It’s quieter here In this simple place Where we stare at the sky And count the rabbits Fluffing their tails. The grass grows greener When it’s neighed at, Not honked. The rhythms of scratches Of dead leaves dancing Across the lonely road Stretching between Gilman and Medford Must give hints to the wind Of deafening snow. We’ll settle here in silence, By and by.
You sit in the heart of Arcadia With tongue not native to this land. In Tortas y Tacos New Sunrise Saying words most don’t understand. But the owners, they speak your language Here on the Oeste side of the state Where the Tamarack grows And the river is young In its march toward its fate To the gulf of your home far from here This Norte portion of River. Even in this place where any hope Seems little more than a glimmer, It may not look it—but trust me—we like Your unexpected face To more than me, You seem to be So foreign to this place.
Legs pumping. Breaths come quick. Sweaty, blurry eyes. Nearly sick. The bluffs are built with pines and oaks That are passed by with every stroke Of swiping hand up this land That curves toward the sky.
At the peak Passing bikes Litter the trails Designated for quick appreciation Of the mountainous bluffs. The cycling tires Swipe berries from their branches Sending them to the forest floor Waiting to be found and swallowed whole. Outside the canopy The river winks in the distance Enticing hikers Down.
Increasing speed Toward the bowl Is soon deemed Out of control. Runs turn into falls And falls turn into rolls. Rolls turn into bleeding From legs, back, and elbows. But the running, rolling, bleeding Comes to a stop down below The peak of the bluff. Swallowed by the bowl.
Intoxicating fumes From the 87-octane Spilling from my Ski-Doo Only heighten my senses That had already peaked Around that last corner That throws me into The final, Deafening Stretch that is checkered in black and white.
Before I even tear the tape I lift my hand in victory Ignoring the dusted snow Blinding me To the competition That I didn’t even know was there.
As we step our first steps Onto the first brick of Main Street, I stop to reflect On the times laid behind me:
The wooden panels glistened On the Lake Geneva seas That held me and my skis Aloft with blinding speed. The laughter and lounging Out on that lake Was only temporarily ruined By one glaring mistake: The loss of my sunnies That now lay at rest on the sand, Forever enjoying the warming waves Rippling overhead.
Now the light red darkens deeper From drips of Geneva flowing down leg, Like a fleshy waterfall, Onto the brick now dark red.
The times lying before me Are sprinkled with ice cream and fudge, Or singing and dancing (Hopefully all the above). But who knows? The plans could change wildly! A pretty girl, for example, Just winked at me mildly. It doesn’t matter, ‘Cause if you can, then you will On the land in Lake Geneva, Time lays down still.
Among these maples and oaks, Owls creep And ravens think, Beetles shuffle up and down And scitterish squirrels quietly shrink, Caterpillars make their homes Between the branches of the birches, At daybreak the hawks awaken And predatory birds begin their searches Through the thicket of the foliage For the field mice and the shrews Scurrying along the forest floor Finding grubs nibbling on the roots
Stuck in traffic, But I’m okay. Got cut off, But I’m okay. My radio’s broken, But I’m okay. It starts to rain, But I’m okay.
Because even in this car I’m close to the trail That leads me to Out Of The City: The Ice age Trail That takes me back in time To a world long lost To the footsteps of concrete, Noise, and Smog. The trail’s guidance winds In escape from the encroachment That I myself need to break.
My foot touches down on the softened dirt, And now I’m okay.
Four boys (No good, no doubt) Sat in the garage, Figuring out, Just what to do With their Saturday night. “Let’s egg some place!” Brad said with some might. They carefully planned it: The egging of 412 Silver. Todd would go to the Kroger And soon would deliver Four dozen eggs (Free range, of course). They were led by Art (Who they called the worst). Then the four of them (Derek in back) Crept up to 412 Silver And quickly attacked. Whistling missiles Of unfertilized chickens Littered the siding and windows. And so it was written: The floodlights exposed them, And they ran for the house. Galloping gayly Laughter shot out their mouths. Back at the garage They gathered their breaths. Three—no, not four— Were all that was left. Todd was here, Art and Brad made it three. Derek was missing! (He’d gone back for his keys.) The three boys all went home then Not sharing a thought About what had just happened And prayed to their God. The next day at school, To their surprise, Todd, Brad, and Art Found Derek alive! Beaten and bruised, He recounted his night: Going back for his keys The homeowners caught him in flight. They bound him and beat him, Tied him with rope to a chair, Poked him with needles, And yanked at his hair. After hours of this Improv interrogation The captors called the police And proudly launched their confession. It didn’t take long For the cops to arrive To find a teenager smiling Because he’d known he survived. Moreover, he smiled because He knew (and believe me, he flaunted) That he could sue this couple For that new bike he had wanted. Right there in school The four all agreed: No more egging houses (Unless bikes were guaranteed).
Lakes chained together make for fun trips and sunny skies! The first toe of the day gets dipped around 8 Into the pale water fitted with a white sand bottom. The minnows scatter at the breaking of reflections With boats and tubes And all sorts of inflatable toys. Speeding Sea-Doos skip across the surface— That once was soft and now is concrete— Towing tubes of fun and games. A child dunks his head to spy for fish, But the real fun’s up top.
The Sun bakes these memories into hardened treasures. For when the snow commandeers this place They will only be totems of laughs long past And hopes for a summer to come.
I’m frantically searching …but what am I searching for?… That hidden gem, That last piece of untouched land That defines this place. The last frontier – barely explored. The last dirt road – often ignored. The last virgin land – pure to the touch. The last piece of home. There’s no thing as such A hidden gem: One I’d love to find, But I’ve been swimming in it All this time.