Beckoning me?
Surely not –
pampas grass
~Nishiyama Soin (S Carter, Haiku before Haiku)

Nikon D750 f/5.6 1/160s 45 mm 100 ISO
Beckoning me?
Surely not –
pampas grass
~Nishiyama Soin (S Carter, Haiku before Haiku)

Nikon D750 f/5.6 1/160s 45 mm 100 ISO
In pine wind
bellsounds shower down
with evening rain.
~Sogi (S Carter, Haiku before Haiku)

Nikon D750 f/7.1 50 mm 1/80 s
Leaves on the reeds
will be suffering to –
after a storm
~Ikkado Joa (S Carter, Haiku before Haiku)

Being alone
may also be pleasant –
autumn dusk.
~Buson (Y Sawa, Haiku Master Buson)

Chat about the snow
on Fuji’s peak–
and summer is no more
~Sanjonishi Sanetaka (S Carter, Haiku before Haiku)
“When I look at the trees in front of me, my mind does not go outside of me into the forest, nor does it open a door to let the trees in. My mind fixes on the trees, but they are not a distant object. My mind and trees are one. The trees are only one of the miraculous manifestations of the mind.”
~Thich Nhat Hanh (The Sun My Heart)
if my father were here–
dawn colors
over green fields
~Issa (www.haikyguy.com)


Hearts are one
in the cool shade
of a single pine.
~Gyojo (S Carter, Haiku before Haiku)

this summer breeze
a gentle guide for the one
coming to visit
Going deep,
I leave summer behind
on the mountain path
~Soseki (S Carter, Haiku before Haiku)

Spring departs —
the clear moon oblivious
of passing time
~Soseki (S Carter, Haiku before Haiku)

from the tip
of the forest ranger’s broom. . .
spring departs
~Issa (www.haikuguy.com)

Trees…Medicine Bow National Forest
Medicine Bow National Forest extends from north central Colorado to central Wyoming in the United States. The origin of it’s name, Medicine Bow, is legendary. The generally accepted version is that the Native American tribes which inhabited southeastern Wyoming found mountain mahogany in one of the mountain valleys from which bows of exceptional quality were made. It became the custom of friendly tribes to assemble there annually and construct their weapons. At these assemblies, there were ceremonial powwows for the cure of disease which, in the hybrid speech that developed between the Indians and the early settlers, was known as making medicine. Eventually, the settlers associated the terms “making-medicine” and “making bow”, and Medicine Bow resulted as the name for the locality.
Hop on over to Lost in Translation to participate.
this rain
a greeting card from heaven
midsummer heat.
~Issa (www.haikuguy.com)
What are the various conditions—past and present, known and unknown—that come together to create raindrops? Scientists have suggested that the interactions between water vapor, dust particles, and wind turbulence within clouds create millimeter-sized droplets which are heavy enough to begin their descent towards earth. And in the process of falling, the droplets accumulate more and more moisture, becoming the raindrops we see on the ground.

This scientific explanation of how raindrops form invites contemplation of the prior conditions that create vapor, dust, and wind. Each of these transient phenomenon is a telling of the ongoing weaving and unweaving of interconnected threads creating the various phenomena we experience within each given moment.
This weaving and unweaving of threads is noted by Thich Nhat Hanh, “This is, because that is. This is not, because that is not. This is born, because that is born. This dies, because that dies.”
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