patrick dixon, writer
poetry.fiction.memoir
  • Home
  • About
    • Contact
  • Poetry
    • Poems
    • SWIMMING WITH FISH and other animals
  • Prose
    • Articles >
      • The FisherPoets Gathering - Coming Ashore in Astoria
      • A Day in the Life: on a Harbor Tug in Seattle
      • Trapped on the Reel
      • Exxon Valdez Spill: Cook Inlet Tanker Blockade
    • Essays >
      • A Lot to Hold
      • Never Cross the Lines
    • Memoirs >
      • A Shaft of Sunlight
      • Trimming the Hedge
      • The Connection
      • My First Strike
    • Short Stories >
      • The Sinking
  • Blog: Gillnet Dreams
  • Links
  • Books by Patrick Dixon
  • Media links about "Waiting to Deliver"

Waiting to Deliver: an Alaskan commercial fishing memoir

3/1/2022

3 Comments

 
Picture
In April of 2020, my wife Veronica said to me, "I think you should revisit that memoir you stopped working on. Since we're going to be isolated anyway, what better time to finish it?" 

I was nonplussed. I'd set that piece - or, rather, pieces - aside because I was stumped at how to connect all the disparate stories and poems I had written over the years into a coherent whole. When I first started writing it shortly after I retired from teaching (the second time) in 2010, I thought it'd be clever to put them in a non-linear format. I landed on a "conceit", or template for telling the story that involved me knocking a pile of old fishing permit cards onto the floor. Those cards are issued by the State of Alaska annually, and each year is a different color. A fisherman must use them to sell their fish to a processor each time they deliver their fish, so the processor knows the fisherman is licensed.. Many fishermen such as myself save them as mementos of their years fishing. When, in the writing of the first version of the memoir, I bent over and picked up a card, I'd look at the year stamped on it and that would trigger memories - stories - of that year. The idea was that the reader would encounter the characters and events out of sequence, and the more they read, the more the pieces of my fishing life would snap into place. It was a good idea until I realized there were multiple people named Rob and more than one Danny. Sorting them out became more and more difficult and redundant as I found myself spending too much time explaining who exactly I was talking about instead of telling the story. By the fifth or sixth card, I was frustrated and realized it wasn't going to work. So I set the project down and walked away. For almost ten years. Then Veronica, as she does, got an idea about what I should do with my time. And for that, I am forever grateful. "Waiting to Deliver: from greenhorn to skipper, an Alaskan commercial fishing memoir" launched Feb. 17th, 2022, and the response from a wide variety of folks - fishermen, former students, old college friends, FisherPoet Gathering fans friends, family and outright strangers have snapped up almost all of the first printing (225 copies). The book is on Amazon now, and, I'm starting to collect some very complimentary and humbling reviews. So for you readers who haven't yet bought one, here's a little taste. I added vintage B/W photos I took while fishing (I taught photography for 28 years), and peppered the book with poems. Here's one of my favorites:

​The Bucket.

All the years I been on a boat,
commercial fishin' on the ocean afloat,
I always seem to find a way to be
what you might call hygienic – 
and never use a bucket at sea.
 
Now let me explain – my first job is as a crew
on a Cook Inlet gillnetter – and I’m new, 
so I work hard and keep my mouth shut
when given all the crappiest jobs, but
all this business with work boats and fish,
the hardest thing to stomach is the dish
my skipper feeds me when he says with a smile,
like he knows just how I’ll react all the while:
There ain't no toilet on a boat, it's called a 'head’.
We ain't got one here, so use that there bucket instead.
 
The container he points to is black and thin,
tucked behind the ladder, it barely has a rim.
I find out later some guys have a toilet seat
they put on their bucket to make it complete.
But the sketchiest thing is – I mean, what the hell?
I have to use it outside, on the back deck, 
in the fish-picking well?
 
Everywhere we fish there are always other boats around;
seems to me the only privacy is back on solid ground,
or in the head of another boat that might tie up for a while –
where I can close a door and do my business in solitary style.
I’m convinced, but don’t show it or say it out loud,
there is no way I’m performing in front of a crowd!
 
So I hold it – sometimes for days
and I refuse to relinquish my restricted ways.
While we’re at sea or even anchored up –
doesn’t matter for how long – I’m a bound-up pup!
With a nod toward the bucket, my skipper says, 
Do you EVER take a shit?
Not on THIS boat! I shoot back, and turn my head and spit.
Well how do you go about that when we’re fishin' for days?
he asks, and shakes his head at my unnatural ways.
I have a strong sphincter, I begin... Ya see…I… ah, fuck it!
I'm telling you, I’ll never, ever use that stinkin’ ol’ bucket!
I won't have my turds slosh 'round when the weather gets rough
and slap my port and starboard as the boat rolls in the trough!
And what if that flimsy fucker collapses under me
when I'm sittin' out there emptyin' my scuppers at sea?
I'm tellin' you, skip, I have a fish hold full of motivation
for me to maintain this extensive constipation!
And I intend on holdin' it 'til the season's over and done,
when I can pull down my rain gear and rest my bum
on a nice, white toilet seat above a clean porcelain bowl –
where I can properly deposit… a civilized roll!"
 
That said, we go back to work,
and though I am full of it, I try to not be a jerk.
But whenever a boat with a head ties alongside
I start to feel the surge of an outgoing, ebbing tide.
And when we hit the dock, it’s always a lively chase
as off the boat I fly and to the cannery john I race!
I know my skipper, on more than one occasion
has wagered a bet or two against me, but the rising sensation
inside me of impending jet propulsion
always seems to result in a positive conclusion.
I always make it. I'm really not sure how;
but my sphincter and legs make sure 
my stern stays clean somehow.
 
I'll fly my flag high: I'm proud to say I’ve always ducked it,
and never, ever used that old black bucket!
​
3 Comments

Gillnet Dreams

3/1/2022

5 Comments

 

Waiting to Deliver: an Alaskan commercial fishing memoir

Picture
In April of 2020, my wife Veronica said to me, "I think you should revisit that memoir you stopped working on. Since we're going to be isolated anyway, what better time to finish it?" 

I was nonplussed. I'd set that piece - or, rather, pieces - aside because I was stumped at how to connect all the disparate stories and poems I had written over the years into a coherent whole. When I first started writing it shortly after I retired from teaching (the second time) in 2010, I thought it'd be clever to put them in a non-linear format. I landed on a "conceit", or template for telling the story that involved me knocking a pile of old fishing permit cards onto the floor. Those cards are issued by the State of Alaska annually, and each year is a different color. A fisherman must use them to sell their fish to a processor each time they deliver their fish, so the processor knows the fisherman is licensed.. Many fishermen such as myself save them as mementos of their years fishing. When, in the writing of the first version of the memoir, I bent over and picked up a card, I'd look at the year stamped on it and that would trigger memories - stories - of that year. The idea was that the reader would encounter the characters and events out of sequence, and the more they read, the more the pieces of my fishing life would snap into place. It was a good idea until I realized there were multiple people named Rob and more than one Danny. Sorting them out became more and more difficult and redundant as I found myself spending too much time explaining who exactly I was talking about instead of telling the story. By the fifth or sixth card, I was frustrated and realized it wasn't going to work. So I set the project down and walked away. For almost ten years. Then Veronica, as she does, got an idea about what I should do with my time. And for that, I am forever grateful. "Waiting to Deliver: from greenhorn to skipper, an Alaskan commercial fishing memoir" launched Feb. 17th, 2022, and the response from a wide variety of folks - fishermen, former students, old college friends, FisherPoet Gathering fans friends, family and outright strangers have snapped up almost all of the first printing (225 copies). The book is on Amazon now, and though it hasn't really taken off there yet in terms of sales, I'm starting to collect some very complimentary and humbling reviews. So for you readers who haven't yet bought one, here's a little taste. I added vintage B/W photos I took along the way (I taught photography for 28 years), and peppered the book with poems. Here's one of my favorites:

​The Bucket.

All the years I been on a boat,
commercial fishin' on the ocean afloat,
I always seem to find a way to be
what you might call hygienic – 
and never use a bucket at sea.
 
Now let me explain – my first job is as a crew
on a Cook Inlet gillnetter – and I’m new, 
so I work hard and keep my mouth shut
when given all the crappiest jobs, but
all this business with work boats and fish,
the hardest thing to stomach is the dish
my skipper feeds me when he says with a smile,
like he knows just how I’ll react all the while:
There ain't no toilet on a boat, it's called a 'head’.
We ain't got one here, so use that there bucket instead.
 
