Debbie lives in Manitoba, Canada. She has made her home in rural and urban communities in each of the four western Canadian provinces, from the prairies to the ocean. Poetry of place features in much of her haiku and tanka. Debbie’s daily creative practice is a form of meditation and healing, helping to mitigate the effects of chronic illness, and connecting her more closely to the world, to others, and to herself.
Debbie’s third-floor writing room looks out onto a gorgeous row of lindens, fragrant in summer, and frosted in winter. Their branches are often filled with chickadees and finches, punctuating the days with song.
Debbie loves:
.
playing guitar, singing, songwriting
.
wind & waves, fog & frost, sunsets & aurora
.
camping, birdwatching, gardening
.
making haiga using watercolours, inks, acrylics
.
collage, paper crafts, miniatures
.
visiting with her sisters
. Scrabble with her husband
Debbie’s camera is her constant companion. She has been making photographs for decades, whilst exploring the wilds with her husband and their dogs in a 1978 lime-green VW campervan named “Ludwig”. Her photography exhibition, “The Poetry of Light”, explores the subtle and flamboyant nuances of light, reflection, and refraction. Now that Debbie’s vision is compromised, she often uses intentional camera movement and diffusion techniques to create dreamlike images.
At the beginning of the Covid pandemic, Debbie invited 50 emerging and established short-form poets to collaborate on an online haiga project for healing. She enjoys creating haiga galleries and films for The Haiku Foundation, and recently contributed an essay discussing colour and the ways in which it impacts her work.
Debbie’s full-length haiku collection, “Random Blue Sparks”, winner of the 2020 Snapshot Press Book Award, has just been released:
dead orchard
the
random blue sparks
of woolly aphids
3rd
Place, Irish Haiku Society Int’l Contest, 2018
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