Tag: September

  • September Poems

    September Poems

    Boathouse Bonfire, September 27, 2014 (Source: Geo Davis)
    Boathouse Bonfire, September 27, 2014 (Source: Geo Davis)

    If September poems sound overly sentimental to you or if you’re inclined to a grittier observance of the almost-upon-us Autumn Equinox, I’ve got you covered. Soon. Stay tuned.

    But if you’re comfortable lingering briefly — and these poems are, if nothing else, brief — in the seasonality and liminality of the present moment, then I’d like to offer you a few September poems. After all, sometimes the singing underneath doesn’t translate to images or longform exposition. So I’ve bundled a tidy bundle of verse celebrating my one of my four favorite seasons.

    Susan in Carriage Barn, September 12, 2006 (Source: Geo Davis)
    Susan in Carriage Barn, September 12, 2006 (Source: Geo Davis)

    Haiku September Poems

    Short and sweet, sometimes bittersweet, is the name of the game when trying to put your finger on something as poignant and humbling as the shift from summer to autumn (with the omnipresent reminder that autumn too will soon yield, and winter will shroud the colors and flavors and aromas away beneath a snowy blanket). But that can be an elusive errand.

    There’s something ineffable about Septembering, but anyone who’s dwelled a spell in the North Country is familiar with this shift. (Source: Seasonality: Septembering)

    Haiku’s economy offers a bold if foolhardy effort, so let’s start there.

    •:•

    Dusky zinnias,
    harvest-ready to welcome
    arriving houseguests.
    — Geo Davis

    •:•

    Bountiful beans,
    red-podded asparagus,
    climbing the teepee.
    — Geo Davis

    •:•

    Seasonal surreal:
    autumnal art, alchemy,
    tart transformation.
    — Geo Davis

    September Sunset, September 6, 2015 (Source: Geo Davis)
    Sunset, September 6, 2015 (Source: Geo Davis)

    Longer September Poem

    I’m struck by the concurrently lavish spoils and humbling caution of September. In so many respects the bounty of an entire summer’s worth of gardening and orcharding comes due in September. Sure, we’ve been enjoying the gardens since May, but the this month full of contrasts is without doubt the most abundant harvest. And yet, even as we indulge to excess, the crisp nights and the sunlight’s increasingly anemic illumination remind us to prepare for winter.

    When Septembering
    honor abundance
    as autumn will soon
    yield to the drum roll
    of hale and hoarfrost,
    bitter wind, and snow.
    — Geo Davis

    This might be the first verse to a longer look at the point-counterpoint of this intoxicating yet sobering marvel of a month. It might also have reached its end. A little hibernation should help decide.

    Cider Pressing, September 6, 2015 (Source: Geo Davis)
    Cider Pressing, September 6, 2015 (Source: Geo Davis)

    Sing-song Along

    I’ve made no secret of the fact that this 2022 summer and autumn have been pivotal for Susan and for me. We’re surfing some seismic transformations in our lives, finally confronting inevitabilities and incongruities that have been evolving for a long time, and fortifying one another for significant choices and changes ahead. In all probability the liminal space we’re navigating underlies the vibrance and drama I’m noticing in everyday events. But I’m unable to disregard the rhymes, rituals, harmonies, and auspicious signs (cairns, buoys, vade mecums,…) as I immerse myself in the texture and artifacts of a decade and a half with Rosslyn, as Susan and I revise and remap and re-plot our next chapters.

    So many friends and acquaintances have contributed to this new adventure we’re embarking on, often without even realizing it or intending to effect our trajectory. Influences have an uncanny habit of popping up at just the right time! And so I close this post with an invitation to you. We welcome you to join and participate in our quest. As fellow sojourners we’ll better bridge the valleys and better celebrate the lofty summits ahead. Grateful to be traveling together!

