austerity…
breaking bread
without wine
Seasons…
Keramikmarkt, Diessen am Ammersee. Boats come and go, people, seasons…
The pithoi too, all the way from Crete, every year. Only this time, the tireless Nikos Kavgalakis didn’t turn up to build his pots right on the promenade. He had to keep the appointment with his own maker. Rest in peace, Nikos.
Luckily, Nikos’ grandson, Giorgos, is continuing the tradition.
Here is a video of the Diessener Keramikmarkt I came across on YouTube (by Joachim Stracke) from 2013. It includes a few shots of Nikos building his pitharia.

‘on screen’

‘withered field’ in moongarlic E-zine
withered field
the old house yields
its past
moongarlic E-zine, issue 6, 2016
p.58
‘crowding the city’
Walking around the old city in Augsburg, I came across wonderful images revealed by peeling plaster.
crowding the city memory lanes

‘sun and shade’
Fresh from the fridge, where she hibernated for 5 months…

What a Day! International Haiku Poetry Day 2016
April 17, International Haiku Poetry Day, IHPD for short, is the day of celebration of all things haiku. The Haiku Foundation encourages public events on local, national and global levels, including readings, exhibitions, excursions, collaborative projects and competitions. Since 2015, the event is listed in the World Kigo Database, a great source of advice and information. (see Kigo Calendar).
While waiting for next April 17 to come round, don’t miss the opportunity to watch the wonderful haiku films that were presented at this year’s HaikuLife, the Foundation’s Film Festival 2016. And scroll through the longest haiku collaborative poem, EarthRise Rolling Haiku Collaboration 2016. This year, in acknowledgement of the United Nations Year of Pulses, the theme of the project was Foodcrop Haiku.
Here are my own offerings to EarthRise:
earthquake
the seed in the child’s
open palm
.
picking over lentils—
quiet
of the evening hour
.
mice-nibbled sack—
edging closer to
the real
.
at the back
of the late night bus
whiff of wild garlic
.
all seeds accounted for dawn chorus
.
The Haiku Foundation re:Virals 31 and my Commentary
This week, a terrific haiku by Melissa Allen was up for discussion at The Haiku Foundation re:Virals. Interesting commentaries looking at the poem from different perspectives. You can read the whole post with the poem and all the commentaries here. I am pleased to say mine was this week’s winner. I copy it below:
.
Melissa’s poem:
radiation leak moonlight on the fuel rods
— Melissa Allen, Haiku in English: The First Hundred Years (2013)
And my take:
In current usage, the word leak refers to a variety of situations: from leaking a document and bringing into the light a secret, to taking a leak, to a wasteful dripping of water, to seepage of radiation. This poem, with its radiation leak, immediately opens up a danger zone. Step in at your peril into an image that gives rise to paralyzing fears, to the dead zones of Chernobyl, Fukushima; to the forbidden zones. Anything could happen here.
From a leak to a fireball, from the atom to the apocalyptic mushroom cloud, you could be walking into a minefield of the results of unbridled ambition and unscrupulous greed, a Faustian deal . . . Whether the leak is from a technological or scientific project, where man sees himself tirelessly bent on expanding knowledge and power over nature, finding solutions to the human problems of illness, poverty, and environmental degradation; whether hubris or dedication to the common good, here is a consequence: the spewing of poisonous material, the fall into a dark, man-made Hell.
But now the poet brings moonlight on the scene. Like a benevolent, all-seeing Eye of God, moonlight bathes the fuel rods in light we associate with understanding, with cool logic, in forgiveness. I am reminded of the Greek poet Yiannis Ritsos’ Moonlight Sonata, where moonlight hides smaller-scale follies such as showing white hair as golden, at the same time relentlessly intensifying shadows. In Allen’s poem too, moonlight is both kind and cooling, as well as relentless and permanent, not allowing the fuel rods to hide in the shadows. An image burned into the mind.
Note that the fuel rods are not spent. The young man in Ritsos’ poem too, is present all through the poem, at the end leaving full of energy, bursting into laughter as he walks away. Life continues in its boundless energy, in its perpetual flow, beyond leaks, beyond the night, beyond our human follies, beyond life itself.
‘lightness’

‘reed ears’
The book of the Fifth Haiku Contest, Sharpening the Green Pencil, is out. An awe-inspiring two hundred and fifty poets from forty five countries took part. Great contributions. Congratulations to the winners!
I am honoured that my own haiku, translated into Romanian by Ana Drobot, was featured in the book (p.191).
reed ears —
not hearing what the doctor
tells me
‘floating’

‘deep inside’

