Showing posts with label Geppo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Geppo. Show all posts

Saturday, August 23, 2025

Geppo: The Work-Study Journal of the Yuki Teikei Haiku Society, Volume L:2, May 2025

February - April 2025


an evergreen decaying from the top down dementia


thunderstone
your death a bolt
from the blue


rain-strung branch
the upside-downness
of redpolls


bag lady
a halo of pigeons
circling her head


Spring Challenge: Dandelion, tampopo


pesticide-free
the wild manes
of dandelions


Honoured to know that "rain-strung branch" was included among the favourites of Dojins Patricia J. Machmiller and Joan Zimmerman!

Also honoured that "rain-strung branch" was chosen for commentary in the subsequent issue:


Dojin's  Corner:

There is so much to like about this haiku, starting with its phrase "rain-strung" to indicate that it has rained, has stopped raining, and has left jewels of rain hanging on a branch. Line two affirms the hanging beads of water through its newly minted and lovely noun "upside-downness" (from the adjective "upside-down").

The haiku pivots on that into line three's redpolls, acrobatic and energetic small finches with a tendency to hang down to forage, gleaning branches from below for insects and seeds. The haiku also feels acrobatic and energetic. A delight.

—Joan Zimmerman

Such a perfect way to characterize the redpolls' acrobatic feeding movements as "upside-downness." One word says it all.

—Patricia J. Machmiller

At least I guessed the correct category: redpolls=birds. Although refusing to keep a life list, I do consider myself a moderate birder, but I had to look up "redpolls" to appreciate this haiku. Smaller than house finches and purple finches I doubt that I'll ever see one, as in the winter they only migrate as far south as Canada and the far northern parts of the midwest and eastern United States.

—Alison Woolpert

Geppo: The Work-Study Journal of the Yuki Teikei Haiku Society, Volume L:1, February 2025

November 2024 - January 2025


Grateful to have a mention of my new book, Random Blue Sparks, included in this issue!


soup kitchen the salt and pepper hair of a veteran


light ricochets
off a snowy owl's wing . . .
ice pellets


hot tenting
the sudden sizzle
of northern lights


new year's thaw
all the snowmen
losing weight


Winter Challenge Kigo: Winter Mountain, fuyu no yama


clouds crash
into the winter mountain . . .
pain flare


Honoured to know that "soup kitchen" and "new year's thaw" were included among Dojin Patricia J. Machmiller's favourites!


Also honoured that "new year's thaw" was included among the "Voted Best" (7 or more votes) in the subsequent issue,





Wednesday, June 18, 2025

Geppo: The Work-Study Journal of the Yuki Teikei Haiku Society, Volume XLIX:4, November 2024

August - October 2024


leaf confetti
a child's face daubed
with mud


corn snow
squirrels talking smack
outside the window


the house
where we were born . . .
bull thistles


circling hawks
the earth tilts
on its axis


Autumn Challenge Kigo: Milky Way, amanogawa


sea shanties
the Milky Way snagged
in our rigging


Honoured to know that "leaf confetti" and "circling hawks" were included among Dojin Hiroyuki Murakami's favourites!

Also honoured that "circling hawks" was chosen for commentary in the subsequent issue:


Dojin's Corner:

This haiku reminds me of the famous haiku by Japanese poet Ueda Gosengoku (1933-1997), migrating birds / I became smaller / instantly." The author's mind must be in harmony with the hawks in the sky to create a haiku from this perspective. Magnificent and free, it is an excellent haiku that shows empathy for animals.

—Hiroyuki Murakami

I think the poet is seeing earth from the hawk's point of view. They have risen so high they can see the earth's tilt!

—Patricia J. Machmiller

The haiku reveals the fact that hawks are responsible for the earth circling on its axis.