The container he points to is black and thin,
tucked behind the ladder, it barely has a rim.
I find out later some guys have a toilet seat
they put on their bucket to make it complete.
But the sketchiest thing is – I mean, what the hell?
I have to use it outside, on the back deck, 
in the fish-picking well?
 
Everywhere we fish there are always other boats around;
seems to me the only privacy is back on solid ground,
or in the head of another boat that might tie up for a while –
where I can close a door and do my business in solitary style.
I’m convinced, but don’t show it or say it out loud,
there is no way I’m performing in front of a crowd!
 
So I hold it – sometimes for days
and I refuse to relinquish my restricted ways.
While we’re at sea or even anchored up –
doesn’t matter for how long – I’m a bound-up pup!
With a nod toward the bucket, my skipper says, 
Do you EVER take a shit?
Not on THIS boat! I shoot back, and turn my head and spit.
Well how do you go about that when we’re fishin' for days?
he asks, and shakes his head at my unnatural ways.
I have a strong sphincter, I begin... Ya see…I… ah, fuck it!
I'm telling you, I’ll never, ever use that stinkin’ ol’ bucket!
I won't have my turds slosh 'round when the weather gets rough
and slap my port and starboard as the boat rolls in the trough!
And what if that flimsy fucker collapses under me
when I'm sittin' out there emptyin' my scuppers at sea?
I'm tellin' you, skip, I have a fish hold full of motivation
for me to maintain this extensive constipation!
And I intend on holdin' it 'til the season's over and done,
when I can pull down my rain gear and rest my bum
on a nice, white toilet seat above a clean porcelain bowl –
where I can properly deposit… a civilized roll!"
 
That said, we go back to work,
and though I am full of it, I try to not be a jerk.
But whenever a boat with a head ties alongside
I start to feel the surge of an outgoing, ebbing tide.
And when we hit the dock, it’s always a lively chase
as off the boat I fly and to the cannery john I race!
I know my skipper, on more than one occasion
has wagered a bet or two against me, but the rising sensation
inside me of impending jet propulsion
always seems to result in a positive conclusion.
I always make it. I'm really not sure how;
but my sphincter and legs make sure 
my stern stays clean somehow.
 
I'll fly my flag high: I'm proud to say I’ve always ducked it,
and never, ever used that old black bucket!

Pandemic Diary

I started writing poetry more frequently in March, as the pandemic began hitting us hard and our president became more and more authoritarian. Neither of those things have abated in the past six weeks, but my output of puetry has remained constant, especially during April, when I usually dedicate myself to a poem a day to honor National Poetry Month. So far, I have kept up – Sweet Jesus, there's a lot to write about these days, and loads of time to do it. Rather than search for publishers that might be interested in publishing these diary-like poems about what we're going through, what I'm going through– I thought I'd post them on my amazingly underused blog. Why not? Perhaps if enough people see them and like what they read (even if it isn't pleasant, I hope it rings true to folks out there), maybe the word will spread, and I'll expand my readership. What is it they say about blogs? "Never have so many written so much for so few." I hope that isn't the case here. So here come over a month's worth of new poems, dated the day I wrote them. If you like, please tell your friends where to find them, or share them yourself. And I'd love to hear your comments. 
03/13/2020
​For Greta
 
It’s all gone sideways.
Pandemic. Stock Market crash,
Trump acting the dictator again.
 
We don’t hear much about the climate crisis
as we try and negotiate
our way through this,
but we know it’s still there.
 
I don’t know about you,
but I’m losing sleep over this,
what seems the first wave
of the apocalypse. Just a warm-up
before the big game begins.
 
So I try controlling my breathing
into the darkness above me,
or distract myself with video games,
reading, playing cards with my love,
hugging, holding, and yes, we cry,
but we do it together.
 
It was cold and rainy today,
the sky was gray – nothing new
and mixed with the rain fell light snow.
I stood on the porch and listened to it
as it spoke with the cedar in the front yard,
saying, this will resolve as it should.
Have faith. 
 
The pandemic is self-correcting– It does
what science can’t, what politicians won’t, 
what people across the globe refuse: 
drive less, fly less, only make essential trips. 
Entire states and countries aren’t commuting. 
Energy consumption is a fraction of what it’s been.
 
For once most of us agree
how high the stakes are.
Will we finally see how high they’ve become?
This is only the first wave.
 
​
03/14/2020
​March Snowfall
 
A cool calm touches gentle
this morning, white flakes
lightly drifting to the ground
in a silent ballet.
 
My mind makes its own music these days: 
heavy metal death rock
with Covid-19 on lead guitar 
and my love’s impending heart surgery 
slamming the drums. 
 
But grey clouds
bring an afterdawn tune –
a solitary light wind chime
against a backdrop of white flutters
that stop the chatter of bad news 
and worse outcomes.
 
Today the stars slipped their tethers
and descended through the clouds 
floating groundward as if to remind us
we are all still – always – standing outside,
mouths and eyes wide with wonder.
 
 
03/17/2020
​Undertaker
 
I close the casket on travel,
dig holes in the back yard,
toss in plays, poetry readings,
concerts, frivolous trips to the grocery,
the Farmer’s Market.
 
I mourn my favorite restaurants,
distrust the handle that dispenses
gasoline into my car. But though 
the price of gas has dropped,
I’m not driving much.
 
I miss my beloved coffee shops,
the friends I’d meet there,
the conversations dipped into
as I wrote in my journal.
I miss relaxing in public.
 
I carry dread with me these days
like a scythe. It shows in my eyes
whenever someone sneezes or coughs
and I hold my breath as I leave.
 
No one says Bless You  anymore.
We duck and scurry like the rats we are, 
at the mercy of the fleas we carry.
 
I’m even reluctant to hug my own children.
 
The fear has changed my posture,
hands stuffed into pockets,
shoulders hunched, arms tight
as if I can fend off this unseen threat
if I hunker deep enough into my coat
deep enough into myself.
 
I am an undertaker all right,
scattered pieces of me
strewn everywhere.
All that’s left to do
is carve a headstone.
                                                – March, 2020
 
​
03/19/2020
Antibody
 
​We’ve had it backwards
all along.

A virus attacks its host
until the victim becomes 

crippled with sickness,
or even dies.

Step back.
Stand on the moon,

rewind time, view the
Anthropocene Age

sped up. Watch
as humans race

across the blue marble
hanging in space,

ravaging forests,
fouling air and water until,

overcome with fever
the world fights back.

Corona Virus? Only if your
perspective is human.

From the planet 
point of view

it’s an antibody.

​
03/27/2020

​Mating Season
 
The flicker’s on the chimney
this March morning, announcing
his presence to the neighborhood.
 
The tin spark shield 
echoes through the cedars,
hemlocks and firs standing silent
 
in the soft rain. Flat gray 
overhead, not a breath of wind.
His beak strikes staccato
 
and the impact hammer of his head
rattles its way into the house,
startling us over morning coffee.
 
We look up from our devices
taunting us with our own helplessness
in this world of breaking news,
 
and smiling, we remember 
there are others here, with an
insistent, immediate message
 
about needs of their own.
​
​
03/29/2020
Tidal Wave
 
 
Let me tell you a true story: 
I have stood on a concrete dock 
extended like an outstretched arm
over a glacial river the color of opal
and watched the water flow upriver.
 
Not toward the river mouth, but UP river,
back to its source– the result of extreme tides 
caused by positions of the moon, earth 
and sun in space.
 
During those times we would double 
the lines of our boats tied to floats 
that rode water up and down 
over thirty feet from top to bottom.
 
When the tide released its grip, 
all that water turned with the river behind,
pushing to the sea. We’d hope we’d secured 
the lines well enough to hold 11-ton vessels
against the stunning immensity of the force trying
for the next six hours to break them free.
 
One day I watched a fisherman try to maneuver  
his oversized boat to a slip near the dock, 
between two rows of other boats five or six deep. 
He turned beam to the current, and in an instant 
the racing torrent grabbed him before he could adjust, 
surging him sideways into the row of the boats behind him. 
His side window shattered, lines to the dock parted, 
and his fiberglass cabin buckled as he slammed into 40-pound anchors 
protruding from the bows of the boats he hit. In a flurry of shouts and curses
fishermen spilled out of cabins like termites from a mound. 
 
