PSA BEFORE WE BEGIN:
Global Climate Strike scheduled for Friday, September 20. Plan ahead to show that
you accept that this is a #ClimateEmergency and that you don't accept government inaction!
orange daylilies stand
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you accept that this is a #ClimateEmergency and that you don't accept government inaction!
The pretty stripes
above are a powerful graphic depiction of climate warming in my state of
Maryland. Each stripe represents the average annual temperature of one
year between 1895 and 2018. "These are just normal fluctuations over
time," say the climate change deniers--but there is no doubt that the
trend we see starting in about 1985 is a strong, consistent shift. You can go to showyourstripes.info and get the warming stripes graphic for your location too. Share the knowledge, friends.
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Why? Why am I harping on? Here are some reasons within my view this morning on my patio.
This particular bloom was a great triumph, because our daylilies were not doing well until we cleared out the avalanche of trumpet vine that was choking it. Then, just as they were getting ready to finally pop, Fiona and I met a pair of young stags on the road behind us, and we are 99% certain that one of them bounded back through our yard and stopped for a tasting at our Daylily Buffet! Of the 18 stalks that had flowers developing, there were only 4 left the next morning. Here's my daylily poem:
orange daylilies stand
long-necked in creeks of green
along every road
flocks of June herons
ours haven’t landed yet
ours haven’t landed yet
late bloomers
just opening their beaks
©Heidi Mordhorst 2019
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I'm harping on because as I'm sitting here, this appears:
blue-grey buzz of
long-beaked hover
coming back
hanging just
out of reach whenever
I think you've
gone
instadraft ©Heidi Mordhorst 2019
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I'm harping on because we poets, "we love the Earth...we love our planet...we love the Earth...it
is our home." (You might like to watch the amusing and not very "clean version" of the not super-poetic music
video below, which seems aimed at 12-year-old boys. You have been warned.)
I'm harping on also because see, L'il Dicky knows that if you want to capture the attention of 12-year-old boys, you put foul-mouthed animated pigs and farting skunks on YouTube, because it's likely that many of those kids have not noticed a daylily or seen a live hummingbird or pig or skunk to fall in love with. We all of us are losing daily touch with nature, or if we're touching it, it's encased in plastic or it's 2D on an electronic screen.
As spring came on in 2nd grade and we spent more time outdoors, I found myself having to explain to 8-year-olds that they are SUPPOSED to actually TOUCH nature, get dirty, get scraped and bruised and sweaty--"it's how your body learns about the world," I said. They all just wanted endless band-aids.
I finally decided to provide unlimited, self-determined band-aids (but not unlimited visits to the nurse!). And Karen Boss's DMC Challenge over at Today's Little Ditty with Michelle Heidenrich Barnes gave me the perfect opportunity to expand on a new, more powerful purpose for band-aids. Thanks to Michelle for featuring this at her blog; now you can read it here too!
©Heidi Mordhorst 2019
Thanks to Buffy over at Buffy's Blog for hosting us today. I hope you get a little dirty and hot and bruised on your way over and that your path is lined with daylilies and hummingbirds and not animated expletives. And don't forget to start thinking about what you can do to make a noise on September 20. #ThisIsZeroHour.