—Emiko Miyashita

I was also thrilled to know that Janice Doppler included the following haiku in her article "Pondering Zōka". This haiku was also selected for her book "One Thread: Zōka in Contemporary Haiku (2024):


peat fire
the scent markings
of other worlds

Frogpond 46:3 (2023)









 

Best of Geppo: 1978-2024, 2025

Grateful to have the following photograph included in this lovely anthology:


Bespangled
 

(note: this photograph was included among my featured artist selections in Geppo XLVII:2, 2022)


Saturday, December 21, 2024

Geppo: The Work-Study Journal of the Yuki Teikei Haiku Society, Volume XLIX:3, August 2024

May - July 2024


garden zazen
a stray kitten nestled
inside an empty pot


bus stop bench
a drifter whistling
up the day


thunderstorm
flocks of crows scatter
the wind


family photo
a quokka grinning
for the trail cam


Summer Challenge Kigo: firefly, fireflies, hotaru


fireflies
the glow-stick halos
of graveyard angels


Honoured to know that "garden zazen" and "thunderstorm" were included among the "Voted Best" (7 or more votes) in the subsequent issue!


Also honoured to know that "garden zazen" and "thunderstorm" were included among Dojin Patricia J. Machmiller's favourites, and that "bus stop bench" was included among Dojin Emiko Miyashita's favourites!

Thursday, August 29, 2024

Geppo: The Work-Study Journal of the Yuki Teikei Haiku Society, Volume XLIX:2, May 2024

 February - April 2024


equinox snow(drops) drifting across your grave


the pace
of my breath slows . . .
rushing stream


gender bias
a boy sticks petals
to his fingernails


earth day
ivy rootlets tickling
small fingers


Spring Challenge Kigo: Rookery, Heronry


garden rookery
the sycamore fills
with shadows


Honoured to know that "gender bias" was included among Dojin Emiko Miyashita's favourites!

Wednesday, June 05, 2024

Geppo: The Work-Study Journal of the Yuki Teikei Haiku Society, Volume XLIX:1, February 2024

November 2023 - January 2024


solstice picnic
our mead peppered
with snow fleas


holly berries
the red-tipped feathers
of cedar waxwings


winter carols
lake ice is singing
under my feet


bomb cyclone
cookie-cutter houses
frosted with ice


Winter Challenge Kigo: Winter Wind, kogarashi, oroshi, karakkaze


winter wind
the bay mare's tail
changes direction


Honoured to know that "winter carols" was included among Dojin Emiko Miyashita's favourites!

Wednesday, November 29, 2023

Geppo: The Work-Study Journal of the Yuki Teikei Haiku Society, Volume XLVIII:4, November 2023

August - October 2023 


autumn haiku the oak grove's white spaces


shadow season
the long and short
of it


damselflies
knit the reeds together . . .
stagnant pond


farmers' market
we choose a bouquet
of daisy gourds


Autumn Challenge Kigo: Insect's Cry, mushi no koe, mushi no ne


grasslands
the pulsing of wind
and katydids


Honoured to know that "damselflies" was included among Dojin Patricia J. Machmiller's favourites!




Geppo: The Work-Study Journal of the Yuki Teikei Haiku Society, Volume XLVIII:3, August 2023

May - July 2023


pelting rain
all the potholes
disappearing


the crest
of a wood partridge . . .
punk rockers


yin yoga
a harbour seal practices
its banana pose


breaking day
I share my grapefruit
with an oriole


Summer Challenge Kigo: Waterfall, taki


sweet alyssum
a cascade of white flowing
over wet rocks


Honoured to know that "pelting rain" was included among Dojin Patricia J. Machmiller's favourites!

Geppo: The Haiku Work-Study Journal of the Yuki Teikei Haiku Society, Volume XLVIII:2, May 2023

February - April 2023


woodlands
the scent of bluebells
ringing


fox's wedding
this metamorphosis
of light


newts migrate
to their hatching pool . . .
Mother's Day


late thaw
a ribbon of water
unspools


Spring Challenge Kigo: Spring Sea, haru-no-umi


spring sea
sandpipers rising
falling


Honoured that "late thaw" was included among the "Voted Best" (8 or more votes) in the subsequent issue!


Honoured to know that "woodlands" was included among Dojin Hiroyuki Murakami's favourites, and that Dojin Patricial J. Machmiller included "fox's wedding", "newts migrate", and "late thaw" among hers. Dojin Emiko Miyashita also selected "late thaw" as a favourite!

