Monday, April 7, 2014

Off The Masham-Eardley Road

November under a
fleece-shearing sky
we hike trail past
beaver-sharp poplars
a polyphony of birdcall
and chickadees like summer's
    castoff leaves
       scrabbling dirt.

We pass Mud Lake
dark and smooth as
           isinglass
white birch repeating
and repeating
    on its surface
like a Thomson painting.

Shying toward us
over a granite litter
a lavender-coated mink
slinking white-bellied
to peer feverish eyes
then evaporate.

The forest is acrid
and a pheasant panics
the undergrowth in a
pandemonium of leaves.
A grouse flaps high
in the branches of an ash

and a woodpecker clowns,
down-hanging a branch
like a drunken bat.
We meet other solitudes
in this Gatineau place.


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