BIRDLAND JOURNAL

Celebrating Northern California Voices

Airplanes by Joe Cottonwood

Trees grow craggy and cranky, says Noah.
One old oak grows sideways
so you can walk the trunk
and we do, Noah and me, 
we walk up the tree and down again
balancing with our arms stretched out
like airplanes
which is cool if you’re four 
or seventy-four.

Noah decides to tour the drinking fountains 
of Flood Park and why not, this fine day
so we run with wings outspread 
a circuit of twenty acres, sampling.
Most are built of concrete, some of shiny steel,
most in sun where the water comes hot,
some under trees where the acorns fall.
One dribbles a bath for birds,
one blasts your nose.
Most of them paired — one high and one low
for the thirsty, for the curious,
for the very young or very old
with so much to discover.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Joe Cottonwood is a semi-retired contractor with a lifetime of repairing homes by day, writing by night. He lives under (and at the mercy of) redwood trees in La Honda, California. His most recent book is Foggy Dog: Poems of the Pacific Coast. joecottonwood.com

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