Thursday, November 02, 2023

Geppo: The Haiku Work-Study Journal of the Yuki Teikei Haiku Society, Volume XLVIII:1, February 2023

November 2022 - January 2023


winterberry
the first holiday
alone


fallen snow
the garden
underneath


farm chores
this frost-fringed hole
in my mitten


the gardenias
in father's mind . . .
winter moon


Winter Challenge Kigo: Narcissus, suisen


i force myself
to get out of bed . . .
paperwhites


Honoured that "winterberry" was chosen for commentary in the subsequent issue:


Dojin's Corner:

The winterberry, a bright red, holly-like berry sets up this poem to be a poem of joy. This sense of joyfulness carries through the second line. Then the one-word third line tells us this poem is not about joy, but about sadness in the midst of everyone else's joy. The way this poem is constructed is very effective in creating how feelings of isolation and loneliness are deepened when the outside world in its merriment is oblivious to one's individual pain.

—Patricia J. Machmiller

"Winterberry" is a form of holly, a plant with deep spiritual meanings in many different cultures. As a kigo it matches well with the feelings of celebrating a holiday alone for the first time. The "winter" in "winterberry" evokes the solitude and desolation of the season while the bright red berries bring to mind the joyful aspect of winter holidays. This is an effective choice for conveying the poet's complex emotions.

—Phillip R. Kennedy

The author spends the New Year's holiday alone, with bright red shiny winterberry, a plant in the holly family. The tone of the haiku is not so lonely; however, there is the sense of missing someone who was there before. "The first holiday" can be interpreted as the New Year's holiday and the first holiday to be alone.

—Emiko Miyashita

Also honoured to know that Dojin Patricia J. Machmiller included "winterberry" among her favourites, and Dojin Emiko Miyashita included "farm chores" among hers!


Thursday, December 22, 2022

Geppo: The Haiku Work-Study Journal of the Yuki Teikei Haiku Society, Volume XLVII:4, November 2022

August - October 2022


broken rimrock
the history behind
this rusty spur


a rainbow strung
across our backyard . . .
birdhouse gourds


dried thatch
the green button you lost
last spring


webs mend
the statue's hands . . .
morning prayers


Autumn Challenge Kigo: Sixteenth-Day Moon, Izayoi


the hesitation
before you say goodbye . . .
sixteenth night


Honoured that "dried thatch" was included among the "Voted Best" (8 or more votes) in the subsequent issue!


Also honoured to know that Dojins Johnnie Johnson Hafernik and Patricia J. Machmiller included "webs mend" among their favourites!


Thursday, December 01, 2022

Geppo: The Haiku Work-Study Journal of the Yuki Teikei Haiku Society, Volume XLVII:3, August 2022

May - July 2022


boxcar graffiti
a woolly bear winds
through the grass


hibiscus
the sun behind
your ear


a mandala
of petals and stones . . .
who went here before


nimbostratus
a scold of blue jays
remakes the sky


Summer Challenge Kigo: Heron, sagi / Great Blue Heron, aosagi / Egret, shirasagi


nuptial plumage
the great white egret
and i


Honoured that "hibiscus" was included among the "Voted Best" (9 or more votes) in the subsequent issue!

Tuesday, September 27, 2022

Geppo: The Haiku Work-Study Journal of the Yuki Teikei Haiku Society, Volume XLVII:1, February 2022

November 2021 - January 2022


warmer days
a necklace of snow along
the barbed wire


a squirrel's stash
we cram our lives full
of emptiness


still waiting
for the results . . .
snow moon


laden branches
chickadees displace
a thousand stars


Winter Challenge Kigo: Snow, yuki


falling snow
mother swaddles
her baby doll


Honoured to know that "still waiting" was included among the favourites of Dojin Patricia J. Machmiller!

