Poem: Aspen Bush in Spring
White snow melts into mud.
Above, bright sun, bare branches,
catkins, a scent reminding me of
cinnamon and caramel,
but nothing like either. I stop,
look up, inhale, try to hold
that fragrance in my mind.
A pair of squirrels, chipmunks,
birds I cannot name. I slip and
almost fall. Bark glows white
in the sun, red dogwoods,
yellow leaves beside the path.
Clear air. A hillside carpeted in
little bluestem, bearberry. On
the plateau above, lilac crocuses,
invading buckbrush, wolf willow.
The trail loops, leads me back
to the trees. Cross a stream, climb
another hill. Other walkers pass, smile
hello. Their laughing dogs are leashed.
Somewhere deer, raccoons, coyotes,
porcupines are hiding. Paths worn under
chokecherries, marks of hooves and claws.
In the car, my boot leaves mud on the clutch.
KEN WILSON lives and works in Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada. His Ph.D. project is a study of the Regina Bypass, a new highway around the city, using walking as his primary methodology. His words and photographs can be found at https://readingandwalking.ca.
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