Planting Season
Thawed, we walk the long rows looking for winter stumps,
site of saw and timber, where from that decapitated ground
a new spine will grow. The buckets are green, filled with dirtwater,
and the saplings are tied in bushels, ready for groundswell,
for the red-winged blackbirds to bring the news of spring
to my father, who woke with the morning dark as coffee grounds
to fasten his overalls, to knot the laces of his boots before
waking me, his oblong obsession, his reason to stay above ground.
The older trees look like equidistant prisms, and I carry buckets
of saplings through the rows, I put the babies in the ground
and the wet mud slurps them home, gobbles the shy roots and there,
life, the Christmas tree farm gifts us another start, another year to groan
through and my father scans his prairie, and the dogs lose their tails,
and between the pines, the sun miracles light upon the ground.
I pull sapling after sapling from their bound and they tremble
like any child does when they are confronted with sky, blue ground
turned black, soon to be planted with stars. We work until the waning moment,
where day topples into dusk, where the peepers, having just come to ground,
begin tuning their violins, where as darkness settles and my father tucks me
into sleep, that prairiesong rises, rises, then full blooms in the background.
site of saw and timber, where from that decapitated ground
a new spine will grow. The buckets are green, filled with dirtwater,
and the saplings are tied in bushels, ready for groundswell,
for the red-winged blackbirds to bring the news of spring
to my father, who woke with the morning dark as coffee grounds
to fasten his overalls, to knot the laces of his boots before
waking me, his oblong obsession, his reason to stay above ground.
The older trees look like equidistant prisms, and I carry buckets
of saplings through the rows, I put the babies in the ground
and the wet mud slurps them home, gobbles the shy roots and there,
life, the Christmas tree farm gifts us another start, another year to groan
through and my father scans his prairie, and the dogs lose their tails,
and between the pines, the sun miracles light upon the ground.
I pull sapling after sapling from their bound and they tremble
like any child does when they are confronted with sky, blue ground
turned black, soon to be planted with stars. We work until the waning moment,
where day topples into dusk, where the peepers, having just come to ground,
begin tuning their violins, where as darkness settles and my father tucks me
into sleep, that prairiesong rises, rises, then full blooms in the background.
Nick Stanovick is a writer and educator from the Pocono Mountains. He is an alumnus of Temple University, Auburn University, and Queens College. An International Poetry Slam Champion and the winner of the Robert Hughes Mount Jr. Prize, his work has appeared in Nashville Review, Vinyl, The Academy of American Poets, Ghost City Review, and Drunk In a Midnight Choir among others.
This poem is part of a series of poems that focuses on my childhood where I grew up on a Christmas Tree Farm. They focus on my father, his relationship to the natural world, and how that informs my identity.
This poem is part of a series of poems that focuses on my childhood where I grew up on a Christmas Tree Farm. They focus on my father, his relationship to the natural world, and how that informs my identity.