Autumn Haiku’s

Barefoot in cool grass

Still damp at midmorning –

Autumn is coming.

 

 

The mountain, breathless,

Awaiting its first snowfall,

Basks in autumn winds.

 

 

Sun sits lower now,

Frost waits on the horizon,

The last leaf lingers.

 

 

The lawnmower plods

Through grass, dry leaves, early frost

The last time this year.

 

 

A squirrel watches

As I rake up fallen leaves

Then it disappears.

 

 

Leafless trees in crisp air

Tendrils of wood smoke rising

To greet the first snow.

 

 

Pumpkins are fat, ripe

We free them from their dry vines

And carve toothy grins.

 

 

Spider’s web woven

Between maple and fence post

Captures sunlit dew.

 

Autumn

 

author
I was born in Germany, but immigrated to Canada as a young child. I grew up in Vancouver, attended UBC and the University of Hamburg (Germany), and graduated with the equivalent of a B.A. degree in Cultural Geography. Belize was my next stop, where I worked on a Mayan archaeology project and then taught high school in Belize City for two years. Sacramento, California, eventually became my home for 30 years. I taught middle school English, and later trained/coached teachers throughout California. In 2004, I returned to Vancouver, where I now live with my elderly mother. Here in Canada, I keep busy tutoring high school students (writing skills especially), continuing my Spanish studies and, of course, writing my own stories whenever I can find time.
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