Showing posts with label nature poetry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nature poetry. Show all posts

Friday, December 11, 2020

Lines and Curves, Nature Poetry

I find immense complexity, beauty and fun in the lines and curves of native plant geometry.  Here is a short poem about the lines and curves of Florida's native plants:


childhood Florida

plants their recognizable

unique curves and lines

distinct shapes evoke bright

memories of when and where

i last touched their leaves

or when the corners

of my mouth turned up and i

looked back for the

subtle fragrance source

wonderfully overwhelmed with

geometric shapes

leaves, branches, flowers and stems

i don’t even focus

my eyes for i know those

distinct curves and lines 

nature’s sketch pad

from all those past days

exploring swamps dunes

forests hills and glades

Florida native plants

sea oats at the beach

sandspurs in my feet

drawn with both sharp angles and 

soft curves

or the maze of tangled

moss swaying below outstretched

oak limbs, curves upon curves,

upon curves just

next to obesely large

satin white magnolia blossoms 

sweeping high above

saw palmetto’s outstretched

fronds their open hands with

so many fingers full

of flora’s geometry pointing above

tangled green below

dewberry wrapping around

sharper than smilax

its purple fruits strewn by 

soft beds tiny violets

the earth fully blanketed over 

lyre leaf sage

dark purple and green

complex cut curves

edging vast longleaf pine

flatwoods those swept

of swaying wire grasses 

beacon-like fire bright 

pineland lilies

orange yellow red

tepals curved with more curves

my fingers tracing

the flower’s flowing outline in the air

just beyond lies

stillwater basins lined 

carnivorously those

pitcher plant meadows

a marriage of more lines and curves

adjacent ancient cypress 

trees still straight and tall

again lined up in dark but clear

shallows where lines and

curves of cypress needles and

pop ash leaves barely 

discernible in subtle earth toned

pond water 

earth’s leaf art

framed and stained with 

tannins flowing south

north of great fields

pointed sawgrass

currents beneath carrying

nutrients to reddish

brown mangrove arches

rubber vine laced

more curves upon curves

vertically mirrored

brine curving flows

so many lines and

curves to sketch here

lying down on the

cool earth to contemplate now

immense beauty of

native plant art so

full of lines and curves

Monday, October 28, 2019

Florida Nature Poetry & Art, La Mar & a Cup of Tea

Monday Nature Verse - La Mar & Cup of Tea
Florida Nature Haiku-Senryu by Kevin Songer
...
rumbling storm vibrates
oceanfront window panes
and my cup of tea


Wednesday, October 23, 2019

Florida Nature Poetry & Art, Monarch Butterfly’s migratory flight across the gulf

 Florida nature poetry for Wednesday, Monarch Butterfly’s migratory flight across the gulf.
Monarch butterfly feeds in preparation for it's winter migratory flight across the
...
one last nectar sip
as kaleidoscope gathers
over the shoreline
nature's refinement
eight hundred miles cross the gulf
waves swallow many
the strongest survive
maybe luckiest rest in
oyamel fir trees

#monarch #butterfly #arttherapy #pensacolaart #pensacola #biglagoonstatepark #floridastateparks #naturepoetry #haiku #poetry #floridanature #nature

Monday, October 21, 2019

Florida Nature Poetry & Art, Purple Coneflower (Echinacea purpurea)

Florida nature poetry for Monday, Purple Coneflower (Echinacea purpurea)

Florida Nature Poetry & Art, Purple Coneflower by Kevin Songer
...
too many’s a crowd
genetic diversity
is survival’s key
purple coneflower
displays its finest array
intently seeking
long distant bee for random
cross pollination
...
Florida field of Echinacea purpurea, Purple Coneflower by Kevin Songer
Purple coneflower depends on long distance bees to spread pollen across hectares, enhancing genetic biodiversity.  In turn, bees profit from Echinacea's nectar sustenance. 

Thursday, October 3, 2019

Florida Nature Fun Poetry - Haiku for Thursday, Feathers, Wind and a Seagull

Florida Nature Fun Poetry - Haiku for Thursday, Feathers, Wind and a Seagull
Florida Haiku, Feather, Wind and Seagull by Kevin Songer
...
stout wind today
pull feather from the sand and

out pops a seagull
...

