Holiday ramblings, Sonnet style by Colleen Keating December 2024

 

Day 1
Indecision  or turning tide

The ocean is a field. The ocean is windy 
wild, kicking, a two year old in tantrum.
The ocean begins to hiss like fired lard.
Waves swirl, twirl, like a mosh pit
of crowded concert goers. Its white plumes
and spindrift ringing the air . They remind me
of your rumpled hair on rising from the bed
uncertain of the day ahead.

Where is the moon, you ask, to parent
the tide? Turmoil is the nemesis of the mind. 
The mind is a field. The mind is windy, 

wild, turning here, turning there. I cannot
help but wish for a moon-god to marshal
your stirrings, directing their erratic flow.

Colleen Keating

 * * * * * * * * * * * 

Day 2.

 

interconnection

She walks out towards the lake 
precariously like a sleepwalker ambles 
when they don’t really want to face the day.
Thick fog steals the horizon. 
Large pines on the other side misted-in
show a ghostly giant command
peering out like Tolkien’s ents.
Her gaze has the gravitas of other worlds.  

How to feel joy in this time of joy? Hildegard’s 
words grooved like an old LP imprint her mind
i cannot break bread except as i am broken.

In the reeds a visiting spoonbill wades, its wide
beak raking the mud .Two pied stilts swoop at it
over and over with barking noise.

Colleen Keating

* * * * * * * * * * * *

 

Day 3.

Put in our place

The lake is mirrored-calm, still untouched
by morning noise. 
The heat is already building for a summers day.
The visiting spoonbill, not deterred is back.
The black swans silhouetted glide peacefully. 
Plovers are themselves always with a voice
for those who encroach in their territory. 
Under the large pines usually full of roosting 

cormorants all chatting, it is eerily quiet. 
They have flown off for the day. 
Only then do our feet begin to stick to the ground, 
We are are walking like people with lead in their shoes.
We realise they have been busy before they left.  
The result is like a glue, stuck around our sneakers, clotted 
with leaves and dirt.

Colleen Keating

* * * * ** * * * * * * * * 

Day 4.

Pause

An online group I belong to 
ask for a word for 2025. 
All the normal ones light up
like electric bulbs in my head–
gratitude, listen, dream.
I was out walking by the lake
and decided to pause to watch 
a white egret fishes the tidal zone.

Pause. I thought how much more 
it gives me focus. I see its pick-axe
precision and stealthful stepping.  
I see how a caught pilchard wriggles down 
its long neck and I hear wild whispers
of the wind in the swamp oaks 
and to make sense of todays turmoil 
the pause is a purposeful strategy.

Colleen Keating

* * * * * * * * * * * * * 

 

Day 5

Road to Jericho

RIP Michael Leunig  1946 -2024

(Thank you for reminding us of our soul 
and the angels over and over
and  thanks for so often being our conscience. )

it is rough uneven, familiar pot-holes 
no surprise. what shocks more is lack
of safety, the unknown enemy lying low.
So many rustling angels are missed,
Leunig said, in the hurry to get from A to B 
A cry for help would hardly 
be heard over the cicada shrill 
of this hot summers day.

Even as I conduct their bush song 
my hands rise and fall in rhythm 
like the oceans rolling crests and troughs
reaching crescendo of an alleluia chorus 
there are still the troughs and life’s journey
is only as good as staying on the way.

Colleen Keating

While shepherds washed their sock by night
all seated on the ground
the angel of the Lord came down
and no one looked around ML
Just wrote this out till I get a clearer photo of the December calendar.

Our last calendar December cartoon. RIP Michael Leunig and thank –you

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * 

Day 6.

   

Butcher bird  and Magpie enjoying a drink with their  careful nod of thanks.

The Perfect Pact

The bird bath stands in clear view on the terrace
like a set up eco stage for insects to skim, 
wildlife  including the possum passing by 
and birds. We insist like a UN peace treaty
all birds have an equal right and must share
Sharon’s yellow flowered bush adds filtered shade
and a place to perch. the bird bath stands  
like an icon of empathy and sharing.

And it is not one way – we enjoy the whoosh
of wings fanning the air, flamboyant colours
of show off fluttering their feathers and bedazzling us 
the songs they sing in all their varied pitch and tone.
Knowing the pairs now why is it when one is missing 
we feel our own fragility? 

