Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Homeless Hermits

I didn't know Hermit Crabs were in trouble. But apparently they are a little. Some of them are too big for the shells that they normally choose for a home.
Talented poet Dana has come up with an interesting way to help out the beleaguered crab. Go HERE to find out more.

Monday, April 14, 2008

Protest Against Specific Windfarms

Please note, I am not agin wind farms per se; just not in favour of where it is proposed that two particular wind-farms here in the South Island of NZ be erected. The elecricity corporation TrustPower are the outfit proposing these huge blots on the landscape. (Come on guys, think about it. Once you change the landscape, it is never the same. You can't get it back. Have you really got the right to make that decision for future generations?)

As the wonderful Joni Mitchell says in her song, 'Big Yellow Taxi'; 'On and on it seems to go, you don't know what you've got 'til it's gone. You pave Paradise and put up a parking lot.'

Go here to learn the latest on the Upland Landscape Protection Society's bid to stop these two large wind-farms (the largest in the Southern Hemisphere so far, so we are talking HUGE blots) proposed for pristine land in the Maniototo of South Island, New Zealand.

Here also is a poem I wrote regarding the protest. It was published in the NZ literary magazine 'Landfall'. It is also in my second collection, 'made for weather'.

nothing to do with you

For a cup of coffee,
you would strike the heart

with an axe, mine stone
for its marrow.

Maim
what rolls on into sky. Screw

metal poles into quiet land,
warp and crush

its offer
of light and air.

*

For northern power,
on land nothing

to do with you,
you would trammel

quilted, southern ground, leave
a trail of stains,

thrust twisted crosses
into its soft belly.

*

Rocks the wind or sun
cannot move, sleep on.

Tussock-backed
they carry soft gold

sound
we can hear for miles.

From somewhere,
a farmer

calls his dogs. Somewhere,
the blaring throats

of young bulls
we cannot see.


Under our feet the gravel
coughs. Fallen apples


form a wild carpet
below a crooked tree.

*

The mist freezes
where it wafts, solid

lace. Cold, bloodless
and beautiful. Still for days

on end, the sun a smear
across the sky’s white mouth.

Bulrushes stuck fast
in frozen ponds.

Willows and poplars
as wan as horse-hair.

*

In summer, the grasshopper
screams. In summer

the road floats
grey. Purple lupins

and orange poppies
dribble paint.

When we stop the car
we hear overhead

a pair of paradise ducks,
their alternating cries

the unfenced sound
of a mountain tarn.

*

Seized by the autumn sun,
valleys do not resist

the line and fall
of riverbeds and trees.

“We call this
our golden season.”

She speaks among art-deco
lightshades.

“Here, we don’t get that fog
they get down river.”

And as the railway station’s
useless clouded window

veils the sky‘s
cruel blue,

she talks of a small town now gone,
and the shop she ran for years.

*

On land nothing
to do with you, somewhere

the sound of a tiny bird.
Somewhere, lovely light,

the sound of nothing, of no-one,
of the air.

*

Kay McKenzie Cooke







And another poem, below, published in the Otago Daily Times as one of the 'Monday's Poem' choices.

imagined reply

If you say but
they are beautiful
too, he will tell you, yes,
in isolation,
somewhere not pristine,
there is an eeriness,
an artful symmetry like a star
or the centre of an orange.
But here, where wind forms
waves over tussock, how
it chills him, the thought
of these seedless lilies
they say will pit
his falcon-feathered hills.
These aberrations
that stalk and mar
his valleys and till their wind
for power. These bastards,
these pale mills, for as long
as it takes to halt
their wrongly-placed
sway over land
not meant for such rude
points he will tilt at them.
Even cancer cells, he says,
can look beautiful.

Kay McKenzie Cooke

***