Saturday, December 24, 2011

7 STARS FOR 7 BEARS


A Praise Poem for our Teton Stars: Mama Grizzlies 399 and 610
                                              by Lyn Dalebout
                              
1. our Bears are numbered
610 and 399

a daughter and her mother

five cubs in tow
combined

these Bears were given numbers
the first time they were trapped

marked with ear tags~choke chains
a way of being tracked

2. we’ve watched them trade one cub

traveling
between two moms

sometimes it seems all 7
are functioning as one

3. Bears are sidereal Sagittarians
born in the underground spring

hatched beneath the Earth

in the sign of
vision
birthing the new dream

4. we are blessed by
Bear ambassadors

fierce love and protection
inhabits their souls

Grizzly Mothers
Bear Mothers

in honoring
them

we become more
whole

5. Ursa Major   Ursa Minor
7 stars in each heavenly Bear

Ursa Major    Ursa Minor
Great Bear and Little Bear

celestial Bears   earthly Bears
mirror one another

emissaries
visionaries

~how to live amongst each Other~

6.are Bears days numbered?

indeed
if we ignore their needs

vast room to roam

              free

hundreds of miles to move

             unseen

our Bears are numbered
so in deeds
we must hold strong

guarding the wildness of territory
more land
that’s what keeps them from harm


7.               These 7 Bears
                  are our 7 Stars

                     thankfully
             ~they hold our hearts~


 

Lyn Dalebout lives in Moose Wyoming in Jackson Hole beneath the majestic Grand Teton mountains. For more information about her astrological services, teaching, writing and poetry, please visit her web site: www.earthwordskyword.com, lyn@earthwordskyword.com

Saturday, December 17, 2011

Exquisite Praying Mantis


In my grandfather’s garden on St. Mary’s Street,
they crept, stemmy creatures with Popeye arms.

Every day at lunch we assembled toy blocks
with letters around the chipmunk’s fountain.

Eating peaches, juice running down our chins,
sticking fingers tossing pits in the grass,

watching the clouds fly by and imagining the
exquisite animals,

feeling the clouds filling my eyes, throwing
all the strange creatures into shadows of shapes.

The winged creatures donned their shadows,
landing beneath the clouds in peace,

two and two flew throughout the night,
and all five felt the magic of flight.


- by Mary Lynn Callahan, Tammy Christel, Meg Daly, Alice Grant, Sue Mortensen, Benj Sinclair, and Olivia Wheeler


This poem was created at the National Museum of Wildlife Art in conjunction with the “Exquisite Animal” exhibit, which runs through February 5, 2012, at 2820 Rungius Road.

Exquisite Heron


The great blue heron broke her driftwood pose;
her wings plumed wide, over the stream she rose.

Rising high above the crystal waters,
a journey to a far off place she goes.

Floating on the air
the eagles’ wings flow,

gnashing their teeth
on a rumpus they go.

Glistening in the moonlight,
the blue, blue moonlight,

shimmering beams of stars
dance gleefully in azure.

Points of light coming from
how far? No one is sure.


- by Meleta Buckstaff, Carrie Geraci, Amy Goicoechea, Jennifer Hoffman, Doug Miller, Terry Roice, and Carol Schneebeck

This poem was created at the National Museum of Wildlife Art in conjunction with the “Exquisite Animal” exhibit, which runs through February 5, 2012, at 2820 Rungius Road.

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Exquisite Chickadee


Dapper chap in your cap
and ebony cravat, sing, sing!

Though darkness brings fearsome shadows,
within the blackness there be stars.

So sing into the night,
sing until the sky shines like diamonds.

In the dawn, the cold rocks grace your skin.
Pick up the red balloon and run.

And the sun
calls all beings into life.

Livin’ the dream!

- by Meg Daly, Kjera Strom Henrie, Elizabeth Kingwill, Rob Kingwill, and Abbie Miller


This poem was created at the National Museum of Wildlife Art in conjunction with the “Exquisite Animal” exhibit, which runs through February 5, 2012, at 2820 Rungius Road.

Exquisite Porcupine


She nibbles on old wooden steps,
wild roses shrink away in awe,

ambles on her way
poking around… curiously,

wondering why…
but knowing not.

The dark lines
would lead her back.

The bees get their breakfast,
“Eat at Joe’s.”

I didn’t know I would come
but I wanted to.

The snakes undulating all the way
through wildflowers.


- by Matt Daly, Fred Kingwell, Wendy Merrick, Mimi, Sue Mortensen, Carol Schneebeck, and Connie Wieneke


This poem was created at the National Museum of Wildlife Art in conjunction with the “Exquisite Animal” exhibit, which runs through February 5, 2012, at 2820 Rungius Road.