Tuesday, February 7, 2023

40.

Samburu (Elephants) by Karen McCall


Drinking chai tea 

one night while camping in Kenya

I snap to attention 

as roots groan, 

bark shreds,

branches crack.

A small herd of elephants 

pads softly near my tent,

tearing at trees 

in search of food.

Adults rumble amiably and

snuffle up leaves.

A little one squeals.

I close my eyes

to fully savor the presence of this gentle sorority-- 

when the matriarch booms a thunderous growl

that jerks my rag-doll body

into the air.

Upon landing,

I rearrange my limbs

and regain my composure.

Nerves soothed,

drama complete.

Trusting,  that the elephants trust me,

I fall asleep to the lullaby 

of their, now quiet, feasting.

I rise with the sun

to a chorus of snoring and farting.

Next to my tent

five leathery mountains, 

   three adults    two calves,

lie curled on their sides asleep.

The sixth elephant stands silently

guarding her family.

She must have seen or heard me

because the group floats to their feet in an instant.

And —

     what a trick—

these giants vanish

like smoke.

All night long we had slept 

next to each other

commingling breath,

dreaming of a new world built of grass and sky

where the Messiah is a mother.

Karen McCall

April 28, 2019



41.

Howler Monkeys - by Karen McCall


In darkness, before

sun swallows night,

male Howler monkeys rumble-roar from tropical tree tops.


Then quiet

covers the forest.

Quiet

quiet

quiet…


Until,

an alpha male

once more

thunder-growls his warning to all potential rivals—


constructing castle walls

with sound


42.

Gray Encounter (Grsy Whales)

By Karen McCall


Sea spray

bearing the tang of kelp and crustaceans

stings my face in the early light

as we skim across the surface

of the lagoon.

I am watching gray whales

feast and frolic

in the kiwi-colored shallows

of Magdalena Bay

when a cow-calf pair approaches our skiff.

The younger whale, only weeks old,

dwarfs our small boat.

His smooth elastic skin,

fresh from the shelter of his mother’s womb,

is already buttoned with barnacles.

Next to our bow,

he lifts his rostrum

out of the water

in friendly greeting.

His curious eye looks directly into mine

inviting my touch.

Before I stretch my fingers over the gunnels

to caress that infant cheek

Before the baby whale closes his eye in pleasure

at my touch

Before we linger

together like this

for a long part of an hou


His mother dives below

our panga and

lifts our boat a few inches higher in the sea.

We rise on her back,

emerging like an island from the brine.

She calculates

and pauses,

before

gently

letting

us

go.



43.

Raising Butterflies

By Karen McCall


In the dry aquarium in my kitchen,

a caterpillar

convulses with the promise of wings.

Parsley and milkweed within glass walls

create a small Eden

where fat fleshy cylinders feast,

then bubble out of old, too-tight skins

sending Monarchs, Painted Ladies, Black Swallowtails

into a transformative sleep.

In their final disrobing,

Monarch larvae leave behind

translucent, jade-green jewels

suspended from branches upon which

they once flexed and fed.

Their chrysalids store

a viscous caterpillar soup

that will morph into patterned, papery wings

designed to soar across seas.

On this morning,

one chrysalis darkens and trembles in contractions.

Green skin tears away

as twitching antennae emerge,

probing the alien air.

I midwife these birth-soaked butterflies

outdoors to cure in the sun.

The heat lifts them in the sky--

a confetti of wings.


44.

On The Edge - Tamarins


Their long tails flowing

Parabolas their paths of air

Stitching earth to sky


In the sweeping world

The trees on the edge of death

As if immortal


Eye to eye and face

To face the tamarins meet

The aspect of eternity