So Hwak Haeng

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(Small but certain happiness)

Between the Feijoa and the Plum is a fledgling Kowhai

and two Rotary clotheslines like totems from the fifties

from one of which hangs her blue school woven knit shirt

firmly pegged, the water pooling at neck and shoulders

sparrows hunt worms in the dark mud patches beneath

the recently culled feijoas on the fenceline, unshaded

Riwaka hops hang fruitful against a stark concrete wall

while a once laden lemon tree tangles with a Bird of Paradise

plant that was almost smothered by a fig tree they dug out

In the asbestos riddled shed, he brews designer beers

has two fridges found on the Community Facebook page

as well as a honkytonk piano a neighbour delivered

she’s learned to mow the dandelion heads in summer

and there’s a bird nest in the garage Perspex overhang

where on their first Kiwi Christmas fairy lights were strung

after midnight, after a few ales, solar powered, hoping

to light up the surprise sandpit, buckets and hammock

they’ve planted swan plants and watched their first

ever chrysalis turn green, go black, seen a Monarch

emerge and flutter from plant to hair to air in wonder

a sunflower bends to drop its progeny, past splendour

the Christmas bikes are abandoned on the path

small planes fly low overhead like shark spotters

from the sixties when summers were endless

the BBQ is covered, tethered on a windless evening

while the rice cooker talks to itself on the bench

near the upright stove in the kitchen full of cupboards

recyclables climb up a wall close to the back door

which has a lockable fly screen and two keys leading

to a small porch with sloping paths either side

around the house they lead either way back and forth

past the garden hose, the perilla plants spreading

weeds, abandoned crocs, drink bottles, a fly swat,

several dinosaurs, multi-coloured faded chalks

grass clippings, honeybees hovering, bare feet

a quintessential Kiwi backyard including a spa


			

The Nor’wester

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I was walking down the zig zag this week and peeked over the fence at my old garden (roses now in bloom), got a bit nostalgic and wrote a poem about the Nor’wester …


then, this morning a dear friend in Sunny Nelson sent me a photo of her blooms









November means roses erupting all over the show
bundles of scented beauty in clusters on arbours
standard and staked, rambling and rambunctious
glossy leaves before the aphids arrive, thorns
rise up and out in defence protection agents
before grandma or whomever arrives with secateurs


quickly, take yourself down to the garden to
breathe in the fragrances, heavy, light some say
green tea or honey, but rush, rush why don’t you
before that damn Nor’wester arrives
to startle the tuis, shift the kereru, entwining
cabbage tree flora to sway and dangle


why did you plant those roses right here in line
of the wind, in clay soil near the sea, surrounded
by manuka, kanuka, kawakawa, beech those
cabbage trees, the flax bushes, the kowhai
did you think your Constance Spry would not fly
away shedding petals in November?


But still, year in, year out you cosset them
Your favourite flowers, out of place in your
native garden where geckos manoeuvre unseen
where tuatara might once have been, but no
you wanted roses, by the sea, so you could
glimpse perfection, inhale summer
then you curse the Nor’wester