Like a light blown out, the day switched from the routine calm
of a fishing closure to absolute chaos. The skippers on board
the involved boats instantly started their engines, 
and everyone pinned by the offender began untying 
so they could escape before they broke free themselves
and went crashing downriver into other boats tied up or at anchor. 
One-by-one they cut loose and motored into the river, 
trying to hover into the current, some still tethered 
to an empty vessel tied alongside, the owner absent,
the boat locked. 
 
Meanwhile every skipper and deckhand 
on the float ran to help, scurrying over boats, 
untying lines from the float, pulling lines out of the water
before they fouled a propeller, pushing boats away, 
or trying to fend the interloper off the impaling bows.
 
It was frantic work. Everyone knew the boat in trouble 
was desperate: tons of water pushing at her keel, 
making her list, threatening to capsize her 
with crew still on board. In a heartbeat 
she could swamp and plunge under the boats 
she was pinned against. 
 
Seconds mattered. A slip of a boot,
a trip over a taut tie-up line or the sudden jerk 
of a shifting boat could send someone 
into frigid water rushing by so fast they’d be gone 
before they surfaced, if they surfaced. 
When the offending boat was finally freed 
broken but intact, she found another place to tie up.
 
                                                ~

Afterward we blamed the skipper for making a decision 
we hoped never to make, but during the crisis 
blame mattered not at all. We knew everyone was needed 
to stop a bad situation from getting worse.
 
Thirty years later, Covid-19 feels like that tide, 
flowing our lives backwards, then turning dangerous, 
sweeping over everything, relentless, unstoppable, 
uncompromising. 
 
Like the river, the virus doesn’t care what we do.
We are pinned against our own mortality.
 
 
03/30/2020
​Love Affair
 
At a party in 1985,
she was everyone’s favorite girl,
she sat on the coffee table,
adorned in white sparkles 
legs curled under.
 
We shared a straw, leaned in
and when she touched me,
I went numb with delight.
 
She ran her tongue between
my lips and gums, 
and as much as I loved her
I loved that even more.
 
With her, time melted.
I don’t think I ever saw her sleep–
eyes wide, we talked til dawn
past dawn, into the next day,
all day, until, ragged and drained
 
I fell from her, 
crawled onto the nearest couch
and slept for a week.
 
She didn’t mind; was waiting 
when I awoke, calling softly, softly,
enticing, alluring, sexy as hell.
 
Before I left her forever
I went back again and again.
 
​
04/01/2020
Keeping Peace at Bay
 
I have felt this way before.
1982. Fishing my old wooden boat
I was off the mouth of Tuxedni Bay
in a six-foot slop south of the Kalgin can,
when the fog came up.
 
In minutes visibility went from unlimited
to near zero. I knew from the radio
one of the boats in our group was nearby,
but as everything but the waves slapping us
disappeared, that was little comfort.
 
In my third season as a skipper,
I barely had a grasp on what to do
in bright daylight. Now, surrounded
by gray mist, I was out of my element.
Disoriented, I made a bad choice.
 
I decided to leave. 
 
I switched on radar I had rarely used, 
my crew and I went outside to pick the net.
The boat tossed and twisted as we backed
into the waves with the pull of the reel.
Spray from the tops of combers blown
 
by the wind stung our cheeks 
as a mostly empty net rolled on board. 
By the time the first fish came over the roller, 
we had enough momentum to carry us 
over the net before the sea could push us off.
 
Worried we’d hang up on the gear, 
I made the worst decision of the day:
I put the boat in gear, wrapping the net,
corks and line around the propeller
until it thumped and ground to a halt.
 
Our day fishing was done. The adventure
had just begun. We tried kicking the net free
by putting the boat into reverse, then forward,
with no luck. We pushed at the net with an oar.
We tried pulling the net alongside. Nothing worked.
 
We went in the cabin and called a tender for help.
Be there in an hour or so, they answered. 
Got some other guys to help out first. I turned off 
the engine and looked to see what the radar showed, 
faint green dots on a round screen. 
 
The sweep of the hand around the screen was mesmerizing. 
My deckhand crawled into the bunk. I watched the fog 
and listened to the boat creak, the slap of the waves on the stern, 
the occasional vessel running by. I could have been peaceful, 
but the stress of the weather, being broken down and missing fish
 
kept peace at bay. By the time the tender parted the fog
I had convinced myself I was the worst fisherman
in the fleet. It wasn’t until I saw he had one of the best 
fishermen I knew in tow with the same problem
that I realized we are all capable of bad decisions
 
on shitty days.

​
04/02/2020
Empty Chairs
 
sit vacant in the gray
light of morning,
reminders of where
we sat yesterday,
our first visit in months.
 
This virus, armed with wedges
places an ironic twist on the adage
Divided We Fall. 
Now it’s Divided We Live,
so, no hugs 
 
when we spotted you 
on the street, despite
desire so strong it hurt.
Instead, laughs, tears
and the feeling I sit with
 
today, writing this poem: 
a knowing that if we don’t survive,
instead become statistics,
that you loved us
as deeply as we loved you;
 
that these chairs outside,
weathering spring sun, rain and hail
are not vacant at all–  despite
all appearances, they cradle
the invisible treasures 
 
of cherished lives.
 
 
            ~ for Kessler 04/02/2020

​
04/03/2020
​Grey Day
 
The rain has stopped
but the sky is still sodden
 
slate grey, gray goose grey
thick grey, grey as my mood.
 
The cat, all contrast and purr
curls on the desk where I write
 
tucks white paws under 
black body, yellow eyes
 
at half-mast. In a moment
she will either sleep 
 
or stretch a gentle paw 
to the back of my hand
 
as I type, resting there,
reminding me she’s waiting
 
in pure grey light spilling
through the window.
​
​
04/04/2020
​Exit Ramp
 
            ~ for Tom Walls, 
  11/20/1949-4/4/2020
 
Visiting my Indiana home
from Alaska decades ago,
we arranged to meet, and you drove us 
to Sleeping Bear Dunes state park
where we camped, smoked dope 
(we still called it that back then),
and told stories into the night.
 
Best friends through college,
we had our adventures,
dropping acid, acting weird
and crazy just to see what people
and each other would say.
 
We drove from the enormous
sand dunes along Lake Michigan
to Chicago, where you were
dropping me off at my girlfriend’s,
and as we entered the ramp for I-90/94,
you turned to me: They say the three
most congested freeways in the U.S.
are the Kennedy in New York,
the Santa Monica in L.A., and this:
the Dan Ryan.
 
We were going sixty on a curve
between two tall cement walls.
You unbuckled your seatbelt,
screamed at the top of your lungs
and launched yourself into the back seat.
Screaming myself, What the FUCK?
I unbuckled too, grabbed the wheel 
and slid over before we crashed
into the concrete abutment or worse.
 
Years earlier, still in college and stoned
to the gills, this time I drove. We came up 
on a flatbed truck with slats six feet high,
loaded to the top with partially inflated
inner tubes. On top of the pile were three
big ones, the size of semi tires. 
 
We were four or five car lengths behind him 
when he hit a bump that bounced the entire load.
The truck tires compressed, then lifted,
one of them more than the others.
In slow motion it separated and floated
free of the truck. I took my foot off the gas
and we both watched as the big black
rubber balloon jiggled and shook in the air
dropping to the pavement in front of us,
flattening, spreading out before
it gathered itself and rose up again
just as we coasted under it. 
 
We’d each been holding our breath.
With an exhale, you turned to look 
out the back window, while I watched 
the rearview to see it land again, 
then bounce off the road into the ditch.
 
I’ve told this story dozens of times,
but a few years ago, I wondered,
with all the fuzziness of detail time brings,
if I had embellished too much,
had the facts wrong, 
or made the whole damn thing up.
So I called you out of the blue, 
our first chat in years. We laughed
and talked, you confirmed the veracity
of my tale, and we swore to stay in touch.
 
And we did, via Facebook posts and comments,
but never again on that personal level
we connected on so well in our early years.
That is what haunts me today, upon learning
that this morning you unbuckled yourself
from the vehicle we all ride, this time taking
a leap out of the car altogether, leaving me here
screaming.
 
 
04/05/2020
What the Hydrangea Knows
 
Vacuum canister in hand,
I opened the door this morning
to sunshine angling through the cedar
and a sense of warmth 
in the spring-scented air.
 