Wednesday, October 2, 2019

Florida Wildflower Haiku & Art, Lyre Leaf Sage, Salvia lyrata

Florida Wildflower Haiku & Art, Lyre Leaf Sage, Salvia lyrata
Florida Wildflower Haiku & Art, Lyre Leaf Sage, Salvia lyrata by Kevin Songer
...
native purple blooms
hummingbirds steal a sip and
chase off butterflies

Lyre-leaf sage is a Florida native and drought tolerant wildflower I see growing across lawns, along roadsides, in fields, meadows and under the forest canopy.


Lyre-leaf sage leaves are lyre-like in shape with deep purple and green colorings. Their light blue flowers provide nectar for hummers and butterflies. The over-lapping leaves of adjacent lyre leaf sage plants keep other weeds down and provide a neat, well-cropped perennial native ground cover appearance. Lyre leaf sage has been one of my favorite and most reliable green roof plants.

Lyre leaf sage has also been used traditionally as a cancer cure. This healing practice was based on a theory that because the plant quickly spread, creating densely populated patches, it must be a natural cure for likewise rapidly spreading cancers. 

Lyre leaf sage is an amazing Florida native perennial, landscape or green roof plant superb in its attraction to pollinators, hummingbirds, bees and butterflies.

Sunday, September 29, 2019

Florida Wildflower Haiku - Short Verse for Sunday, Wild petunia, Ruellia caroliniensis

Florida Wildflower Haiku - Short Verse for Sunday, Wild petunia, Ruellia caroliniensis

Florida Wildflower Haiku - Short Verse & Art, Wild Petunia, Ruellia caroliniensis by Kevin Songer
purple bloom nectar
attracts pollinators all,
far into scrub woods


Wild petunia is always a surprise to discover growing in the woods as the plant and flower brings an aura of nice-neat cultivation to rough and ramble undergrowth. Wild petunia is a cousin of the more invasive Mexican petunia yet wild petunia is a prized Florida native wildflower and does not grow in an invasive manner. The common buckeye and white peacock butterflies seek out wild petunia as larval host plant.

Friday, September 27, 2019

Florida Nature Poetry - Senryu for Friday! Snowy Egrets & Sanibel

Florida Nature Poetry - Senryu for Friday! Snowy Egrets & Sanibel
Florida Poetry, Haiku - Senryu, Sanibel & Snowy Egrets by Kevin Songer 
...
sanibel traffic
hit the causeway early for
best picnic table
...

Thursday, September 19, 2019

Haiku - Senryu Poetry, Florida Wildflowers, Purple False Foxglove, Agalinis purpurea

Florida Wildflower Poetry, False Foxglove Senryu, Agalinis purpurea
Florida Wildflower Haiku - Senryu Short Verse Art, False Foxglove by Kevin Songer


false foxglove marsh
ruby throated hummingbird charm
break sonic sound barrier


False foxglove's mauve blooms in mass covering a wet field are truly a spectacular sight in color and texture.  

False foxglove (Agalinis spp.) can be seen growing along roadsides, in cleared or disturbed lots and pastures or fields.  The plant prefers slightly damp, sandy soils.

 As with other trumpet shaped flowers, False foxglove’s blooms are sought out by hummingbirds.  Did you know a group of hummingbirds is called a 'charm'.  Charming!

Wednesday, September 18, 2019

Wednesday Native Plant & Wildflower Poetry - Haiku (Senryu), Smilax spp.

Wednesday Florida native plant & wildflower haiku (short verse), Smilax spp.
Florida Haiku, Wildflowers & Native Plant Art, Smilax spp.
by Kevin Songer

wily cat brier
scampers up tall long leaf pine
hold tight sharp tip thorns


Catbrier provides the hungry hiker a quick energizing snack with its tender, tasty vine tips. Some sauté the green vine ends in butter and say the flavor resembles asparagus. 


Catbrier’s vines are loaded with thorns, making the mature, thickly vining plant a veritable evergreen barrier and providing wildlife with protected communal habitat.

Though a bit on the rambling side, many Smilax species make great green roof and living wall plants as they are drought tolerant and grow well in full sun (think of the beach dunes where they grow lush and thick).

Sunday, August 18, 2019