image by Glenn Buttkus
Fire Mountains
“Of all the fire mountains which like beacons, blazed
along the Pacific Coast, Mt. Rainier is the noblest.”
--John Muir.
I live in the “Ring of Fire”, in one of the fertile valleys
scooped out by Mt. Rainier magma millions of years
ago. The Cascades sport six active volcanos. Mt.
Rainier is our tallest and most majestic at 14,411’.
North of it we find Mt. Baker, which has the most
snowfall, standing at 10,786’. Just south of Rainier,
we encounter Mt. Adams, looking like a smaller twin,
standing at 12,781. Southwest of there, we come
to the infamous Mt. Saint Helens, which erupted in 1980.
It once was 9,617’. After it blew its top, it is only 8,307’.
Due south of it, in Oregon, we discover Mt. Hood, that
stands at 11,249’. South of that, in California one finds
Mt. Shasta, a looming 14,179’, second tallest in the
range.
We are told that at any time, perhaps after a massive
earthquake, one of more of these mountains could
erupt. These peaks have never been cold.
Wolves get relocated.
They adapt and thrive quickly.
Then comes a bounty.
Glenn Buttkus
Haibun
Posted over at d'Verse Poet's Pub
8 comments:
So you rest in the middle of all of that? Your haiku is full of such sorrow. Is there no escape from it in this world?
A tour-de-force of the cascade range! How the pathos of your haiku echoes the moment we all find ourselves in!
"These peaks have never been cold." Perfect.
To me, your haibun speaks of a "cold" war that has never really been cold. Our adversaries are always steaming and ready to blow at the least (or manufactured) provocation.
The natural conflict can be as intense and dangerous as anything we can conjure up! This is a wonderful Haibun, Glen. So many giant mountains around you, waiting to blow at any time. Amazing!
Like those hot mountains. The world as we know seems to be blowing its top right now. A poignant haibun Glen
Much love...
Ah, yes...."These peaks have never been cold."
That last sentence of the prose ... the threat that looms under those high peaks.
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