I swept the house of debris
the past week dropped upon us:
the detritus of bodies,
including some we knew, 
including some we were related to, 
 
piled in corners with pine needles 
and seeds, bits of chips under the table,
grains of rice, grains of rice.
I stood on the porch, 
all that wreckage in my hands, 
and breathed in the cool morning.
 
Looking down I noticed the hydrangea
for the first time since winter cut her back
and withered the flowers in her hair; 
and there she was, quietly growing more.
 
Yesterday I sobbed on the telephone
as I told my granddaughters how much
I loved them. I felt my life drying up, 
desiccated by this pandemic, 
and I miss what has fallen away.
 
In that moment I forgot 
what the hydrangea knows–
how patience is as important as water
in surviving the long winter.
 
So I wait. I wait with the sweet hydrangea,
the budding dogwood in the back yard,
and the lilacs walking their slow, diligent path,
not lamenting fallen blooms of autumn,
but moving ahead, trusting their work
will bear beauty again, each in their own time.
 
​
04/06/2020
​Unpretentious Audacity
 
The news says the next two weeks
are forecasted to be the worst yet.
Brace for the toughest fourteen days
of your lives. Today blossomed blue sky
and yellow sunshine bathing the buds
on the dogwood, maples and spruces,
warming the cool spring air of early April
enough that we ventured outside,
into the teeth of danger.
 
It didn’t feel treacherous, but then we avoided
the supermarkets, gas stations and hospitals,
and stayed home, working the yard,
cleaning out the garage, dragging lawn furniture
from under the eaves. The riskiest thing
I did was roll the recycle bins to the street.
I didn’t even get the mail.
 
Sweating from the little effort I put out,
I sat on the corner of the wooden box
in front of the house and paused in the shade
of the cedar. A tiny songbird flew into the Japanese
maple across the drive and burst into an Aria
so beautiful and loud for his size that he surprised me
into smiling at his unpretentious audacity.
 
It didn’t last.
 
Perhaps he was disturbed that I sat next to
so many abandoned and fallen nests displayed
behind me on the box, that he left soon after his serenade,
or maybe it was the black iron sculpture of a great heron 
bolted there.
 
Or maybe, like me, he saw not the stable, thick concrete 
where our cars park and we walk, but the cracks
lacing the poured foundation, eating away the solidity
year by year, day by day, accelerating, falling away 
no matter how brightly we sing.
​
04/07/2020
​So Many
            ~ for John Prine
 
What do you say
when the dark cloud comes for you?
 
What do you do
when you feel it in your lungs,
 
when you’ve taken all advice,
worn the mask,
 
used the gloves, read the articles, 
and all your effort
 
didn’t pay off? What if
your creativity, your toil at your job,
 
all the love–
of friends, lovers, family 
 
didn’t matter? When you can’t 
breathe your last breath,
 
sing your last song, recite your last poem,
paint your last masterpiece,
 
what do you say?
 
Take me then, you fucker.
I don’t resent your choosing me,
 
despite all I am or have done,
but that you’re so greedy,
 
taking so many others
so many of us all.
 
04/08/2020
The Trouble with Rattle
 
The bubble popped today
when the English teacher in me
saw not one, but three errors
of spelling in the title and intro
of a poem emailed to me 
by what I naively thought
was a prestigious literary magazine–
each instance the same word.
 
Ouch, I thought. 
This sends an unfortunate message
about the poets and writers published there,
of which I am not one, 
but thought I might like to be.
 
More concerning was 
how did the repeated misspelling
make the poet feel?
And damn, it was an excellent piece.
I know I’d be embarrassed,
maybe even a little horrified.
 
The poem itself 
had the title spelled right, 
pointing a finger
at the culprit, not the author:
An intern in a hurry, I presumed,
who just needed to run a spellcheck.
 
So I dashed off a reply,
asking Really? Three times?
And sent it off without a thought,
 
until an offended reply 
from the editor arrived
in a cloud of hot smoke.
How dare you? Was the gist
of the response, with a terse description
of how busy he was, how audacious I must be,
and how I cherry-picked his trivial error, 
catching him at a weak moment,
when he had so much more important work to do.
 
Abruptly I was cast the bad guy,
like so many English teachers before me.
 
Yet, I took his offense to heart, wrote a letter
of apology, even offered to volunteer
if he was so swamped he could use a hand.
            His reply was silence.
But for him, I suppose the moment had passed,
and he pushed into the current of his busy,
important life.
 
Just as abruptly I wrote off 
ever getting published there,
or ever wanting to. Though 
I must admit I harbor a nagging itch
to send him this poem.
 

04/09/2020
​Out Front
 
The cedar fronds
hang in the still air,
cradling two tiny trillium,
white triangles–
a portrait of fragility
under its eaves.
 
And in the cool air
above this giant of a tree–
a light mist
of fog that nurtures
the ancient forests
of this coastal land.
 
We call the fog
a Marine Layer,
as if science can override
what water vapor 
truly is.
 
Though today is forecasted 
unseasonably sunny and warm,
the mist belies discipline,
 
like empty cushions 
of lawn chairs we 
placed in the yard,
knowing that
in the year of Covid-19
no one may come sit in them.
 
Still, the morning has started
soft, and for the little trillium,
the towering cedar and me,
filled with expectation.
​
 
04/10/2020
​April Showers
 
During March, we were lucky.
No one we knew died.
 
But April arrived,
and with it, the trepidation
 
we felt became real: 
our brother-in-law,
 
my wife’s sister’s husband,
passed from complications
 
of Parkinson’s aggravated by the virus:
no longer able to visit the nursing home
 
daily, his wife couldn’t bring him food,
couldn’t touch him or lean in and whisper,
 
I love you. Starving, he lost weight,
and stopped taking his meds.
 
Two weeks later, he slipped away.
At least she was holding his hand
 
at the end. Not so for so many others
who are dying alone this spring.
 
The sun has returned this month,
dripping sadness through the trees,
 
warming the chill in the air
until the reminding wind drives us,
 
tucking our collars up, inside
to wait for more bad news.

​
04/10/2020
​Departure
            - a letter to the hospital staff
 
 
When the end comes,
please remember who I am,
 
that I have a wife or a husband 
or family and friends
 
whom I love and who love me
and they can’t be here.
 
Know that I ache to see them,
one last time even with this tube 
 
down my throat, but I don’t want them
here, risking their lives to say goodbye.
 
Please understand that I am filled 
with sadness that I must leave – alone
 
in the company of so many others.
I am grateful that you are here
 
tending to me at your peril.
Know that I would choose another way
 
if I could. And even if I am unresponsive,
trust that I am still present,
 
and if you get a minute to breathe,
please whisper a kind word in my ear
 
to take with me as I go.

​
04/11/2020
​Arc of Visibility
            ~ for Bridgit
 
Think of a lighthouse–
how in the dark of night
it hurls photons into the dark
in a circle: an illuminated warning
not for those on land,
but for the water-borne,
the mariner making way
toward home.
 
Watch a ship pass 
after the sun is well-set,
already lighting the other side
of the planet. Notice how red,
green or white lights appear,
then fade from view.
 
Now you have it.
Arc of Visibility is not 
what you choose to see,
nor even what chooses you.
It is the repeating life lesson
blinking at us across the void–
everything depends upon 
what porthole you gaze through.
 
04/12/2020
​Spring Holidays, 2020
 
Easter
Passover
Crucifixion
Blood over the door
 
Now more than ever
Now. More than ever.

​
04/13/2020
All at Once
 
The virus is in our lungs
reproducing in the soft, moist tissue
until, full, we drown in our own blood.
 
The virus is in our bank accounts
feasting on all we thought we had
until, empty we are hollowed out.
 
The virus is in our pockets
robbing us of family, friends,
lovers, leaving as payment
 
 for its indulgence, generous helpings
of anger, sorrow, loneliness 
and grief.
 
Invisible, the virus is everywhere 
and nowhere to be seen
simultaneously, all at once.

​
04/14/2020
One More 
            ~ for Ella
 
 
What would you do if this
were your last day on earth,
we used to ask ourselves
as a reminder to wake up
from travelling through life
on automatic.
 
The old answers don’t work now.
My bucket list has changed: no longer
do I want to sightsee the world,
leave my family behind for weeks
or months to indulge my selfishness.
 
After a month of self-isolation
and not seeing her, 
we ask our granddaughter 
what she wants for her birthday 
next week. She’s turning eight, 
and with wisdom far older 
than her years, her reply is 
I want to spend it with you.
 
