3.2 miles
mississippi river road path, north/south
95% snow-covered
16 degrees/feels like 16
Wow, the birds really think it’s spring. So chatty! I guess nobody told them we’re getting a foot of snow this weekend. Didn’t wear my yaktrax, which was a big mistake. The path was extra snowy because the plows had come through again, moving out more snow and making little mountains in the process. Greeted the Daily Walker and a few other runners. The soft, small mounds of snow all over the path made it much harder to move my legs. Listened to a playlist and felt a happy buzz around mile 2. Jamie Quatro’s first layer of the runner’s high (from “Running as Prayer”). I think I only get these highs when I’m listening to music–the ones where I feel intensely euphoric, invincible. Glanced at the river but I can’t remember what it looked like–was it open? I think I heard the geese honking at some point, but it was hard to tell with Fleetwood Mac singing about mountains and getting older and needing to change and snow-covered hills.
clothing layers: black shirt, orange shirt, vest, buff, gloves, visor. A rare occasion of wearing just the right amount of layers.
path layers: the smallest sliver of bare pavement near the lake street bridge, slick ice, hard packed snow, soft not quite settled or compressed snow, snow ledges on the edges of the path, big chunks of old snow, little mounds of snow scattered all around
I’ve been mentioning hearing geese honking a lot lately. Here are 2 very different poems that feature geese:
Wild Geese/mary oliver
You do not have to be good.
 You do not have to walk on your knees
 for a hundred miles through the desert repenting.
 You only have to let the soft animal of your body
 love what it loves.
 Tell me about despair, yours, and I will tell you mine.
 Meanwhile the world goes on.
 Meanwhile the sun and the clear pebbles of the rain
 are moving across the landscapes,
 over the prairies and the deep trees,
 the mountains and the rivers.
 Meanwhile the wild geese, high in the clean blue air,
 are heading home again.
 Whoever you are, no matter how lonely,
 the world offers itself to your imagination,
 calls to you like the wild geese, harsh and exciting –
 over and over announcing your place
 in the family of things.
Seasons/John Haag
1
Clouds so thick 
they put down 
roots 
Young aspen 
practising 
quakers 
Incoming geese 
Periwinkle sign passports 
brings remission with a V 
of the blues 
Feel the sun 
butting the buds 
open 
Blossoms 
Trout lilies nod expand 
they know the sky 
they know 
Lilac 
a scent by which 
we mark the calendar 
Weather report 
May? showers 
By all means and fresh rainbows 
Yes. You May 
2
Crickets 
ventriloquists 
of summer 
Loon cries 
increase the loneliness 
of lakes 
It’s untrue 
They leave that that bats 
to the silence make it darker 
of owls 
Morning warblers 
refresh 
the joy of hearing 
Comes the hedgehog 
And the bumblebee who lives on pins 
non-aerodynamic and needles 
existentialist 
Horses stand 
awash 
in the setting sun 
Anticipate 
Nighthawks if you can 
swoop the firefly’s flash 
gathering the evening 
3
Prophetic winds fill 
the graveyard 
with signposts 
Then a scurry 
of stormspurred 
sparrows 
A lamentation of geese 
Hummingbird leaves in the early 
to cruise dusk 
the Carribean 
Squirrels 
pad 
their acorn accounts 
Cedar waxwing 
Blue jay insists feathered scholar 
it’s never too late knows his berries 
to scold 
Grackle 
predicts a turn 
for the worse 
Flies buzz 
in this cast-iron against the chill 
autumn pane 
stained with rust 
4
Fly husks on sills 
reflect 
the year’s demise 
Ptarmigan advises 
“kuk-kuk-kuk 
go back-goback” 
Deer bundle 
Coyote lingers in the laurel 
to school us thickets 
in survival 
Fashionable spruce 
knows how 
to wear snow 
Strange angels 
Frostfeathers leave their three-D 
lace shadows 
the cabin glass 
Cabin Fever 
medicine 
runs low 
As 
 Days does 
 begin the woodpile 
Oliver’s “Wild Geese” was one of the first poems I memorized while I was injured 2 summers ago. I still love it. Today is my introduction to John Haag–I did a search on poetry foundation for “geese.” So much fun. They only had one other poem of his online. It’s great too.

