The detritus of past seasons - great haiku and wonderful observation. I love the way the yellow line demarcates, as if to separate the seasons themselves.
This is so clever - and astute. Love it! An unrecognized bike (yes, an entire bike) is beginning to make its way through the snow berm out front. I'd rather have fries!
The Cloud Messenger (Meghadūta) is a lyric poem by the respected Indian poet, Kālidāsa. The poem centers around a yaksa in exile. Longing for his beloved, waiting for him on a Himalayan mountain, he asks a cloud to take a message to her. The sights he tells the cloud it will see on its way make up most of the poem.
The idea of recording observations appeals to me. I thought The Cloud Messenger was the perfect title for a blog about the journey that we all make as we move through our days.
I'm a baby boomer who grew up dancing in the streets of Detroit during the classic Motown years, lived beside the Rocky Mountains for many years, now retired and living (and writing full time) in S. Ontario. I have one blog for rock 'n' roll oldies, and one for nature, poetry and life along the Lake.
24 comments:
The detritus of past seasons - great haiku and wonderful observation. I love the way the yellow line demarcates, as if to separate the seasons themselves.
Kat
interesting post...I just read one on Sandy Carlson's blog and they are so different-shows our individual creativity.
One loss can be another gain.
you can never know what you're going to find under the snow when it melts...I found a safety helmet once...
BTW, I loved your haiku :)
Very clever; I hope the crows got the french fries.
An original take on the prompt.
Enjoyed that.
Big A for that one for creativity. I love it!
Very clever pun, yet very significant message at the same time.
You summed up a whole story in such few words! Bravo!
Someone finished those fries! Ah, but the fork....
Your haiku suggests that lost and found could very easily be two sides of the same coin! Lovely!
Ha! A different kind of fork in the road ... both winners.
LOL! ;<) This was great Deborah. Thanks for the smiles.
Hugs, G
I loved your Haiku and the humor in it.
Thank You!
That puts a whole new meaning to that popular saying! I like your creativity.
This is so clever - and astute. Love it! An unrecognized bike (yes, an entire bike) is beginning to make its way through the snow berm out front. I'd rather have fries!
I saw half of a
sad sandwich on the sidewalk
it might have been ham
brilliant blend of photo & words
Fun (if appalling littering).
Interesting! And really, I do wonder about things like that!
Nice one..season's loss is your gain.
You are very clever!
Glad somebody got the fries...
I love that! "winter's lost and found" Great interpretation!
lovely lines...someones loss is someone's gain...enjoyed reading!!
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