‘swelling buds’

sleepless
.
sleepless night formatting loneliness
.
In Bones – journal for contemporary haiku no. 9 March 15th 2016 p.22
‘east wind’
east wind
the moment
it drops
.
Haiku Journey (2015)
Haiku Journey is my entry to HaikuLife, The Haiku Foundation FilmFest 2015 (includes sound).
Alfred Wallis paintings by kind permission of Kettle’s Yard, University of Cambridge.
Haiku and Design: Stella Pierides
Editing: Rob Ward
“Joining the Dots” in Haibun Today
Joining the Dots
From the compensation for the demolition of his house to make way for a new road, he bought two tiny apartments, a four-poster bed, an amber komboloi, and a pendulum clock. As a child, I considered the wall-mounted, cherry wood, chiming clock to be my granddad’s most striking acquisition. I checked it continuously, comparing its time to the watch my dad had given me before going away to sea.
approaching wind knots matter
But it was the sound of it chiming the hour that stayed with me the longest. Half a century later, I can feel the deep resonance of that chime opening doors to the past.
let’s say the map shrinks afterwards
In Haibun Today, 10: 1, 2017
Pandora’s Box
Pandora’s Box
I step inside a second-hand store in downtown Athens. A musty odor envelops me. A yellow handbag, by the entrance, has pride of place. Plastic dolls of varying sizes, unclothed but for the price tag, line a shelf. Rows of scaffed shoes, and shoes never worn, line the skirting board. Shirts, trousers, blouses, and skirts hang from circular rails. Moths dance in the sunlight. I run my hand across the clothes and continue to the back of the shop, to the books: Fiction, Poetry, Classics, Biography, Bibles. I duck to avoid a doll in military dress.
A glass-topped drawer catches my eye. Sparkling pair after pair of earrings: pearl, gemstone, silver, gold, diamond. I didn’t expect such quality.
The owner, dressed in a beige cotton tunic, approaches. “The Junta General’s wife,” she tells me. “After the trials she could not wear them. Brought them here. In all these years, nobody will touch them, although they come and look.”
A shadow of suspicion crosses her face. She looks me up and down, then relaxes. “Pity. She loved poetry,” she says, fanning herself.
bitter olives . . .
sound of a key turning
in the lock
.
In Haibun Today vol.9, 4, 2015
‘winter wind’ in RHP 95
winter wind
the bird house filled
with emptiness
In Right Hand Pointing 95 The special Haiku Issue
guest-edited by Eric Burke.
‘typos’ in RHP 95
typos
in the book of the dead—-
water lilies
In Right Hand Pointing 95, the special, and wonderful, Haiku issue guest-edited by Eric Burke
Interesting introduction by Dale Wisely, founder and editor of RHP, who refused to include haiku in the journal for twelve whole years! Well, at long last, Dale!
Read Dale Wisely’s introduction here
‘mild January’
mild January—
sprucing up his wife’s
grave
‘winter seclusion’
winter seclusion
practicing the warrior
pose
‘giving the walls’
giving the walls
a coat of sunlight—
egg tempera
.
yolk
European top 100!
Pleased to hear that I have been included in Krzysztof Kokot’s list of creative European writers for the 5th year running! Krzysztof Kokot has published this year too his list of ”European top 100 haiku authors in 2015” Thank you for the honour, Krzysztof!

.
‘river tides’ on tinywords
My poem on tinywords yesterday:
river tides where have I been
.
(I almost missed it!)
Thanks to the tinywords team for the beautiful background image.
‘hung with lights’ and ‘dreaming’
Haiku for Gillena Cox’s Let’s Haiku a Christmas Carol, at Lunch Break,
*
hung with lights
the tree still sparkles…
year end sales
.
(Day 7)
*
dreaming
of a safe Christmas…
children’s refuge
.
(Day 6)
Happy Holidays!
Wishing all friends and blog visitors, Happy Holidays and a Happy New Year 2016!
Peace, Health, Love, and lots of Laughter

‘winter solstice’
Happy Solstice!

KYSO Flash Anthology of Haibun and Tanka Forms 2015
Clare MacQueen just announced the publication of the KYSO Flash Anthology, featuring prize-winning haibun and tanka. My own haibun “Time,” which received an Honorable Mention (in November 2015), is included.

This is how KYSO Flash describes the release:
We’re pleased to announce the release of a little book with a mouthful of a name: the KYSO Flash Anthology of Haibun and Tanka Forms 2015. Contributor copies are now on their way to folks.
This is an international collection of 25 poetic hybrid works by 14 authors (plus images by three artists). Works were judged by Roberta Beary, award-winning poet and haibun editor of Modern Haiku, for the first annual KYSO Flash “Best Of” contest. Cash prizes were awarded to seven artists for First, Second, and Third Place, and Honorable Mentions. The judge also selected 19 finalists to appear in this anthology.
The book is available from Amazon.com
‘Intertextuality’ in Sonic Boom 4
Pleased to see my ‘Intertextuality,’ a haibun diptych, in issue 4 of Sonic Boom, published under ‘Fiction.’
Issue 4, is an anniversary issue. Happy Birthday to Sonic Boom, many happy returns!
Intertexuality
(a diptych)
I
A reader asks for help with a patch of garlic plants forgotten and left to overgrow in their garden. Well, I say, dear reader, we are caught between a rock and a hard place. Garlic doesn’t like to be transplanted. And this text is not the right place to ask, or answer such a question. But I can’t resist. It is spring, after all, and I am stuck for ideas. So, to your garlic clump: Let it be. Let it grow, and when it is ripe and ready, when the tips of the green shoots start to brown, dig the plants out. They will be pungent, crisp, and juicy, the plant oils moistening your tongue. Then plant a few individual cloves for next year’s crop. Enjoy the rest.
writer’s block
the school of life
full of lessons
II
Spelt flour, baking powder, butter, milk, and salt. Mix, pat down, shape into rolls, and bake. Serve with olive oil, and garlic from another haibun to dip the bread into. Enjoy!
a frog jumps in—
intertextuality
for beginners