  • Autumn Twangs

    Autumn Twangs

    September Twangs, September 23, 2019, (Source: Geo Davis)
    September Twangs, September 23, 2019, (Source: Geo Davis)

    September Twangs Haiku

    Early morning light
    in mid-late, late September
    twangs like a banjo.

    Three years and two days ago, September 23, 2019, autumn light leapt the visual audio barrier shortly after sunrise. The moment, really a medley of moments, still resonates today. Cooling hues and crisper textures tickle nostalgia for fall foliage past, the sentimental tug of mornings, no, illuminations past, hollowed out, taught, ready to be plucked into song.

    Lyric longing. Morning luminescence. The icehouse dormant just beyond the basswood tree so recently. Now awakening. Coming to life just as autumn twangs, summer exists, winter rehearses.

    Falling Forward…

    A month from now, as autumn achieve’s its most dramatic, most colorful climax, childish charm inevitably gives way to the inevitable arrival of winter. In “Autumn Vibes”, the exuberance and optimism that twangs in the haiku above still linger but are already fading, resolving into the sweep of seasonality. Seasons come. Seasons go…

  • Seasonality: Septembering

    Seasonality: Septembering

    Septembering: grapes sweetening in the vineyard (Source: Geo Davis)
    Septembering: grapes sweetening in the vineyard (Source: Geo Davis)

    September 1 should logically be indistinguishable from August 31. But it’s not. Seasonality along the Adirondack Coast is irrefutable, and possibly no season-to-season transition more apparent than the one we’re now experiencing. “Septembering” is neither sly nor subtle. Hot and humid yesterday. Crisp and chilly today. There are nuances aplenty to anticipate and enjoy in the weeks ahead, but this moment is our reminder. Summer is in retreat. Autumn is advancing.

    Septembering: grapes sweetening in the vineyard (Source: Geo Davis)
    Septembering: grapes sweetening in the vineyard (Source: Geo Davis)

    Septembering Haikus

    There’s something ineffable about Septembering, but anyone who’s dwelled a spell in the North Country is familiar with this shift. Temperature and barometric shift are obviously part of it, but it’s also the changing light, daylight duration, and the abundant harvest. So much colorful harvest to tempt us. And that magical sweetening of fruit in the orchard and the vineyard. Best step aside and let sparse haiku convey what I’m stumbling over.

    •:•

    Seasonal surreal:
    autumnal art, alchemy,
    tart transformation.
    — Geo Davis

    •:•

    Dusky zinnias,
    harvest-ready to welcome
    arriving houseguests.
    — Geo Davis

    •:•

    Septembering: exuberant zinnias (Source: Geo Davis)
    Septembering: exuberant zinnias (Source: Geo Davis)

    Sweet, Surreal Seasonality

    This time of year we harvest fresh bouquets of garden-to-vase blooms to welcome our guests to ADK Oasis, our lakeside vacation rental. These colorful zinnias offered this afternoon’s new arrivals a cheerful invitation to unwind and revitalize! There’s something almost garish about zinnias, the decadence of color, the abundance of petals. They are the quintessential child’s illustration of a flower in my opinion. An explosion of colorful petals to balance the creeping autumn umber.

    Septembering: grapes sweetening in the vineyard (Source: Geo Davis)
    Septembering: grapes sweetening in the vineyard (Source: Geo Davis)

    Grapevines too offer a sweet is slightly surreal portrait of seasonality. Days ago these bursting fruit were too tart too eat. I’ve been tasting. And puckering. But cool night catalyze the sugars as if awakening deep memories of what grapes might taste like. This morning I ate dozens of grapes. The perfect play of tart and sweet.

    Septembering: grapes sweetening in the vineyard (Source: Geo Davis)
    Septembering: grapes sweetening in the vineyard (Source: Geo Davis)

  • Sometimes September

    Sometimes September

    Sometimes September (Source: Geo Davis)​
    Sometimes September (Source: Geo Davis)
    Sometimes September
    withers leaves and sweetens fruit,
    sensible sublime.