Roger Camp

Under the golden avocado
by Roger Camp

Cold I cocoon myself

encasing the stringy green

hammock around me,

camouflaged to sleep.

Waking to tittering bushtits

flitting through the leaves,

their jittery flight

showering me

in golden-green efflorescences

my wife

picks out of my hair

at dinner.

I follow a female’s

dodgy flight

discovering a pendulous

woven wonder

a slapdash sac

entwined with weeds,

leaves, cobwebs,

fuzzballs, the flotsam

of the yard

I sweep daily

from under the tree.

Cleverly bearded

suspended by an improbable thread,

it mirrors my own ramshackle bed.

Two nesters swaddled in green

cradling each to sleep.

 

Published in Cider Press Review, Volume 28, Issue 1.

Roger CampRoger Camp is a former Marine NCO who daily walks the Seal Beach pier, muses over his orchids, spends afternoons playing blues piano, and reads under an Angel’s trumpet surrounded by a charm of hummingbirds. His poetry has appeared in numerous journals including the Southern Poetry Review, Nimrod, Pank, and is forthcoming in Grey’s Sporting Journal, and Scientific American Magazine.

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