Sep 09
Posted: under Reviews.
Tags: garden, home, neighborhood, suburbiaSeptember 9th, 2009
Way, way back at the beginning of this haiku year, I lived in a house and Alison lived in a condo.
And that’s how we thought our lives would continue. Neither one of us envisioned our living situations would change in the coming 12 months, but –
But life has a way of ignoring your plans, which [...] [...more]

by Kelly
Way, way back at the beginning of this haiku year, I lived in a house and Alison lived in a condo.
And that’s how we thought our lives would continue. Neither one of us envisioned our living situations would change in the coming 12 months, but –
But life has a way of ignoring your plans, which is exactly what happened to Alison. In January she had no idea that by August she would be a homeowner.
However, now that she is, I remembered this cute little book I bought several months ago called Homeowner Haiku by Jerry Ratch and Sherry Karver.
The book is filled with haiku that share the excitement of shopping for a house, the anxiety of placing an offer, the irritations of home-improvement projects and the creeping guilt that comes from ignoring the lawn for too long.
For example, I identified with this haiku from the book:
The weeds quietly
speak to me even though I
choose to ignore them
Oops. Did I just reveal an embarrassing truth about my garden? Oh well. I might as well come clean. There are weeds growing amongst my hostas that scare me. I just can’t bring myself to go out there and pull them. I have other things to do, I reason, much more important things to do — like reading haiku about ignoring weeds.
But the book did get me thinking about my house, the hopes, the joys and the annoyances that go along with homeownership. With that in mind, I came up with my very own homeowner haiku:
crystals and wind chimes
will fix our broken feng shui –
we wake up hopeful
And now, with that said, I’m packing up this book and shipping it off to Alison with my best wishes for her happy homeownership!
Jun 30
Posted: under Daily Haiku, Kelly's Haiku.
Tags: flowers, gardenJune 30th, 2009
biggest marigold
I’ve ever seen is growing
in my front door pot
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[...more]

by Kelly
biggest marigold
I’ve ever seen is growing
in my front door pot
May 31
Posted: under Guest.
Tags: animals, Eileen Beha, gardenMay 31st, 2009
Green garden gnome
Stares wistfully at rabbit
Rabbit hops away.
Read more of Eileen Beha’s haiku.
Did you know that Eileen Beha is a published children’s author? It’s true!
Check out her author web site.
var addthis_pub = 'haikubytwo';
var addthis_language = 'en';var addthis_options = 'email, favorites, digg, delicious, myspace, google, facebook, reddit, live, more';
[...more]
Green garden gnome
Stares wistfully at rabbit
Rabbit hops away.

Read more of Eileen Beha’s haiku.
Did you know that Eileen Beha is a published children’s author? It’s true!
Check out her author web site.
May 30
Posted: under Guest.
Tags: Eileen Beha, food, garden, srpingMay 30th, 2009
Wrinkled rhubarb leaves
Rose-red stalks bursting with juice
My first bite of spring
Read more of Eileen Beha’s haiku.
Did you know that Eileen Beha is a published children’s author? It’s true!
Check out her author web site.
var addthis_pub = 'haikubytwo';
var addthis_language = 'en';var addthis_options = 'email, favorites, digg, delicious, myspace, google, facebook, reddit, live, more';
[...more]
Wrinkled rhubarb leaves
Rose-red stalks bursting with juice
My first bite of spring

Read more of Eileen Beha’s haiku.
Did you know that Eileen Beha is a published children’s author? It’s true!
Check out her author web site.