Wednesday, April 18, 2018

Light, and get away. With loud retort!


Efficacious • \eff-uhKAY-shus\ • Adjective - Having the power to produce a desired effect

Ipecac relief
Efficacious music now!
Here’s the “Candy Man”

(Good Grief…what a HORRIBLE haiku!)

Tuesday, April 17, 2018

National Haiku Poetry Day - The Rain, It Falls...


The rain. It falls...
Hard rain, and soft drops
Charm of Pacific Northwest
Evergreen and sweet

The blessing of the rain...
I welcome the rain
Torrents, sprinkles, soft drizzle
Blesses blooms of May

Tuesday, March 13, 2018

The Dance of the Daring Starlings


Murmuration ● \murm-uh-RAY-shun\ ● Noun – 1: the act of murmuring: the utterance of low continuous sounds or complaining noises 2: A flock of starlings: usually flying in large formations.

An Aerial Busby Berkeley Show

Synchronized in flight.
Murmuration of starlings.
Tiny sky dancers.

Friday, March 9, 2018

Robot Ruckus


Pummel ● /PUM-mull/ ● Verb - Pound, beat.

Punch. Pummel. Bam. Pow!
Those Rock ‘Em, Sock ‘Em Robots
“You knocked my block off!”

Thursday, February 22, 2018

Snow Falling From Cedars - Gravitational Crystalline Sloughing

x

Phrase of the Day – Gravitational Crystalline Sloughing  (Common Name: Snow Drop)

The act of snow falling from tree limbs, power lines, roofs, or other places during a thaw.

Gravitational
Crystalline Sloughing, Heads up
“Twang!” the limbs recoil

This is a phrase a former journalist friend and I made up today as he described snow falling from fir trees in his back yard. Sounds impressive. No?

Thursday, February 1, 2018

Time's Up - Missed Deadlines

Deadline ● /DED-line/ ● Noun – 1: a line drawn within or around a prison that a prisoner passes at the risk of being shot 2 a: a date or time before which something must be done b: the time after which copy is not accepted for a particular issue of a publication

Those dratted deadlines
Immutable march of time
Missed. Copy now dead

Word Origins, “Wonderopolis

The term “deadline” has uncertain origins. The earliest uses of the word appear to have referred simply to lines that did not move. This usage may have developed into “deadline” being used around the time of the Civil War as a term related to prisons, meaning a line that could not be crossed by prisoners.

Eventually, the term began to be used by journalists in the sense we know today. This was most likely the result of the design of early printing presses that featured a guideline on the printing plate. Any text inside the line would be printed. Any text outside the line — the “deadline” — would not be printed and would “die.”

Wednesday, January 10, 2018

On the Pot

Loo ● \loo\ ● – Noun – Bathroom.

Gardex l’eau she cried.
“Too late” groused the soused old man.
Chamber pot emptied

From Oxford Living Dictionary and Kottkey:

When people flung their potty waste out of the window, they would shout
“Gardez l'eau” [gar-day low]. That's French for “watch out for the water”. We probably get the word “loo” from this expression. Some people think it comes from “Room 100” which is what European people used to call the bathroom. A third theory refers to the trade name 'Waterloo', which appeared prominently displayed on the iron cisterns in many British outhouses during the early 20th century.