Month: November 2018

  • Haibun – full beaver moon

    Originally posted on kanzen sakura: For Frank’s Haiki Challenge #62, Winter Moon. I am keeping my new haibun short, more in keeping with the original haibun created by Basho. I am now writing haibun that are less than 65 words. Haibun – Full Beaver Moon The Algonquin tribes named this moon Beaver moon for the…

  • My Daily #Haiku (11/25/18)

    11/25/18: clear sky sudden honking across a clear sky migrating geese #haiku #micropoetry #poetry

  • Winter moon tanka

    Originally posted on Jane Dougherty Writes: A winter moon tanka for Frank Tassone’s challenge. ? moon hangs round in a sky of rushing cloud frost creeps through the grass weaving pale furred blankets cold as my summer-drained bones

  • Invitation

    Invitation

    #Haiku Happenings #2: Reena Saxena’s latest haiku!

  • The Only Survivor

    Originally posted on Roth Poetry: Who knows how many souls were lost when this ship went down in the gales of November. Its bones were unearthed on the Outer Banks by another storm many years later. Now it lies in the sand as children and adults look in awe at this piece of the past…

  • #Haikai Challenge #62 (11/24/18): winter moon (fuyu no tsuki) #haiku #senryu #haibun #tanka #haiga #renga

      Happy Belated Thanksgiving! For those that celebrated, I hope you enjoyed your day of feasting!   Congratulations to last week’s contributors! Haikai Challenge Participants  1. Dwight L. Roth 2. Reena Saxena 3. Jane Dougherty 4. Helene Vaillant 5. Deepa 6. Jules @ Strands 7. D L Starlight 8. The Dark Netizen 9. Janice 10.…

  • Today’s Haiku (November 24, 2018)

    Originally posted on Blue Willow Haiku World (by Fay Aoyagi): 三つほど悪い茸の出てゐたる 鴇田智哉 mittsu hodo warui kinoko no deteitaru             about three of them             are malicious             mushrooms come up                                                             Tomoya Tokita from “Haiku Shiki” (“Haiku Four Seasons,” a monthly haiku magazine), November 2016 Issue, Tokyo Shiki Shuppan, Tokyo

  • Haiku for a frosty morning

    Originally posted on Jane Dougherty Writes: Last night the temperature was below freezing. By mid morning, in the sun, the lizards and butterflies were back. ? Mist hangs frozen dancing in morning sunbeams a butterfly.