
to see what that adventure brings.
And when you perch upon my tree
to share your company with me,
such varied music swells from your chest,
of all loud neighbors, I love you best.
*Grackle feathers were used ceremonially by the Aztecs, who it is speculated, brought them northwards for this purpose. Zanate is the Aztec name for what in the north we call mynah birds or grackles.
Prompts today are save, variation, grackle, quagmire and chest.