Showing posts with label Fiordland instrument. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fiordland instrument. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 08, 2011

Tuesday Poem - Absence of Birds





The mountains 
do not remember
asking the forests 
to shelter birds 
with silent tongues
and wings of bark. 

CB 2008



I wrote this short poem whilst on board the conservation yacht, The Breaksea Girl. A group of us were fortunate to spend six days and nights in and around Doubtful and Dusky Sounds in Western Fiordland, a protected, once-pristine area of black water, red kelp, primordial forest, 'vanishing' waterfalls and - until quite recently - a cacophony of birdsong. Sadly, predators - cats, rats and stoats - have resulted in a severely diminished bird population and significant damage to the forest floor; this in turn has led to the canopy thinning which implies potentially dramatic long-term changes to the ecology in the area. We were shocked and saddened to witness firsthand what felt like the loud absence of birds. . .    





For more Tuesday Poems, please click on the quill. 
This week's editor is Helen Heath with Bookcase Full Of Closed Books Wants To Sing 
by Joan Fleming





Monday, November 15, 2010

Companions



companion 1 |kəmˈpanyən|
nouna person or animal with whom one spends a lot of time or with whom one travels his traveling companion• a person who shares the experiences of another, esp. when these are unpleasant or unwelcome my companions in misfortune.• a person with similar tastes and interests to one's own and with whom one has a friendly relationship drinking companions.
• Astronomy a star, galaxy, or other celestial object that is close to or associated with another.
ORIGIN Middle English : from Old French compaignonliterally ‘one who breaks bread with another,’* based onLatin com- ‘together with’ panis ‘bread.’





*Seems to me we break bread together daily out here, friends -
I am glad of your company. 


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