A poem written in Jedidiah Smith State Park

Campfire Stories

Campfire stories,
knights brave and bold.
Campfire stories,
with ghosts of old.
Campfire stories,
over a warm yellow glow.
Campfire stories,
make the night wane slow.
In the still forest
soft whispered voices
pierce through the dark
and over crackling bark
to tell of far-away places
and thrilling detective cases.
These campfire stories
play in our mind
stories of worlds
we never could find.
These campfire stories
they twist and they dance,
as the teller crafts tales
everyone’s caught in a trance.
Rare nights are these,
when we go without tire
among the tall trees
sharing stories and the blessings of campfire.

A Poem Written At Smith Rock

On The Precipice

The wind sweeps above the river,
where it is seasoned by the water’s spray.
It sings and sometimes howls
through the chutes and canyons.
Scraping along the ice,
which has formed like crystal webs
between the grass in shadowed vales,
it picks up even more cold
then moves on with a hurry.
The wind is always rushing,
even though it is timeless,
there seems too much sky
to run across. And so it runs,
sometimes fast, sometimes gently,
over eastern plains and sandy deserts,
on daunting mountains and misty coasts,
through cities and forests,
between glass towers and trees alike,
running to these rocks we sit upon,
weathered shapes risen and formed just so,
that have taken years we can’t count to,
in order to stand so high.
From on these tall rocks
we can see the valley and the fields,
the river, its host of mallards, and the banks we walked along.
Stone columns and far ridges draw the skyline,
and the sun colors it with inks of orange, pink, and blue.

The wind gusts up the cliffside over the precipice
and into our moment,
washing away weariness.
I can feel the very sky we watch in the distance,
swirling around us, carried in the wind.
It’s a young wind,
I know by how it feels on my skin,
cracking lips with its rough touch;
but also by the way it dances, uninhibited,
in all the spaces in between.
It gives generously, and begs to be breathed deeply.
It’s a cold wind.
It’s a good wind.

In The Night My Mind Runs Free

Staring up at storied skies,
endless stars to look through.
A thousand nights could be spent,
watching and guessing tales for every light,
the faint and strong alike.
And in my mind I’m weaving
figures across the blue black sky,
finding patterns in empty spaces
which aren’t empty,
but just too distant
to tell their message yet.
A whisper cracks the silent air
to point out a falling star,
and I wonder:
What days might be?
in the homes of these distant lights.
Do far off peoples swim and laugh
underneath these foreign stars?
Did they climb and strain,
and run and scrape, just like us?
Did they curse the clouds
and crash through waterfalls
then bathe in dirt and sand,
just like us?
Ours is named sun.
I wonder if those points of light
stare back this night
while crafting stories,
light years away.
I think of our story and smile.

A Prose Poem I Wrote Driving Back From Lake Tahoe

Waves

Growing up in Reno, I spent my time dreaming of the ocean. Our ranch wasn’t very big, the land was big enough but we had only a few cows and an old steer with brown spots and irritable eyes; remnants from my Grandfather, who lived off of his cattle. My father works construction though, and while he rose through the ranks to a middle management position, the herd wilted. Me and the leftover beef would sit on the edge of our property, stare in between the three wires that made a fence, and watch out over the salt flats. Pure white. Endless white, even though I could see the far side where brush and yellow grass rose from the parched dirt, what I really saw were waves, falling at our fence. I assembled the ocean puzzle from movies and photos, and then I watched it form in front of me, blue springing from the salt and rolling out white.  Now in the tomorrows of my life, after work dad and I come home and I sit by the three-wired fence, with just the steer, and I try to remember how to see the ocean.