the rivers have
an ancient darkness…
cuckoo
~Issa*

Lost in Translation: Darkness and Light
*cited: http://www.haikuguy.com
the rivers have
an ancient darkness…
cuckoo
~Issa*

Lost in Translation: Darkness and Light
*cited: http://www.haikuguy.com
squatting
the frog observes
the clouds
~Chiyo (F Bowers, The Classic Tradition of Haiku)

the autumn wind
resounds in the mountain–
temple bell
~Chiyo (F Bowers, The Classic Tradition of Haiku)

The wild geese yet
Are content to stay —
And must you return
~Otomo Oemaru (1719-1805)
cited: F Bowers, The Classic Tradition of Haiku

Nikon D750 f/6.3 1/200 s 90 mm ISO 100
looking delicious
the snow falling softly
softly
~Issa (www.haikuguy.com)

Nikon D750 f/5.6 1/200s 300 mm 100 ISO
those snow days…blanketing the earth and gifting us with silence, before snow shovels and snow removal trucks, serene
Let’s spend a few minutes listening to…The Sound of Silence, Simon and Garfunkel.
No matter how much things change, they still remain the same.
Will you turn toward me?
I am lonely too,
this autumn evening.
~Basho (F. Bowers, The Classic Traditions of Haiku)

I felt compelled to update this earlier post to invite you to visit LdG luciledegodoy who earlier noted my image inspired her to post a photograph she created a few days ago. I invite you to hop on over to visit her post and while there listen to Eva Cassidy’s wondrous voice and the story of her life.
even tortoise and crane
meet their fate…
autumn evening
~Issa (www.haikuguy.com)

Nikon D750 f/7.1 1/125s 300 mm ISO 100
Going through the gate
I also am a wander
this twilight in autumn
~Buson (Y Sawa & E Shiffert, Haiku Master Buson)
It began that first Halloween in Des Moines, Iowa, when I found myself wondering if the ghost, goblins, and witches that appeared at my door were also messaging the onset of seasonal changes. It was that year as my daughter’s Halloween costume was atop layers of clothing and hidden by a winter coat, I first noticed–and then again during later years in Wyoming and Colorado–that Halloween is often accompanied by a significant drop in temperature that generally lasted well into spring.
Today, the November 1, 2017 edition of Aljazeera reported that while Halloween is not recognized outside the western world “the date is climatologically significant in that it ends the three-month climatological autumn. Figures will now be confirmed and compared, by climatological statisticians, with autumn seasons from previous years.”
Additionally, at the end of October:
The Indian monsoon withdraws to the tip of India and Sri Lanka and the second cyclone season begins in the Arabian Sea and the Bay of Bengal. The Australian cyclone season officially begins.
Both Australia and South Africa have seen particularly stormy spring seasons and are settling now into summer.
China has entered its winter season with the northeast monsoon now prevalent. In the United States, the last few days of October brought some proper snow to the northern states.
Northern Europe has been battered by a windstorm followed by a big drop in temperature. The system responsible is still covering Belarus in snow. Western Europe, and in particular Iberia, is yet to realise the change of season.
Sometimes one’s private musings do have a bit of merit.
the old dog
looks as if he’s listening…
earthworms sing
~Issa (www.haikuguy.com)

once green, now fading yellow
a beautiful leaf
all by itself in autumn

dandelion wind
and departing parachutes
awaiting a spring

plum blossom scent–
the voices of children
sound reverent
~Issa (www.haikuguy.com)

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