 

Saturday, July 23, 2022

Geppo: The Haiku Work-Study Journal of the Yuki Teikei Haku Society, Volume XLVII:2, May 2022

February - April 2022


Honoured to be the featured artist for this issue! Please visit the "Articles/About" tab in this blog to read the feature.

bespangled



fallen



pirouette



swans



transience



Other work included in this issue:


twilight how purple the dormant butterfly bush


slow thaw
the curling stones
of mallard ducks


paper sunflowers
in the maternity ward . . .
still too soon to say


seasons turn
the way we measure
life expectancy


Spring Challenge Kigo: Spring Breeze (or Spring Wind), harukaze


spring breeze
a porcupette's quills
begin to stiffen

Monday, February 07, 2022

Geppo: The Haiku Work-Study Journal of the Yuki Teikei Haiku Society, Volume XLVI:4, November 2021

August - October 2021


freight train the rags of a vagabond moon


wilted garden
dust sparkles on the wings
of sparrows


rows of maize
we put our affairs
in order


Autumn Challenge Kigo: Persimmons, kaki


nature's almanac
persimmon seeds predict
the weather


Honoured to know that "rows of maize" was included among the favourites of Dojins Randy Brooks and Patricia J. Machmiller!

Geppo: The Haiku Work-Study Journal of the Yuki Teikei Haiku Society, Volume XLVI:3, August 2021

May - July 2021


farm team
blue jeans steal colour
from the sky


you outgrow
your self again . . .
cow parsley


meadowsweet
the deer leave me
one bloom


summer as far
as the eye can see . . .
new horizons


Summer Challenge Kigo: Summer Grass, Summer Grasses, natsugusa ya


the resilience
of summer grasses . . .
prairie hail


Honoured that "meadowsweet" was included among the "Voted Best" (7 or more votes) and chosen for commentary in the subsequent issue:


Dojin's Corner:

The second line, with its multiple readings, is the heart of this haiku. Deer leave one bloom, deer leave me. Deer will eat anything, but they leave one—not some, not a few—one bloom. That solitary bloom reinforces the idea of leaving, of being left. I also admire the sonic qualities of this haiku: the long "e" sounds in "sweet," "deer," and "me," as well as the "m's" in the first and last lines. Also I can't read that first line—"meadowsweet"—without thinking "bittersweet."

—Beverly Acuff Momoi

Oh, spirea or meadowsweet is such a beautiful bush with its long sprays of white flowers. It's hard to imagine the deer ate them all but one? It must be like vanilla ice cream to them—so the name, meadowsweet, appropriately captures its delectability.

—Patricia J. Machmiller

Just one bloom left on the meadowsweet? Since deer have four legs while we have only two, it probably took all of those anti-inflammatory herbal flowers to relieve the deer's joint pain and gout. One bloom will be enough to make a ice cup of meadowsweet tea. Enjoy!

—Emiko Miyashita



Also honoured to know that "meadowsweet" was included among the favourites of Dojins Beverly Acuff Momoi and Patricia J. Machmiller. "Farm team" was included among the favourites of Dojin Emiko Miyashita, and "you outgrow" was included among the favourites of Patricia!

Friday, September 17, 2021

Geppo: The Haiku Work-Study Journal of the Yuki Teikei Haiku Society, Volume XLVI:2, May 2021

February - April 2021


rusty watering can
how vibrant the life
of mud


snowdrops
the future is almost
upon us


baby skunks
the unmown strip
of grass


loonsong
I am not alone
in the mist


Spring Challenge Kigo: Kite, Toy Kite, tako, ikanobori


kite tails
we watch you
slip away


Honoured to know that "loonsong" was included among the favourites of Dojins Michele Root-Bernstein and Patricia J. Machmiller, and "baby skunks" was included among the favourites of Dojins Emiko Miyashita and Patricia!

Saturday, April 03, 2021

Geppo: The Haiku Work-Study Journal of the Yuki Teikei Haiku Society, Volume XLVI: 1, February 2021

November 2020 - January 2021


salt lick
the blue concave
of sky


first flute
woodpecker holes stuffed
with acorns


the eye-shine
of a great horned owl . . .
long night moon


candy floss
hair ice transforms
a rotten branch


Honoured to know that Dojin Patricia J. Machmiller included "salt lick" and "first flute" among her favourites of the issue!