My answering thought: 
I want to be with you too– 
for many, many more. 
But if it’s all I get,
I’ll take this one.
 
​
04/15/2020
​The Music of Poetry
 
A poem a day for April
has been my practice 
these past three years,
 
thirty days in a row, writing.
Some days I race to arrive
at an intimate meeting
 
behind closed doors
with my secret lover. 
On others, the room 
 
is empty, and I
hollowed out– nowhere
to turn for solace,
 
the blank white page
a window to futility.
On those days,
 
– and I admit
it’s become every day –
I turn on the music, 
 
soft and instrumental; something 
to entice a muse to dance,
a small step to start – a word
 
or lyric placed just so, tempting
more until the choreography weaves
and spins itself up and out, 
 
exhausting us, that tired
that comes with the burning flame,
certain to return tomorrow.
 
 
04/16/2020
Good Advertising
 
My neighbor across the street
always has a friendly word.
He likes beer and football,
roots for the Mariners, 
and he even checked on our house
when the security alarm went off
a few months ago.
 
When the ambulance came last year
to take me to the hospital 
after I dislocated my knee,
he texted, asked if there was anything 
he could do. He even offered to mow
our lawn while I was laid up. 
He’s a nice guy.
 
Which is why it was such a shock
when he hung a Trump sign
above his garage a few weeks ago.
He knows how we feel 
about the animal inhabiting the White House,
poisoning the landscape
with his words and actions. 
 
Now, with the pandemic sweeping
the streets and details of our lives
down the storm drain between us,
exacerbated by the lies and deception
of our incompetent government,
the sign still hangs there, in our minds
a symbol worshipping corruption, 
fascism and immorality.
 
Not that I’m the most moral of people,
but I know right from wrong, compassion
from callousness, what’s important
from what’s petty– most of the time.
That sign offends me. My neighbor and I 
haven’t spoken since it went up.
 
I thought he was a nice guy,
but he’s hung a sign for all to see 
saying he’s not. 
 
It’s good advertising.

​
04/17/2020
​Boathook
                  ~ for Ross
 
A five-foot spruce boathook–
in my garage for thirty years
waiting, weathered and brittle
until, while cleaning on a slow day
this week, I rediscovered it, 
sanded it four times, 
varnished it three.
 
After lunch I took it, much like I
scavenged it from the cannery
I used to fish for all those years ago– 
to an artist I know, and watched
him weave magic on a bronze hook
to replace the original aluminum one.
The newly varnished handle 
glowed in the spring sun,
and when he finally got the hook to fit,
it glistened in response.
 
What once was a utilitarian tool
made by hands seeking a solution
to a need, too much time, 
and a tinge of boredom 
is now renewed– 
for many of the same reasons.
 
Tomorrow I will tie my first
ever whipping knot
to seize the hook to the pole
the way it was originally designed.
And somewhere, I imagine, 
an old fisherman will nod in approval.

​
04/18/2020
Currents
 
Take me back
to the 1980’s
in Alaska, when, 
in my thirties
I finally grew up.
 
Put me on a boat
on big water, 
surrounded
by high winds
and steep waves.
 
Let me remember
what it felt like
to stay afloat
when everything else
conspired to sink us.
 
A broken-down boat
in nine-foot seas,
or a storm so ferocious
getting home
wasn’t an option.
 
How the phrase
cheated death once again
was less a joke
and more of a reality
of going to work.
 
Let me learn again
currents that carry me
along riptides, how they
can show me which direction
to run.
 
Let me see once more
a world in flux,
one foot anchored
in the past, one raised
toward the unknown.

​
04/19/2020
No Words
 
Last night the networks
all hosted a coronavirus celebration
of essential workers 
with musical performances
from some of the best 
entertainers in the business.
 
From Oprah to the Rolling Stones
we heard an evening of hope and praise.
Together, we will beat this! was the message.
Many spoke about the future–
When this ends, was the common cry
world-wide.
 
Then came the opinion today
penned by a world health professional
considering the possibility 
it might not ever be over,
that this might be 
the new normal.
 
Like the flu
or the common cold,
Corvid-19 may burrow
into our pockets 
only to resurface 
when we think it’s gone.
 
Viruses mutate. Vaccines 
take time, and may not work. 
We who want to see
the finish line 
might be in for a shock:
there might not be one.
 
Meanwhile, the childish 
among us wave flags
and gather to protest 
their right to choose 
to die or worse–
spread the disease further.
 
I have said this before:
Sightless, we are led
by the blind; and deaf,
we can’t hear the alarms.

​
04/20/2020
Green Hair and Gauges
 
 
The older you get
the more change
is tougher to bear.
 
When we were young
it didn’t seem like
change was hard.
 
If anything, 
it was too slow
in coming.
 
We ground the bit
with impatience
at birthdays that took 
 
too long to arrive,
or hours in schoolhouse seats
while the minute hand
 
crept along its arc.
Our parents chafed
when hairstyles lengthened
 
and the bottoms of jeans
grew fatter. But we 
counter-culture kids
 
couldn’t get enough:
we set the table 
with bittersweet
 
rebellion, insatiable, gluttonous 
for more, while the elders
resisted sitting down at all.
 
Now it’s our struggle.
Tattoos for some, 
piercings for others,
 
 
green hair, gauges, 
queer, transgender,
transsexual, 
 
we stumble through
not understanding
until we arrive,
 
remembering like
a long look in the mirror:
there is room here
 
for everyone.
 
 
04/21/2020
​Old Friends, Hard Times
 
These days 
I spend more time than ever
trying to be mindful
in an attempt to silence
the monkey-mind chatter.
 
Trump, Corvid-19, Republican
power grab, protests against 
lockdowns and health guidelines, 
threats of civil war, injustice, families
torn apart, death, climate change–
 
it’s ongoing, incessant, everywhere.
So I meditate, listen to new age
music, write poetry, hug my wife,
call family and friends. We tell each other
we love one another before we end the call,
 
because who knows? A dry cough,
a sore throat, and a week later
a ventilator? It’s frightening enough 
to remind us to say the things 
we don’t want left unsaid.
 
Which is why I’m at a crossroads:
old friends reached out by phone today,
wanting to catch up. Once we were close,
but they’ve gone over to the dark side of politics,
and that bothers us so much we didn’t pick up.
 
Our first impulse is to not return the call. 
We spent several Thanksgivings together, 
both families isolated in Alaska. 
We taught at the same school, raised kids together. 
We even photographed their daughter’s wedding 
 
as a gift. But that was a decade ago. 
These days his Facebook page is filled 
with hateful statements about beliefs
and causes I hold dear. He supports opinions
I consider lies. She remains silent,
 
and we don’t know if she agrees or not,
but they are still together. If they were strangers
we’d know what to do. But they’re not. 
They’re people we cared about, were close to.
To contact them as if nothing’s changed

feels like a sacrifice to hypocrisy. To refuse
is an acknowledgement of our own intransience.
Either choice embraces grief. Either choice
feels wrong and full of sadness. And either 
makes us question ourselves.
 
Is this friendship in the time of Trump?
I hate to give him power over our intimacies,
yet I hate to compromise our beliefs
during such hard times. So we wait
sadly, and do nothing.

04/22/2020
Earth Day Again
 
And the news is dismal.
More extinctions impending
and a new list already slipped
into the void. Another species gone,
another drought, mass famine
on the horizon, forecasts predict
a lousy hurricane season, oceans warming,
ice sheets melting, millions of humans
sick, thousands dead, no end in sight.
 
Pick up your gun and kill someone,
some of us seem to think. If they disagree,
shoot them. The president will approve,
as long as it’s not him. We lemmings
run, charging off the cliffs of sanity
and decency. Meanwhile an implacable
planet has launched a defense system
no one saw coming, and so far,
we are helpless to stop it. Who’s next?
Tigers, elephants, gorillas? Us? 
 
Celebrate the earth. Celebrate her resilience.
Praise her ability to self-correct, even if we
are what needs a remedy.

​
04/23/2020
The Constance of Gravity
 
Stand, feet on firm ground,
look up into a cold day
and watch snowflakes
drift and dance 
with each pulse of wind.
There is something
inside that performance
that compels, even
 
turns pink in spring
when the plums,
dogwoods or cherries
release their petals
from what binds,
and like snow
they fall to the street
swirling as you drive past,
spiraling in your wake,
 
the same way rain 
transforms from clear drops 
to white mist and back again
when the wind and thunder boom.
 
