I made it to 500! That's more than 500 Tuesdays since I started (no Haiku Stickies were posted during April in 2018 and 2019). Somehow I doubt if I'll get to 1,000, but I'll begin on the next 500 a week from today!
© Diane Mayr, all rights reserved.
Text:
summer coming...
peppermint patties
stashed in the freezer
Featuring cherita!
May 28, 2019
May 26, 2019
Happy Haiga Day!
Earlier this week, heading up the NH coast to Maine, I saw a bald eagle. It was quite a surprise, but I was also taken aback by the landscape in which this American symbol appeared. Sadly, it is appropriate to this week.
© Diane Mayr, all rights reserved. Photo courtesy Yellowstone NPS; digitally altered by me.
Text:
today I saw a bald eagle
perched on a dead tree
in the midst of a swamp
my high school English
teacher would have loved
this lesson in irony
© Diane Mayr, all rights reserved. Photo courtesy Yellowstone NPS; digitally altered by me.
Text:
today I saw a bald eagle
perched on a dead tree
in the midst of a swamp
my high school English
teacher would have loved
this lesson in irony
May 21, 2019
May 19, 2019
Happy Haiga Day!
© Diane Mayr, all rights reserved.
Text:
after too many years
she gently closes
the door
behind her
a slam is not needed
when the reverberations
come from her soul
May 14, 2019
May 12, 2019
Happy Haiga Day!
Here are the other two postcards created for the April Spark postcard exchange; both are cherita poems.
Since it's been raining almost nonstop for the past month, I'm hoping we'll miss pine pollen coating everything. It'll be washed away before it can fly around.
© Diane Mayr, all rights reserved.
Text:
spring in bloom
you can't blame the pine
for envying the flowers
she does her best to add to
the color medley by spreading
yellow pollen over all
The dandelions won't be in full force for a few weeks, and although they're weeds, they're a bright, cheery yellow.
© Diane Mayr, all rights reserved.
Text:
spring dusk
one dandelion flower
remains open
the tickle of a warm
breeze invites self-indulgence
in the both of us
Since it's been raining almost nonstop for the past month, I'm hoping we'll miss pine pollen coating everything. It'll be washed away before it can fly around.
Text:
spring in bloom
you can't blame the pine
for envying the flowers
she does her best to add to
the color medley by spreading
yellow pollen over all
The dandelions won't be in full force for a few weeks, and although they're weeds, they're a bright, cheery yellow.
Text:
spring dusk
one dandelion flower
remains open
the tickle of a warm
breeze invites self-indulgence
in the both of us
May 7, 2019
Haiku Sticky #497
After taking the month of April off, Haiku Sticky Tuesdays are back. I'm up to 497! I've written nearly 500 haiku and other poems, which fit on a sticky note, since August 2009.
© Diane Mayr, all rights reserved.
Text:
who would have thought
so much green is possible
...May rain
© Diane Mayr, all rights reserved.
Text:
who would have thought
so much green is possible
...May rain
May 5, 2019
Happy Haiga Day!
April was a postcard exchange month for the Spark community. I had to create original postcards to send to four individuals using the general topic of spring. The first two are early signs of spring--crocus and forsythia. The second two occur slightly later in the season. Today I'll post the early spring ones, both of which are small poems.
© Diane Mayr, all rights reserved.
Text:
New England Gardens in Spring
Her six-month lease is up.
Granite and gneiss is the trash
she leaves behind as Winter
reluctantly vacates the premises.
© Diane Mayr, all rights reserved.
Text:
Spring Impossibility
Getting an accurate count
of rabbit kits gamboling...
in
out
under
a forsythia bush.
Text:
New England Gardens in Spring
Her six-month lease is up.
Granite and gneiss is the trash
she leaves behind as Winter
reluctantly vacates the premises.
Text:
Spring Impossibility
Getting an accurate count
of rabbit kits gamboling...
in
out
under
a forsythia bush.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)