Colleen Keating

* * * * * * * * * * * 

Day 7

 

The dry sandy walk to Karagi Point slows 
like a trek across a desert. At the far edge
the first thing we hear a frenzy of chirps, 
insistent and wild flapping of wings. 
Hundreds of little Terns cloud the sky across
the fenced-in breeding ground.Their flighty 
path of lift-ups and dives with tight turns 
and somersaults more precise than aerogliders. 

Then one darts down to the sand, a dangle 
of food in its beak and the sand comes alive
with beige coloured chicks. 
We stand there mesmerised,
marvelling at the endurance of this migratory
bird. Its tiny heart thrumming against the wind. 

Colleen Keating

 * * * * * * * * * * * 

Bird Talk   on our Normanhurst terrace.

They call me King . Aren’t I gorgeous.?
They don’t seem to mind me perched on their  herbal garden

 

Waiting.   Just playing my cards. Sitting on their clothes line
near their back door means they will see me soo.
I am getting them trained!

We are learning to share here on the terrace.

 

 

 

Lockdown walk No. 17, Loosing our Marbles by Colleen Keating

Photo: from our calendar  The night We Lost Our Marbles by  Michael Leunig, a modern day prophet, where I understand ‘prophet’ to be one who challenges us to remember our core values.

Losing our marbles

“We not only listen to the birds but find ourselves talking  to them.”

Turning the calendar has its own monthly ritual.
Our Leunig calendar always gives us a surprise
often prophetic for our time.
Turning to October was no exception.
It gave us a laugh.

We resonated. It looked how we felt
on our walks in lockdown
birds, fish, flowers moon our companions.

It was while sitting against
the trunk of a swamp oak
on a lockdown walk
we found ourselves both talking aloud
to the Pied Butcher Birds
that had flown down to join us.

A family of seven
some with the distinctive black bib
some more tawny and freckkly
which according to Morcombo –
our Bird Bible –
is the juvenile and poetically
pale rufous-buff.

They hopped around
inquisitive about us relaxing
in their territory.

Besides watching them
dart for insects on the open grass
we enjoyed a choir on a branch above
its musical four-note sequence
lilting flute-like deep and mellow.

The laugh was on us.
listening to the birds
believing they were communicating with us
thinking we were understanding
and talking back to them

Are we happily losing our marbles?

Now we talk to every bird that comes to meet us –
the willy wag tails  our companions on the way
the tiny wrens we chirping
and sometimes catch their splash of blue
the magpies that warble along our track
their carolling a rings from high
to low, deep and  always  tidings of joy.

We love the lake birds
find the  haunts of the white-faced herons
watch their monk like shoulders
ponder quietly as if pretending to pray
but actually with the great white egret
stalking to prey.
If our spoonbills call in
with their bevy of ducks
we become very effusive


and enjoy the plovers
telling us to be aware of their eggs
and their young.
We wait for the whip birds to sing
listen and laugh with its song of reply.

Losing our marbles figuratively
gives us permission
to be immersed in their world
like the cartoon of the two
smiling contentedly
surrounded by nature.

Humbly we know we are a very small
and incidental part of their world
yet secretivly a little part
likes to think they are communication with us.
and losing our marbles stays figurative.

 

 

Life isn’t measured 

by the number of breaths we take 

but by the moments 

that take our breath away

Treasure every day

 

 

BIRDS our ‘feathered angels’

Birds

according to Leunig are our ‘feathered angels’

I could hear them in the distance
and in this time of ISO I wanted them closer.
I wanted them around.

But it’s not working . . .
Feeding birds on a terrace
albeit a large terrace
having the birds call in
is not working. I feel opposition.

I tell the birds not to make such noise and try to share.

It was Ok in summer when they called in for water
now it is seed and they get too excited.
Yes it thrills me and sends me buzzing.
Their energy is exhiliarating.

A pair of magpies passing by call in
and two little rainbow lorikeets keep calling
and the chirping native miners are always around
and their song and colour and energy brings us alive
in this time of self isolation.

 

 

 

 

But you see when the cockatoos heard
there was a chance of a feed
they came to take over
and I worried the neighbours and cockatoos
would not get along.

I didn’t want complaints.
Yes there are neighbours close by – up and down.

It is the sulphur crested white cockatoos
that bring bedlam and chaos and might end the deal.

 

STOP PRESS: Today 20th September 2020 a new addition to the terrace.  A Galah  arrived

to try and push in with the Cockatoos. I got a few pictures to add to this blog. I am so happy they visited the terrace. I saw two in the garden earlier this week and was wishing they would come.  Photos of the Galah visiting follows this gallery of colourful angels atound us.