Or breathe brisk autumn air
and the scent of fallen leaves
that drop when the light
is angular and low, 
never a straight descent
even when winds are calm;
leaves piling around you 
until your feet disappear, 
until you raise your arms
in praise of the constance of gravity.

​
04/24/2020
The Center
 
As a teen I knew
there was more to life
than what I had been dealt.
My mother was an alcoholic,
my father a bully. My sister
and brothers in college,
I held a void in the center
of my chest that the rest 
of me revolved around.
All I did, all I was,
was an attempt to fill
empty space.
 
I tried hard:
I drank, ran away,
tried drugs (lots of drugs),
pretended to love things
and people I didn’t,
rebelled, partied, 
ran away again. 
I vandalized,
stole, lied.
 
In the worst of those times
I still felt that emptiness,
stared at that hole
alone, inside me each night,
hovering above me and below
inside and out, 
emptier than ever.
 
My freshman year in college
I fell in love, and thought
Maybe.
But she didn’t,
and when I transferred away
her memory deepened the void 
and put her face upon it.
 
I fell in love again
a few years later, 
and returned, 
that was when 
the hole began to shrink.
 
When I finally met
the right person
half a world away, 
I slept for years 
never thinking
of that dark place.
 
Until recently
I feel its return, haunting 
my dreams, waking and asleep.
I wonder at the love that banished it,
if it’s strong enough to protect
all the people I love now
against all I see coming for them.
 
Sometimes it’s all I can do
to close my eyes, and honestly,
tonight, sitting here facing it awake,
I don’t know how to make it
stop.
 
 
04/25/2020
Necking with Veronica
 
We sit wrapped
sharing a blanket
in our chairs and watch
the computer screen stream
our favorite show.
When the commercials
come on, we laugh, decide
to neck our way through
until the program resumes.
 
I am 69 years old
you almost 72.
And here we are,
still 29 in our minds,
freshly married,
hugging and kissing,
teenagers at the movies.
 
Except there are no movies
these days, and we’re 
old farts. But like so many
have said before us,
We’re not dead yet!
When I try to cop a feel,
you scream, push me away,
and we laugh louder.
 
This virus can kill us
together or one at a time,
and we confront that
each day at our age.
But life can take us too,
and if this disease 
has taught us anything,
it has reminded us
to drink the marrow
out of each day
as fervently as we kiss,
mouths open,
dreaming of eternity.

​
04/26/2020
​Pandemic Time
 
These days we awaken early,
no need to get out of bed, 
or sleep more, for that matter.
 
We roll over, grab our devices
and snuggle in for an hour
or more, arising when 
 
empty stomachs 
override our inertia,
not bothering to get dressed.
 
Some days we wear jammies
(me in sweats, you bathrobe)
‘til midafternoon, giving in
 
once the sun’s come out
from behind the clouds,
or if we really have to shower.
 
What are you going to do today?
Is an inside joke we share
with a smile and shake of the head.
 
You paint flowers, I write poetry,
and we wait as if something’s
about to happen. Knowing
 
that it will, likely not good, 
we hug more than ever, 
attempt to remember
 
gratitude for each day, 
each minute together, 
each breath we take.
 
04/27/2020
Ella
 
You are not gone,
and the sun is pouring 
through the window
as I create your eighth birthday card
on my computer.
 
The music on the speakers 
is soothing and just sad enough
to feel the thought of you
and how much our visits–
now barricaded behind
a virus– mean to me.
 
I miss watching you
as you somersault across
the family room; I miss
your voice calling Papa!
as you remind me to watch
as you swirl on the uneven bars
or do a back handstand
on the trampoline.
 
I miss your comfortable snuggle
as you slide onto my lap
to watch a movie together.
I miss your hugs. But most of all,
on this day before your birthday,
I miss you.

​
04/28/2020
Cradling Spring
 
I look out the kitchen window
see the late April sun filter
through cedars, firs, 
hemlock and spruce.
A shaft of light arcs 
through dark green fronds,
sparkles and glistens on water drops
clinging to violet blossoms
of the lilac in the back yard.
 
I wander out the door
smell the fragrance 
dozens of feet away.
I am drawn in.
I cradle the blooms,
hold lavender-tinted cheeks 
in my hands
feel the tremble 
on my fingertips
as I draw them close
for a tender inhale 
of all these spindly
sticks have offered:
homage to returning sun,
praise stretched to sky,
the air washed 
by night showers.

​
04/29/2020
​Writers Block
 
Blank page like a new day
like a flash of lightning
like squinting into the sun
 
blank sheet like new snow
like white sky
an envelope with no address
 
blank like my stare
my slack jaw
unwritten words
 
unthought
untoward
undecided
 
uncommitted
unworthy
blank
 
blank
unworthy
uncommitted
 
undecided
untoward
unthought
 
unwritten words
blank like my slack jaw
like my stare
 
an envelope with no address
like white sky
blank sheet like new snow
 
like squinting into the sun
like a flash of lightning
Blank page a new day
 
 
04/30/2020
In Praise of April
 
I have come to love
April. She carries 
the transition of seasons 
in hands cold as ice
one day,
warm as fleece
the next.
 
Storm clouds 
in her eyes swirl winds
that bend trees
or gently caress and lift
a feather-light butterfly 
skyward;
 
If you don’t like the weather
wait ten minutes,
goes the joke, 
but the hailstorm 
that follows in her wake
rarely lasts that long.
 
Most of all
I am in love with her flowers
and foaming trees:
shy crocuses peek
from under her hem
starting off first, and as she strolls
and squalls her way to thirty,
a brown and drab landscape
bequeathed by winter transforms
to  a parade of yellow daffodils, 
pink plums, blue forget-me-nots,
white cherries, brilliant tulips, early rhodies, 
azaleas and  Godohgod–  the lilacs. 
 
She dances
her way offstage to explosions
of fragrance and color, 
and like all good performers do,
leaves us wanting more, always
wanting more.


5 Comments

Veronika K Log Book: a found poem

3/30/2017

1 Comment

 
Looking for one more poem to round out a book I'm working on, and found this tonight. Not the poem I'm looking for, but I thought it deserves a little love... so here it is. The Veronica K was the boat we built in the winter of 1988 outside Portland. We ran her up the Inside Passage that June. Somewhere I still have the Alaska flag I flew from her VHF antenna.
Picture
​Veronika K Log Book
A Found Poem
 
1988
in the margin: Tarot: The New Handbook for the Apprentice
June 17: Finn Bay Found our way in by Radar.
June 18 - drenched the carpet today
June 20: Saw whales outside Elfin Cove
forecast is for 40 knot winds and seas to 20 feet…
looks like we’re here for a while.
6/26 – Arrive Kenai 1900– roughest weather of the trip
Sat. July 16: didn’t fish the east side opening – leak in reduction gear.
Mon. July 11 – 2323 total, 1800 reds.
Sun. July 17 – didn’t fish E-side – chiropractor.
Sat.: Didn’t fish due to weather.
Sun. July 24 - We didn’t catch shit.
 
1989 Work List:
Wind screen for bridge
Extend stack
Protective board for wires behind helm / top bunk
Install fresh water tank
Drawers?
Rehang hook for EPIRB
Spray skirt for bow?
Cabinets for focsle?
Hook up antennas
Coolant
5200 seam around rubrail
Tighten/check/spray all elect. fittings/battery cables
Check all fluids
Lube reel/fairleads/Ram
Carpet interior
Check survival suits
 
7/13/89
No oil tar balls, sheen in small rip. Choppy, foggy.
7/19/89 Fish & Game called off the season. Too much Exxon oil in the inlet.
 
1991
July 20, Sat – Jeff Snyder was killed in a car wreck off Island Lake Road at 2:30 pm. Nobody found out what happened until the next day. Fishing suddenly seemed unimportant. F & G cancelled Monday’s period due to poor escapement & “what appears to be a weak run.”
Picture
Jeff Snyder, 1990. Still miss him.
1 Comment

20th FisherPoets Gathering is just around the bend...

2/19/2017

2 Comments

 
A slip of a boot on a wet deck
becomes a slip of the tongue,
and this place fills with salt water.
Picture

I used to hate February. Out the window of my office it's rainy and blowing 15. There's a small craft advisory for the coast, and this is the 20th day in a row it's either rained or snowed. Typical late winter weather for Western Washington. Yet, as I have for the past 19 years, I am crazy excited! This coming Friday over 100 performers will flood Astoria, Oregon at the mouth of the Columbia River to attend the 20th FisherPoets Gathering. I look forward to this event every year. It's like a commercial fishing family reunion, with folks coming from the Pacific Northwest and coastal communities throughout the country. We've even had visitors from Japan and Europe. All to read, recite and listen to poetry and stories of the sea. This year we're expecting upwards of 2000 people to come listen. Tie buoys onto the net, boys!

On Friday and Saturday nights, readers, poets, storytellers and songwriters will take the stage at any one of seven different venues – bars, restaurants and theaters – to present their work to audiences for 15 minutes, then sit down and listen to someone else have a go. Some of us have been doing this for all 20 years the Gathering has been alive; some are greenhorns with something to say. All are welcome, and all encouraged to get up and share their stories and thoughts about what it is they've done or still do. And it's a hoot. I have laughed so hard my sides hurt, and I've choked back sobs. I've seen old salts recite their poetry from wheelchairs and get a standing ovation, and I was present when a 12-year-old girl won the onsite poetry contest to adoring  cheers from the crowd. No matter where you are in Astoria on FisherPoets Weekend, you will find something to remember and love. 

Check out the Special Events schedule as well. Films, workshops, an old-timers Story Circle and even open mic sessions if you get inspired are available most of the day Saturday.

You can also take bits of the Gathering home. Local galleries display fishing-related art. A silent auction helps raise funds to help with expenses.The performers sell their books, Cds, T-shirts, art, photographs and even fishy jewelry at the Gear Shack each year. And pick up a copy of Anchored in Deep Water: The FisherPoets Anthology before they're all gone. Fewer than 20 complete sets remain. But most of all, hang out with the fisherpoets. Visit with friends old and new, and witness how much this event brings us all together around an industry and culture we love  and love to share.

So come join us! Rooms are still available at the local hotels, there's always a spot to squeeze in at the venues, and there is a weekend full of salty tales to be heard. Buy a $15 button at any of the venues, and you're admitted to any spot something's going on during the entire weekend. It doesn't get any better. 

                                                                                 ---------------------------------

Find the information about who reads where and when at the FisherPoets Gathering website. If you can't make the Gathering in person, listen in to the reading online at the Astoria Event Center both Friday and Saturday (Feb. 24th and 25th). And if you want some fisher poetry now, check out our online archive, IntheTote. 



​Here's a poem I wrote  celebrating the FisherPoets Gathering:

FisherPoem
 
 
I slide into this crowded bar
   like I’d ease a boat into a slip:
the river is crowded tonight.
   Fisherpoets
ride these aisles like currents.
     Tying up to booths,
 dropping anchors on barstools,
 they open journals like hatch covers–
     unsure of how the catch compares.
How many brailers does the rest of the fleet
     have tonight?                  
                        How many pounds?
Maybe I’ll wait to deliver until morning,
    when no one else is watching.
 
But morning comes and no one cares.
  We drink beer, watch the show,
            and listen.
The stories fill the air like jumpers;
    words weave to catch them on nets hung deep,
ears cock for the sound of a splash
eyes narrow, looking for hits.
 
Here comes the next set, and a poet picks up the microphone –
     static over the radio, the bar chatter fades,
     whispered verses lift us, riding on the back of a swell:
            The VHF just said a boat went down with all hands.
            Sunrise lit the mountaintops the color of salmon.
            …that halibut hook sunk deep into the side of his hand.
            The lights of the fleet looked like fallen stars.
Pea soup.
            She went over when we weren’t lookin’…
 
A slip of a boot on a wet deck
becomes a slip of the tongue,
and this place fills with salt water.
 
The speaker pauses,
hangs up the mic and walks away without a look.
  
In a moment all hell will break loose,
and we’ll live it again in the telling,
but as the story lands on the dock
            solid and hard,
we can sense the slightest change of the engine,
            feel the gentlest breeze,
            hear our own heart beat
                in the distance,
                in the waves.



Below are a few photos from last year. See you there!
Picture
Several performers from the 2016 Gathering
Picture
Maria Finn from Sausalito,California reads at the Voodoo Room, with a little operatic help from a friend.
Picture
Jack Merrill from Maine gives us a poem about lobstering.
Picture
Geno Leech from Chinook, WA swabs the stage with the "Ol' Figure Eight!"
Picture
Mariah Warren from Ketchikan shares a nonfiction short story.
2 Comments

Flash in the Distance

2/17/2017

1 Comment

 
This poem was a runner-up in the FISH publishing annual poetry contest for 2016. Thought it would be a good one to put out there just a week before the 2017 FisherPoets Gathering in Astoria. I'll be reading there THREE times. This is on the playlist. Tune in to KMUN Coast Radio at 6:15pm PST to hear me live from the Astoria Event Center. Best Fishes!

​Flash in the Distance
 
 
I am from gillnetters: from the Skookum Too and Veronika K. 
I am boats floating a night sea, circles on the back of a wave.
I am from salmon slime, flake ice, scales and gurry.
I am hissing stick rips, glassy rolling seas, 
wild-horse, white-maned wave stampedes.
I am waterhaul and roundhaul, radio fish
and sunken nets; clatters, splashers,
nudgers, jerkers, nothing much
and better get over here now.
I am from beer on the back deck,
baseball caps and rubber boots.
I am from where sunrise ignites the sea,
volcanoes vent over the island,
belugas rise to greet stars.
I am the shuddering slam of the hull,
salt spray on the windows,
needles of rain on my cheeks.
I am a fire in the cabin, a blown fan belt,
oil in the bilge, catching a line from a tender for a tow.
I am a flash in the distance, whitecaps in the rip, 
the bow slicing an ocean swell,
foam in my wake.

1 Comment

Cleaning House... a poem for our times

2/1/2017

3 Comments

 
They’re moving all the furniture–
rearranging for the sake of change.
 
We didn’t think they’d go so far:
toilets in the living room, toys 
chained in the yard, windows shuttered,
doors locked after throwing
the refrigerator on the lawn.
 
They cancelled garbage pickup,
and there’s talk of disconnecting
the phone and turning off the internet.
TV doesn’t matter any more,
and the papers pile up in the driveway.
 
The neighbor had a fire  that killed six people
last weekend, but no alarms sounded,
not even from the men with pepper spray
patrolling the sidewalks. No one was home anyway:
everyone was at the protest or locked up.
 
I saw my old girlfriend in handcuffs.
The streets were littered with pink hats.
3 Comments

Fighting the DT's

12/19/2016

1 Comment

 
It's been a month and change since the election. The last post I wrote was in response to the outcome of the voting. Today the Elecoral College will certify Donald J. Trump's victory by voting their candidate into the White House. I had hoped that Hillary would not be the nominee after Bernie Sanders did such an unexpectedly good job challenging her, and once the delegates were counted, the rebellion we hoped for didn't materialize...I'm confident the feelings expounded in the past weeks about the Electors staging a similar vote of conscience will go the same way - namely nowhere, and we will install a fascist bully, bigot and misogynist as the the 45th President of the United States a month from now.

I have lost sleep about this. I wake up, as do many of my friends, at 4:00 am filled with disbelief and dread. I am appalled at what we have done...at what so many of my countrymen have been duped into believing is a good idea. I can barely watch the news, news feeds on the internet, Facebook. Since the election the media has been stuffed full of articles about Trump, Trump tweets and retweets, Trumpers' hate crimes, insensitive, ignorant, mean, even vicious comments and graffiti– a rising tide of vocal expressions against everything I thought we stood for, everything I have believed in all my adult life. As a nation, we have voted outspokenly for bigotry instead of diversity, greed instead of equality, anger instead of hope, division instead of unity, simplistic rhetoric instead of critical thinking. And we have announced to the world that we are far worse than anyone imagined we could be. 

England has rejected many of the same ideals I thought they held dear. Italy, France, Hungary and other members of the EU are leaning further to the right in response to the continuing influx of Syrian refugees, economic stagnation and Muslim extremist acts of terror (whether they are, in fact, Muslim-based or not). Russia and Syria are orchestrating mass executions in Alleppo, and no one cares enough to stand up to them - not even Obama, who everyone with experience agrees is far better a leader than Trump could ever hope to be. So it's not just us. But it IS us now, and for the next four (only four, I hope) years. Even if DT does something else inordinately stupid, and most predict he will, and gets run out of office, his replacement, Mike fucking Pence, is very possily a WORSE man for the job, with his self-righteous religious agenda that again is anti-everything I believe in. The cabinet appointees that Trump is proposing are amazingly unqualified, and astoundingly pro-corporation, capitalist oligarchs. All the signs point to the right - and except for the uber-wealthy, we are in deep shit for the forseeable future.

So what now? What can we do to forstall this sea-change? Build walls between us and the rest of humanity? Escape? Become ex-pats with no place to call home? Not many of us have that choice even available to us. THIS is why I'm losing sleep these days. I have no clear answer. I feel helpless, powerless to stop this reality from coming down the rails at me, and I feel as trapped as if my family and I were tied up and thrown across the tracks. I have raged against it - see my most recent blog posts if you haven't read them. I have cried. I have most recently slipped into a deep depression. Part of me is afraid that DT will rise like Hitler to a position of Dictator-for-Life. That is the bogeyman I fear most. But over the past two days I have discussed my overwhelming trepidation with my wife and two of my best friends, and I feel that I need to get past the fear. At breakfast today, Michael said to me, "Action is the remedy against despair," and suggested I do exactly what I am doing now. Add my voice, my passion to the clamor that says, "No." So here I am. I am going to stay off Facebook and social media for a while. I am going to read the news sparingly, and I am going to share my feelings here. As long as I can, as long as it takes. I WILL get over this. Once you get past the DT's, you can come out the other side. So here I go. Bracing for withdrawal... it'll get worse before it gets better, but it WILL get better. I have to believe that...for my children, for my grandchildren. And I need to fight this, each day, for them. 
1 Comment

A Call for Resistance: A Letter to Liberals and Progressives

11/12/2016

2 Comments

 
This letter is not addressed to Trump supporters, even those of you who voted for him once you got into the booth and couldn’t bring yourself to vote for Hillary. By now,  you know how I feel about you and your support of a man that by many  accounts is a disaster for this country and any semblance of Democracy left within its borders.
 
No, this is for those folks who voted for Hillary even if we didn’t agree with everything she stood for, because we acknowledged what the alternative was. This is for all those who have posted on my Facebook page about how we can’t be obstructionist, should give the man a chance,  how we need to come together now, how you hope he’ll be a different leader than he was a candidate.  Listening to you, I understand your feelings of  reconciliation. The politicians still running the show are pleading for us to come together, and I get that sentiment – I would feel it myself if we had elected almost any other candidate. But not this one.
 
When I listen to such arguments, I feel I am in a bubble of short-term amnesia. Who remembers what the dialogue was two weeks ago among liberals and many high-profile Republicans? Never Trump. America, don’t elect him! He is awful. Awful as a candidate, as a potential leader, as a human being. Several well-respected folks have called him a fascist and compared him to Hitler or Mussolini. And it’s those accusations I want to address here.
 
Do you really think he is any different now that he’s President-elect? What evidence do you have to illustrate your belief? I’m thinking that you are in the act of burying your head deep in the sand. We are better than this has been proven a lie. America is no longer the beacon on the hill we thought it was. I can’t believe I’m doing this, but I’m going to quote Sarah Palin, soon to be (if the reports are accurate) our next Secretary of the Interior: How’s that Hopey-Changey thing workin’ out for ya?  Stick your head deeper, sing Lalalalala so you can’t hear the hate speech already filling the air, and believe away. Donald Trump is STILL Donald Trump. And we are in big trouble.
 
The way to mitigate what is about to happen is NOT to cooperate with him or his surrogates, hoping he’ll turn out to be tolerable. The only way past this is to resist what he stands for with more than our pathetic votes… the ones that WON the popular count, not that it matters. We need to continue to resist in every way possible: demonstrate, scream, yell, post, petition, support the politicians who fight back, support to the marginalized, and NOT go back to our lives, pretending things will be normal again, relying on the politicians to make things better or right. We need to be present and voice our outrage at every turn – and there will be lots of reasons to be vocal in the next four years. Resist. Demonstrate. Stand with Standing Rock. Join the Million Women March on inauguration day. Wear your safety pins. Resist.
 
My wife, the woman I love and have lived with for 40+ years, lost most of her family to Nazi Germany’s journey down this road. Both her brothers, ages 5 and 2, were murdered. Her parents were imprisoned in Auschwitz and somehow lived through that nightmare to survive and emigrate to the USA, then a place of hope and sanity. The election of Donald Trump and all his rhetoric, ideas and beliefs has put us on a merging lane with the Third Reich. I will not forget who he is, what he stands for, who supports him. I will never advocate cooperation or compromise with him. To do so is to accept what is about to happen. To do so is suicide.

2 Comments

A Poem for the 2016 Election

11/11/2016

5 Comments

 
​I Just Pissed Myself
 
You know what pisses me off?
Me.
 
I’m pissed I’m angry,
that I’m so intolerant
I can’t accept what my fellow
countrymen and women have done.
I’m pissed that I can get so pissed.
I want to punch walls, take out my gun
(yes, I own one), shoot every Trump
sign still hanging on my neighbors’
houses. Throw eggs at their windows,
confront them with their own ignorance.
 
I am pissed I am convinced I’m right
about the future. It makes me  irate to confront
my own worst fears come to pass. The man
we just elected to lead the country is evil.
I’m pissed that I live in a land where this can
and has happened. I’m furious at the millions
who feel they’ve done the right thing. I get
nauseous thinking of four years of him and his hate
in all our faces – being the face, the mouth of this country.
I am pissed I bought into the lie that we are better than that.
 
I am fuming at myself for not having the awareness
that people of color, LGBTQ folks and women have
had all along, and not just with him now, but all their lives
all the time, with anyone. I am pissed that hate crimes
are on the rise. I am upset that I feel outnumbered,
powerless to stop time, turn away from this dark future.
 
I am angry that I don’t have the self-control,
the gentleness of nature, the kindness to give
him half a chance… no, wait. That pisses me off more,
that I would consider such a thing – who can be
reasonable in the face of unreason?
 
All that leads me here: this is what I’ve come to? Ending up
an angry, bitter old man? I don’t want to be that guy –
for me, for my wife, my sons, my granddaughter.  
But I don’t see much alternative, which is why
I’m so pissed…at me.
5 Comments

New Digs

12/11/2015

8 Comments

 
So this is my first post on my new web home, powered by Weebly. I have to say it's been easy to set up with this company. They aren't too expensive, and give you a lot of bang for the buck. My only complaint is that they do seem to charge a lot for e-commerce. I suppose that's to be expected, but I don't like it much. Ok. Enough whining.

Much of what I have written for some time has centered around my fishing days in Alaska. After going to a poetry reading in Seattle last fall, I realized there was a lot more during those 20 years that I did besides fish. I spent time canoeing the rivers and woods, hiking the trails and skiing the hills around the Kenai Peninsula. I saw, photographed and enjoyed moose, bears, bald eagles, sandhill cranes and migratory snow geese. I was surrounded by a pod of Beluga whales on my boat late one night on a calm sea (ok, that's a fishing experience). There's much, much more to my life in Alaska, even though I wasn't a hunter, guide or bush pilot. And I intend on writing about those experiences soon. Best intentions, right? Well let's see who's listening out there? What stories tickle your interest? What should I write first? Leave a comment and I'll know if anyone is even listening out there.

At the same time, if you wouldn't mind, please let me know what you think of the new site. How does the format work for you? Comments are welcomed and appreciated...
8 Comments

    Gillnet Dreams
    ​Patrick Dixon

    I am a poet and writer of creative non-fiction and fiction. I also edit fisherpoetry  for National Fisherman magazine.

    More of my work can be seen at www.IntheTote.com, a site I curate that displays the work of the readers at the annual Fisher Poets Gathering in Astoria, Oregon, where I have performed for the past 18 years. I edited Anchored in Deep Water: The FisherPoets Anthology, a seven-book set of writing celebrating the commercial fishing industry, published in August, 2014.

    I write on two blogs, From the Field is about photography and the other is about fishing, life on the water, and really, everything else. That would be Gillet Dreams version one, the earlier version of this one, which has lots of past writings.

    Archives

    March 2022
    March 2017
    February 2017
    December 2016
    November 2016
    December 2015

    Categories

    All

    RSS Feed

Proudly powered by Weebly